{"id":1018,"date":"2019-01-04T19:23:01","date_gmt":"2019-01-04T19:23:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/generic.wordpress.soton.ac.uk\/skywritings\/?p=1018"},"modified":"2019-01-04T19:23:01","modified_gmt":"2019-01-04T19:23:01","slug":"declining-the-compliment","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/generic.wordpress.soton.ac.uk\/skywritings\/2019\/01\/04\/declining-the-compliment\/","title":{"rendered":"Declining the Compliment"},"content":{"rendered":"

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“…I wish to reiterate my admiration for your veganism…”<\/i><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/blockquote>\n

Admiration? For veganism? But it is so simple and easy \u2014 not at all what people (including me) imagined. No sacrifice, no hardship \u2014 and no reduction whatsoever in gastronomic pleasure: in fact, quite the opposite. <\/p>\n

I now realize that not only is it true (as we have all heard many times) that our species is neither herbivore nor carnivore but omnivore, but that this consists of two contingent \u201cmodes.\u201d When a human consumes animal protein, most alimentary needs are fulfilled, so there is very little need or desire for herbivory. (That\u2019s why it\u2019s hard to get meat-eating kids to eat vegetables.) <\/p>\n

But when our metabolism gets the cue to switch to herbivore mode \u2014 the cue is the complete absence of animal protein (meat, fish, dairy, eggs) from one’s diet \u2014 then the taste of vegetables, fruits, nuts, and grains all transforms and becomes incomparably more delicious and satisfying than when one was in carnivore mode. <\/p>\n

It is for this reason (and not the opposite, as people imagine: not because vegans can\u2019t find enough tasty things to eat) that many vegans are so obsessed with food, recipes, cooking! It is because everything tastes so good, and such a rich variety of potential gustatory pleasure is opened up by the complete switch to the herbivore mode. For most of my life, while I was still just a vegetarian<\/a>, still eating dairy and eggs, hence animal protein, I never bothered to cook. It wasn\u2019t worth the effort. Since I became a vegan 6 years ago<\/a>, my pleasure from and interest in food have grown so much that I have not only taken to cooking things, but I have discovered that I may even have a little talent for it!<\/p>\n

And one last thing: The reason I (politely, and appreciatively) decline admiration for being a vegan is not just because it is in reality so trivially easy and rewarding, but out of the belief and hope that in fact I am absolutely no different from the majority of human beings: the majority are decent, and are eating meat only because they mistakenly believe two things to be true that are in fact untrue: that (1) we need to consume animals in order to survive and be healthy and (2) that this can be and is being done in a humane way that does not involve suffering for the animals. <\/p>\n

Both (1) and (2) are in fact untrue. And (2), in particular, is untrue in a monstrously horrific way<\/a>. <\/p>\n

So I decline admiration for becoming vegan because I think the only difference between me and the majority \u2014 who, like me, would never knowingly cause needless suffering \u2014 is merely informational. I (and many others) just happen to have learned already that the animal suffering is (1) indeed needless and (2) indeed suffering, terrible suffering. Hence it is our duty to inform and awaken the rest of the decent majority who are still so tragically misinformed. <\/p>\n

Indeed, the fact that the only relevant difference between us and the majority of humanity is informational, and hence remediable, is the only hope of the countless tragic victims of humanity\u2019s greatest crime. (The Holocaust was humanity\u2019s greatest crime against humanity, but our treatment of animals is humanity\u2019s greatest crime tout court<\/i>.)<\/p>\n

If vegans weren’t exactly the same as everyone else, it would mean that animals were doomed to eternal, inescapable agony.<\/p>\n

Booth, D. A. (1985). Food‐conditioned Eating Preferences and Aversions with Interoceptive Elements: Conditioned Appetites and Satieties. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences<\/i>, 443(1), 22-41.<\/p>\n

Booth, D. A., & Simson, P. C. (1971). Food preferences acquired by association with variations in amino acid nutrition<\/a>. The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology<\/i>, 23(1), 135-145.<\/p>\n

Young, P. T. (1957). Psychologic factors regulating the feeding process<\/a>. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition<\/i>, 5, 154-161.<\/p>\n

Young, P. T. (1948). Appetite, palatability and feeding habit: a critical review. Psychological Bulletin<\/i>, 45(4), 289.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

“…I wish to reiterate my admiration for your veganism…” Admiration? For veganism? But it is so simple and easy \u2014 not at all what people (including me) imagined. No sacrifice, no hardship \u2014 and no reduction whatsoever in gastronomic pleasure: in fact, quite the opposite. I now realize that not only is it true (as … <\/p>\n