Filters▼
Sort
Sorting applies immediately after selection.
Categories
Tags
Top 20Showing 1–12 of 23
The book "Outlive" by Peter Attia challenges traditional medicine (Medicine 2.0) for its reactive approach to chronic diseases. It introduces "Medicine 3.0," a proactive, personalized strategy for extending both lifespan and healthspan by targeting the "Four Horsemen": heart disease, cancer, neurodegenerative disease, and type 2 diabetes. The core framework emphasizes prevention, early detection, and individualized interventions. Key tactical domains include exercise (cardiorespiratory fitness, strength, stability), nutrition (metabolic health, protein, calorie management), sleep (brain health, metabolic regulation), and emotional well-being (trauma, self-talk, purpose). The author advocates for aggressive, evidence-informed actions to build resilience against age-related decline and live a more fulfilling, healthier life.
This book redefines uric acid as a central regulator of metabolism, not just a cause of gout. Drawing on historical insights and modern science, the author links elevated uric acid to widespread health issues like obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cognitive decline. The text explains how evolutionary adaptations, combined with a modern diet rich in fructose, have made humans susceptible to chronically high uric acid levels. It advocates for managing uric acid through dietary changes, specific supplements, lifestyle adjustments—including sleep and exercise—and time-restricted eating to prevent long-term biological damage and achieve optimal metabolic and brain health.
Breath : the new science of a lost art
James Nestor • 2020
The book explores the "lost art and science of breathing," detailing how modern humans have significantly deteriorated their breathing capacity due to softened diets and lifestyle changes, leading to numerous chronic illnesses. Through personal experiments and historical research, the author demonstrates the profound benefits of proper nasal breathing, full exhalation, and controlled breath-holding techniques. It highlights how ancient practices, once dismissed, are now scientifically validated for improving health, mental balance, and longevity. The text advocates for conscious breath control, emphasizing that simple adjustments to how we breathe can dramatically reverse modern maladies and optimize physiological functions.
Atul Gawande explores medicine's struggle with aging and mortality, often viewing death as a failure. He contrasts traditional multi-generational care with the modern pursuit of independence, which can leave the elderly vulnerable. The book critiques institutional care for prioritizing safety over patient autonomy, leading to loneliness and helplessness. Gawande advocates for a shift towards palliative care and honest conversations, emphasizing that medicine's true role is to enable well-being by respecting an individual's values. He argues for supporting patients in authoring their own life stories until the very end, ensuring a meaningful and dignified conclusion.
Becoming A Supple Leopard
Kelly Starrett & Glen Cordoza • 2013
The book describes a comprehensive movement and mobility system designed to optimize human performance, resolve pain, and prevent injury. It emphasizes maintaining a braced, neutral spine and generating torque in joints for stability. The author argues against traditional lagging indicators of pain, advocating for proactive self-care through systematic mobilization. The text categorizes movements by complexity and provides detailed diagnostic tests and mobilization techniques for every major body area, from the thoracic spine to the ankles. It highlights the importance of consistent daily mobility work and proper mechanics in exercises like squats, deadlifts, and presses to unlock full physical capacity and longevity.
The book "The Blue Zones" explores regions worldwide where people live exceptionally long, healthy lives. Author Dan Buettner details five such "Blue Zones": Okinawa (Japan), Sardinia (Italy), Loma Linda (USA), Nicoya Peninsula (Costa Rica), and Icaria (Greece - though not explicitly detailed in this summary, the intro mentions it conceptually). Through extensive research, he identifies common lifestyle factors—dubbed the "Power Nine"—that contribute significantly to longevity, including natural movement, plant-based diets, strong social connections, stress reduction, and a clear sense of purpose. The book emphasizes that lifestyle choices, not genetics, are primarily responsible for a longer, healthier existence, offering practical advice for readers to apply these principles.
