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Eating Ethically

Religion and Science for a Better Diet

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Few activities are as essential to human flourishing as eating, and fewer still are as ethically fraught. Eating well is particularly confusing. We live amid excess, faced with conflicting recommendations, contradictory scientific studies, and complex moral, medical, and environmental consequences that influence our choices. A new eating strategy is urgently needed, one grounded in ethics, informed by biology, supported by philosophy and theology, and, ultimately, personally achievable.
Eating Ethically argues persuasively for more adaptive eating practices. Drawing on religion, medicine, philosophy, cognitive science, art, ethics, and more, Jonathan K. Crane shows how distinguishing among the eater, the eaten, and the act of eating promotes a radical reorientation away from external cues and toward internal ones. This turn is vital for survival, according to classic philosophy on appetite and contemporary studies of satiety, metabolic science as well as metaphysics and religion. By intertwining ancient wisdom from Judaism, Christianity, and Islam with cutting-edge research, Crane concludes that ethical eating is a means to achieve both personal health and social cohesion. Grounded in science and tradition, Eating Ethically shows us what it truly means to eat well.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 9, 2017
      Fusing philosophical ethics, religious wisdom, and science, Crane (Narratives and Jewish Bioethics) has designed a regimen for what he calls “the heartiest, healthiest, and holiest way to eat: eat less than one can consume on a regular basis, saving one’s feasting for feasts.” Crane weaves together various perspectives to illustrate that eating is not simply a physiological act but one with moral, economic, ecological, social, and political ramifications. He comes at the philosopher Jacques Derrida’s question of how should one eat well from multiple angles, deploying cutting-edge studies of metabolism, ancient philosophers’ musings on food, and religious reflections from Judaism, Christianity, and Islam to bolster his position of refrained consumption. Some readers will be disappointed that Crane skips non-Western systems such as Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain traditions. Crane’s accessible prose and principled approach to eating make this a worthy addition to the ongoing discussion of how humans should consume food.

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  • English

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