[Buddha-l] buddha-l Digest, Vol 103, Issue 3
Catalina
c_castell at yahoo.com
Mon Sep 9 10:59:17 MDT 2013
David Living answer to Bob Woolery says:
"Another complication is that some plants actually want to be eaten as a way of
propagating the species - blackcurrents, grapes, apples, pairs - the list goes on.
Maybe that is a "get out of jail" clause. We don't have to starve to death to be
ethical. Another thought is that some plants do "send a message" that they don't
want to be eaten by being poisonous or irritating eg toadstools and stinging nettles.
Perhaps a rule of thumb could be that if a plant propagates through pollinating
or by means other than being eaten then if you are very strict don't eat it. If you
might die of starvation (and lets face it most westerners don't know the meaning
of the word) then that may be another get out clause too"
In MNHO I agree, you can also eat plants without killing them, isn't it? and some are just anual, give fruits and that's it...
I would say that to stablish ethical priorities works for me, I will start worrying about eating plants after resolving some other problems as being more compassionate with human beings, try to help and be kind. So will talk about that again many thousands lives later.
Catalina
________________________________
From: David Living <aryacitta at hotmail.com>
To: BuddhaL <buddha-l at mailman.swcp.com>
Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 6:02 PM
Subject: Re: [Buddha-l] buddha-l Digest, Vol 103, Issue 3
Re: Sentience of Plants
Bob quotes:
*Bob Woolery*
> If we give any credence to the notion of sentience in plants, the
> implication is that we all must kill to live. A strict Fruitarian might
> argue that he has escaped killing, and planting fruit trees maybe quashes
> the problem of seeds. The rest of us are for sure killing living things
> who have no choice in the matter.
Another complication is that some plants actually want to be eaten as a way of
propagating the species - blackcurrents, grapes, apples, pairs - the list goes on.
Maybe that is a "get out of jail" clause. We don't have to starve to death to be
ethical. Another thought is that some plants do "send a message" that they don't
want to be eaten by being poisonous or irritating eg toadstools and stinging nettles.
Perhaps a rule of thumb could be that if a plant propagates through pollinating
or by means other than being eaten then if you are very strict don't eat it. If you
might die of starvation (and lets face it most westerners don't know the meaning
of the word) then that may be another get out clause too.
Aryacitta/Dave Living Southend-on-Sea
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