CIN wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2021, 7:07 pm
I'm having a real problem deciding what to eat. I was going to have a salad, I've got lots of nice fresh tomatoes, cucumber, radishes, olives and so on, but I'm now worried that they may all be conscious. I mean, the tomatoes aren't attached to the mother plant any more, but maybe it's just like they've gone off to uni, you know?
So I'm thinking I'll leave the salad veg in peace, and eat some vegetables out of a tin - or, as I'm now thinking of it, a little metal coffin. Because even if they were conscious when they were put in there, they've been in there for long time, so they're probably dead by now, don't you think? But still, I'm not sure. Maybe they're just asleep.......
I've got some fresh mushrooms. Are fungi safe to eat? Or are fungi just very slow plants?
I did think of having a slice of bread, but then I thought of all those wheat plants brutally cut down and having their ears cut off, and I couldn't face it.
Earlier today I caught my dog eating soil from one of the tubs in the garden. I told him off, because for all I know, soil may be conscious.
I'm getting really hungry. Can anyone help?
It is an interesting question and I understand the seriousness of the issue, since some people could actually decide not to eat when they have the idea that plants are sentient and are hurt in the process of being eaten.
Bulimia is a serious condition. More than 10,000 people die each year by stopping eating.
(2021)
Eating Disorders Are on the Rise
https://nutrition.org/eating-disorders-are-on-the-rise/
Plants intentionally provide food to animals with fruits and nuts being clear evidence. From that perspective, it may be most ethical to accept what is 'given' and to make optimal use of it to prevent it going to waste.
When a mother provides milk to a baby, it would be most ethical for the baby to accept it and to grow into a healthy and prosperous human being.
What is given by plants may be considered 'given by Mother Nature' and it is most ethical to accept it and to make optimal use of it.
What Nature could want from humans is to serve life optimally, and to do so, the human would need to evolve into a 'moral being' which can be achieved with philosophy (reason beyond value).
Awareness that a plant is a
meaningful creature may be sufficient to address plant morality. Plants have a different strategy for successful evolution than animals. They may not actually be hurt when destroyed or eaten, although their physiological responses are still to be considered meaningful and thus worthy of consideration.
If plants are to posses consciousness, it may be found in their root system deep under the ground, since that is where 'neuron' like cells and neurotransmitters have been found, however, some plants may not mind when that part is eaten with
carrots being an example.
The advocacy by philosophy professor
Michael Marder that plants should be eaten with
respect may be sufficient to address plant morality. It would essentially be a simple 'thank you' to the plant, and care for its long term future, so that the plant achieves a potential to share in a higher purpose and to become 'happy'.
Philosopher:
Plants are sentient beings that should be eaten with respect
https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/unth ... -1.1965980
The following books may provide answers if you are seriously wondering how it would be most ethical to eat plants:
Plant-Thinking: A Philosophy of Vegetal Life
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/167 ... t-thinking
The Philosopher's Plant: An Intellectual Herbarium
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/223 ... er-s-plant
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My advise: accept what is given and dedicate to making best use!