As far as I'm aware, Dr Price only focused on dental caries, not malocclusion.
He examined both. Just look at the photos he took and you'll see plenty of examples of malocclusion on modern diets vs. perfectly straight teeth on traditional diets within the same ethnic groups.
And the fact that malocclusion existed in (post-cooking) hominids in the Palaeolithic, but does not exist in wild animals is clearly strongly indicative.
Thanks for this info. That is suggestive evidence, although there are other possible explanations in addition to, or instead of cooking (though I suspect that cooking is part of the equation): "human hybridization under civilized systems of mating might have adverse effects on occlusion"--in other words, neoteny through sexual selection [source:
Malocclusion and civilization], which some of your sources also point to as a factor in brain development.
Well, a lot of people view increased neoteny as a good sign indicating an increased rate of evolution(re bigger brains to body ratio like infants have etc.)
Sorry, but if they think that neoteny is purely good, then they're either ignorant or nuts. Bigger brains is not a sign of neoteny. ....
I'm afraid you're dead wrong re this. Neoteny is indeed referring to youthful traits, but also on a ratio-basis by comparison to overall body-size. So, for example, human babies have a much bigger brain to body size RATIO than adult humans(or other animals) do, so that a bigger brain to body size ratio for an adult is indeed a neotenous trait. Here's a couple of links:-
http://www.pnas.org/content/106/14/5743.full
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=being-more-infantile
OK, I understand now where you're coming from on the ratio-basis (thanks for the references), and I'll grant that it makes some superficial sense given that smaller dog breeds apparently tend to be more intelligent, but it still doesn't explain everything, given that domesticated (neotenized) dogs have smaller brains than wild dogs and wolves and human neoteny accelerated during the last approx. 35k years at the same time that absolute brain size decreased and the brain/body ratio did not increase (see "The Relationship of Dietary Quality and Gut Efficiency to Brain Size," from "Comparative Anatomy and Physiology Brought Up to Date, Are Humans Natural Frugivores/Vegetarians, or Omnivores/Faunivores?"
http://www.beyondveg.com/billings-t/comp-anat/comp-anat-4b.shtml). We are more neotenized now (less hair, softer and finer hair, less muscle, finer bones, smaller jaws, flatter faces, more childlike features, longer lactose persistence, longer persistance of lighter-colored eyes such as blue eyes, etc.) than at any time in human history, yet our brains are smaller than Cro Magnon's and proportionately no larger. On my more important and broader initial point, that neoteny is not a purely "good sign," increased brain size is the only improvement you've pointed to, whereas less hair, smaller jaws, less muscle, and finer bones could be seen as negative, so I remain unconvinced of the proposition that neoteny is only "a good sign."
"since neoteny means an extended childhood, you have this greater chance for the brain to develop” --http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=being-more-infantile
Childhood is more extended now than at any point in human history, yet brain size is not rapidly increasing in absolute terms and not dramatically in proportionate terms.
Attributing neoteny solely to selection of behavioral traits and childhood extension and disregarding diet would ignore the fact that rewilding the diet results in reversal of some neotenized traits in humans (and without any reports of reduction in brain size). For example, the Weston Price Foundation has documented dramatic reverals of neoteny in the offspring of highly neotenized adults within a single generation (and on a personal note, when I switched to a Paleo diet, hair started growing on my chest). The children fed more traditional diets than their parents experience less malocclusion, broader and flatter palates, broader jaws and faces, etc. Jared Diamond has even argued in
Guns, Germs and Steel that New Guinea hunter gatherers are "genetically superior" in "mental ability" to modern folk. It is a controversial hypothesis, in part because it could be misused to support misguided racist ideology, but given the effects of modern foods on the brain and the benefits on the brain of rewilding the diet (such as elimination of "brain fog"), it is plausible.
"Rounding" by as much as 5,000 years(in the more recent Upper Palaeolithic era, no less) is rather extreme, by any standards, LOL! Especially when I've never heard of this supposed carb-increase in diet c.30,000 years ago(except Barry Groves who is somewhat unreliable, to say the least). Now if Barry had made a claim of 20,000 years(for some not all humans), he would at least have a point, otherwise not.Either way, the 5,000 year-difference between a supposed change in diet and a decrease in human brain-size means there is no real link.
5000 years of rounding in the 2.5 million plus years of human history is the mere blink of an eye. I already granted you the 35k ybp date for approximate initiation of brain size decline, so let's not beat a dead horse over such details unless there is a critical reason for doing so. Are you arguing that brain size started declining exactly 35k years ago, whereas plant foods were not a significant part of human diets until at least 30k years ago, therefore making a connection impossible? What change do you posit suddenly occurred 35k years ago that accounts for decreasing brain size since that time and what reason for the critical certainty regarding that precise millenium?
My main sources were Clive Gamble (The Paleolithic Societies of Europe) and Ward Nicholson ("Longevity & health in ancient Paleolithic vs. Neolithic peoples: Not what you may have been told,"
http://www.beyondveg.com/nicholson-w/angel-1984/angel-1984-1a.shtml). I didn't know that Groves also connects the decline in brain size to diet, but thanks for providing another confirming reference. Gamble calls the Middle Paleolithic period the "Carnivore Guild," claiming that human carnivory reached its peak during this period. He roughly estimates this period to have covered around 300,000 to 30,000 years ago (other scientists use different ranges, such as 200,000 to 40,000 years ago, illustrating the rough nature of naming such periods). Part of the reason these figures are rough is that changes occurred in different parts of Europe at different times. To claim that every area of Europe changed dramatically in exactly the same millenium 35k years ago would not be taken seriously by paleoanthropologists, so I'm surprised that you seem to be suggesting that. Please clarify.