This post is a follow-up to my “case for a non-mammalian food ethic.” I’ve given that case some more thought and have decided that honesty requires more nuance than either continuing to call myself a (straight) vegetarian or calling myself a “non-mammalian.” The latter term is confusing in any case, since “mammalian” could either mean someone who […]
Posts Tagged ‘locavorism’
Post-vegetarian food ethics, continued…
Posted in Eco-culture, tagged diets, flexi-vegetarianism, flexitarianism, food ethics, freeganism, locavorism, mammalism, mammals, non-mammalian diet, post-vegetarianism, veganism, vegetarianism on August 18, 2017 | 9 Comments »
A case for a non-mammalian food ethic
Posted in Eco-culture, tagged diets, food ethics, freeganism, locavorism, mammalism, mammals, veganism, vegetarianism on January 12, 2016 | 24 Comments »
Vegetarianism has been part of my identity for the last 25 years (thanks to arguments like this one and this one), but I’ve been increasingly recognizing the term’s limits.