Good calories, bad calories: challenging the conventional wisdom on diet, weight control, and disease
Gary Taubes • 2007
This book challenges the prevailing dietary fat hypothesis, arguing that refined carbohydrates and sugars are the true drivers of obesity, heart disease, and other chronic illnesses. It traces the historical progression of nutritional science, revealing how the low-fat dogma emerged through political influence and selective data interpretation rather than robust scientific evidence. The author posits that obesity is fundamentally a hormonal disorder, regulated by insulin, which promotes fat storage and inhibits its release, leading to persistent hunger and metabolic dysfunction. The text advocates for a return to carbohydrate-restricted diets, aligning with historical medical consensus and human evolutionary biology, as a more effective approach to combating the modern epidemic of metabolic diseases and improving overall health.
The book explores the mind-body benefits of spiritual and intermittent fasting practices, outlining author Dave Asprey's journey from chronic health issues to biohacking for resilience. It delves into psychoneuroimmunology, explaining how practices like meditation and fasting reduce cortisol, strengthen immunity, and improve physical health. Asprey details various fasting protocols, from 16:8 to extended fasts, emphasizing metabolic flexibility, cellular repair, and the role of ketones for enhanced brain function. The text also covers the importance of sleep, targeted supplementation, and exercise, advocating for a holistic approach to gain mastery over biological instincts and achieve overall well-being. It highlights the unique considerations for women and the psychological traps of rigid dieting.
The longevity paradox : how to die young at a ripe old age
Steven R. Gundry
The book, "The Longevity Paradox," by Dr. Steven Gundry, argues that the secret to aging well and preventing age-related diseases lies in nurturing the body's microbiome. It challenges common aging myths, positing that chronic illnesses are not inevitable but stem from a neglected gut and compromised gut barrier. Gundry explains how factors like modern diets, antibiotics, and specific proteins (lectins) disrupt gut health, leading to inflammation—the root cause of many diseases including heart disease, cancer, and cognitive decline. The program emphasizes a holistic approach involving a prebiotic-rich, lectin-free diet, strategic fasting, balanced exercise, stress management, quality sleep, and targeted supplements to regenerate tissues, strengthen the gut, and extend a vibrant healthspan.
The case for Keto : the truth about low-carb, high-fat eating
Gary Taubes
The book challenges conventional dietary advice, arguing that the "eat less, move more" mantra has failed to address the obesity and diabetes crisis. Author Gary Taubes contends that obesity is a hormonal disorder, primarily driven by insulin's response to carbohydrates, rather than a lack of willpower. He highlights a grassroots movement of medical professionals successfully using low-carb, high-fat (ketogenic) diets to reverse chronic conditions. The text delves into the history of obesity research, the physiological differences between lean and fat-prone individuals, and the cellular mechanisms of fat storage. It advocates for carbohydrate abstinence, treating it as a permanent identity shift to manage insulin, reduce hunger, and achieve sustainable metabolic health.
Nature Wants Us to Be Fat: The Surprising Science Behind Why We Gain Weight and How We Can Prevent - and Reverse - It
Richard Johnson
The book introduces the "survival switch," a biological mechanism in humans, primarily driven by fructose, that once aided ancestors in surviving food scarcity by promoting fat storage. However, rapid changes since the Agricultural Revolution have led to an evolutionary mismatch, causing this switch to remain "on" in an environment of caloric excess. This persistent activation contributes to modern epidemics of noncommunicable diseases like obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and even cognitive decline. The author explains how fructose, salt, and umami flavors trigger this switch, leading to insulin resistance, increased hunger, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Understanding this mechanism is key to managing metabolic health and preventing chronic illnesses by outsmarting our ancient survival instincts through dietary and lifestyle changes.
The book "Bulletproof" explores biohacking as a means to extend human lifespan and improve health, challenging the notion that aging is an irreversible decline. It identifies key drivers of aging, such as mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular damage, and inflammation, proposing strategies to combat them. These include optimizing nutrition, sleep, light exposure, and hormone levels, along with advanced techniques like stem cell therapy and targeted supplementation. The author emphasizes regaining control over one's biology to prevent degenerative diseases, enhance cognitive function, and maintain vitality, aiming for a "superhuman" existence. The core message is proactive intervention to age backward, ensuring quality years in an extended life.