The Veg Vs. Non-Veg Diet Debate
I’m happy to have clicked a pic of dead fishes, the last time I went to my nearby fish market.
Happy because it started a healthy debate on one of the most debated topics : Being a Vegan Vs. Non-Vegan & it led me to do a research on the Internet over the lazy weekend.
Before arguing the points I would like to clarify my own stand point in this whole debate: It really doesn’t matter & is a personal(often by birth, religion etc.) choice. IT’S A MATTER OF CHOICE. None is better or worse & we shouldn’t try to impose our behavior or eating habit on others. Period.
p.s. Btw, I’m a hard core non-vegan & love to savor my taste buds with anything except beef. (Again, not beef because my decision to stay non-vegan is what I got through birth. We are Hindus and we don’t eat beef. As simple as that)
So let’s start with the most widely stated argument by any hardcore Vegan: We should not eat animals because they are sentient beings. Sentient means awareness: state of elementary or undifferentiated consciousness. As we all know(because we as humans are scientifically proven to be sentient: we feel pain, we have a nervous system etc.)
So the vegan club believes that plants don’t have a nervous system or they are not sentient & hence it’s a better way way of living. Although they are alive, it’s ok to kill them coz they don’t jump out of your frying pans when you try to dip your uncut potato into the boiling water.
Firstly, let me take a unscientific approach. How many of you have seen that a potato kept at a basket for a long time grows buds & if we bury it in the ground, it will grow. That means it still has life in it.
See, the basic premise is that it is violent to kill any life form. Jain priests(who follow Mahavira) wear face masks around their mouth because they fear that by talking or coughing they might kill life forms in the air like bacteria & other microorganisms. Point noted.
So by eating plants aren’t we also killing a life?
The hard core vegan might still say no because the plant can’t feel anything, right? They are merely there for our relishing?
Let me counter argue this point scientifically now.
Back in 1966, a fellow named Cleve Backster(research scientist) did an interesting experiment. He connected a plant to a polygraph(which is used as lie detectors). He said the machine registered changes as soon as he began to contemplate burning the plant’s leaves.
He reported observing that a polygraph instrument attached to a plant leaf registered a change in electrical resistance when the plant was harmed or even threatened with harm. He argued that plants perceived human intentions, and as Backster began to investigate further, he also reported a finding that other human thoughts and emotions caused reactions in plants that could be recorded by a polygraph instrument. His work was in part inspired by the research of Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose, who claimed to have discovered that playing certain kinds of music in the area where plants grew caused them to grow faster.
There will always be another section of researchers who would like to counter argue him & that’s exactly what happened. The article was met with wide criticism of his research methods. However Backster gained the interest of other researchers and expanded his experimental range to test for primary perceptions in other life forms such as yogurt, bacteria and human cells.
More recently, in 2004, scientists in Italy & Genmany conducted various experiments that suggests that plants under threat can marshal a positively devilish measure of cunning. They communicate the danger to plants nearby; and also call in help from other creatures.
Biologists at the University of Turin and the Max Planck Institute in Jena were reported to have found evidence that plants sensed — and reacted to — the presence of hungry, leaf-chomping grubs. Their response was to emit an odour similar to lavender. This alerted other plants to the presence of a predator. The intriguing question raised by the study is whether, at the start of the process they describe, there is something that can be termed fear in plants?
The only real difference, that we know of between animals and plants, is that they don’t move like we do, cant really communicate like animals do, and cant look you in the eye during slaughter. That is it. Otherwise there is NO real difference. And they have different means, mechanisms & maybe not yet discovered methods of doing these same things. We need not have the same methods. Dissimilarity doesn’t mean absence.
So to make an argument that since we are compassionate being we should not kill animals. This same argument can be applied to plants too. Even they feel. Just because it’s not widely accepted or ‘proven’ by the scientific community doesn’t mean they aren’t sentient beings.
As an analogy let me put forward a classical argument: the earth is flat. Earlier people believed that the earth is flat & later it was confirmed that we were actually wrong. So ignorance can’t be taken as an argument. Science today can’t be said to be at it’s peak. We are not in a position that science has done it’s work, discovered everything & now is sipping iced tea watching Simpsons. Absolutely not.
As Newton beautifully sums up my above argument in his famous quote: “I was like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.”
No wonder he was a great scientist. He understood that science is a vast ocean full of mystery which is yet to be fathomed into.
So the question is : Is a vegan lifestyle better than a mixed(sometimes called omnivorous) diet?
Its a privilege we have as humans to choose to be a vegetarian or not. It’s a matter of choice. There really is no right or wrong way to go about it. And since at this point in time its a matter of choice, it doesn’t matter. You eat what you choose to eat. Just like we have the right to believe in whatever we wish, religion wise.
After a bit of research, I even found out that it’s not good to switch from one side to the other(veg to non veg or reversal) without seeking medical advice. Our systems are used to a diet since our birth & to switch abruptly is not recommended. A slow medically advised transition is what is always recommended.
I have a quite chilled-out way of looking at the whole debate. It’s like religion.
