If you've found the relationship between proximity and diet after you've controlled for income differences, then you can't use it to say anything about the effect of income differences on diet.PainRack wrote:Wtf.... how on earth do you parse that?
Not really. I don't know what you mean by "external vs internal factors," but it seems to me that self-discipline is doing hard things instead of easy things, so when you say that eating a healthy diet is hard, and Conqueror says people who don't eat healthy diets don't have enough self-discipline, you guys are agreeing.... While the true picture is more nuanced than external vs internal factors,your inability to see there is a difference is shocking.
***
What you're calling "logistics" is really just high cost tradeoffs. Willpower is what lets you bear those high costs. So again, I don't see a difference. If eating healthy food requires lots of sacrifices, it takes a lot of willpower. If poor people aren't willing to make those sacrifices, then they don't have the willpower to make healthy choices. Two sides of the same coin, no disagreement.Simon_Jester wrote:To some extent, going out of your way to get healthy food is a matter of willpower.
To some extent, it's a matter of logistics.