When you’re born: you get a religion by default. You didn’t have a choice.
When you’re born: you get a diet by default. You didn’t have a choice.
Finally, even AR Rahman was Hindu by birth. But who cares? It’s the music he makes that makes him the legend he’s today, not his religion.
Hope I made sense.
Source:
http://www.spiritualforums.com/vb/showthread.php?t=13162
http://www.hindu.com/seta/2004/04/22/stories/2004042200331600.htm
http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/plants/news-feeling-plants-how-sensitive-flora
Why did the whole world cry when Steve Jobs died?
When Steve Jobs passed away some days back,the whole world showed their love, regards and respect towards the genius artist.
And for someone like me who doesn’t even own a single Apple product (& infact is an Android user), even I shed a silent tear as a tribute. Some people even went a step forward to compare him to the likes of Einstein, Edison etc. But that’s a different story.
Another smaller section of the crowd analyzed the whole situation, made some rational comparisons and found out that actually Dennis Ritchie(the creator of C language) deserves more of such posthumous appreciation (& adulation, maybe) & that there’s no big difference between hard headed businessmen (like Bill Gates etc.) and Steve Jobs.
But I beg to differ.
In my humble opinion, Steve Jobs got this posthumous adulation because of the emotional connect he/his company/his products has made with the masses. Shahrukh Khan gets all the appreciation while the whole crew behind the scene has also worked equally(or maybe more) hard on a film. But SRK makes an emotional connect with the audience. We, humans are an emotional lot. A survey has found out that people often appreciate gifts more than hard cash(of the same denomination of the gift). Why? Aren’t we a rational lot of left brained humans who churn out formulas , punch numbers into spreadsheets, analyze and make ‘rational’ decisions? Probably not( to the extent we believe it to be)
Our right brain is equally strong & in most cases beautifully takes decisions in a snap of a second. The right side of the brain is holistic & can see the whole picture, can love, can spot creativity, can appreciate a piece of art, can make out the difference between a bad sunset picture & an awesome sunset picture. Our right brain is beautiful & together with the left brain decides the fate of any situation, reaction etc.
Our left brain often goes into a phase named “Decision paralysis” which occurs when it over-analyses any situation and goes into a complete spiral making itself numb and ineffective of taking a rational decision. Then it seeks help from the right portion. So together, the right & left make a beautiful combo called the brain. Neither can exist without the another.
Steve Jobs is often known as someone who was a perfectionist when it comes to art. While Bill Gates wanted all the computers to run on Windows OS, he was obviously looking for world domination. When Google launched Android, even they followed a similar path. Their OS was manufacturer neutral i.e. every manufacturer could use it on their hardware. Sounds uncannily similar to Microsoft’s strategy. But Apple didn’t compromise on the hardware. If you want iOS, you’ll have to buy a Mac product. Period. He was definitely not after world domination. All he wanted was to design a perfect piece of engineering marvel and gift it to the world. And that’s exactly what made an emotional connect with the audience.
Today, if we look at each & every celebrity & try to analyze on whose death, we would mourn the most, I’m sure we would have similar names on our minds. The ones who have gone out of their ways to make an emotional connect with us. Beautiful, isn’t it?
Wait a minute, where is my reward?
What happens when a selected bunch of young people get to meet their company’s Senior Vice President & Chief Information Officer (CIO) over dinner in a picturesque farm house?
Intriguing discussions! Discussions that varies from public speaking, work-life balance, career choices, attrition, motivation & what drives it, leadership among various others.
None of the questions thrown were easy, but one question from a friend left me wondering. The question was, ” What should you do when someone steals your credit at office?” In other words, what if you did a great job and then your supervisor(let’s say) steals the credit in front of the team/manager.
Do you -
1. Fight it off & reclaim your credit.
2. Complain to his/her supervisor.
3. Let it go & keep doing your best.
4. Cry yourself to sleep?
5. None of these. Then what else?
After a riveting discussion & experience sharing, it was concluded that letting it go is the best thing to do in the long run. Self-esteem is the ultimate answer, I believe. If you know that you’re awesome, if you know that you’ve it in you, if you know that no one can stop you, then NO ONE actually can. Period.
What do you think?
Why do we tip at restaurants?
Yesterday night, when it was raining heavily in Pune, I ordered a Veg Thali from a nearby restaurant. A kid in his teens rang my doorbell after half an hour. He was partially drenched in rain but kept the food from being soaked.
oOo
I generally tip a waiter as a voluntary incentive for a job well done and seldom as a social compulsion.
A quick search on the Internet on the Why?What?How(much)? of tipping would throw up the following opinions:
1. In America tipping is almost a mandate where the servers get paid lower than the minimum wage & hence the tip make up as a compensation. The business owner can keep the prices of food low & pay the servers less. Good work, good tip. Bad work, bad tip. But tip it is. (Generally varies from 5-15% of the bill)
2. If you don’t tip, the business owner will have to hike the food prices to pay the servers better. In other words, you’ll have to pay for the service in one way or the other.
3. Some communist consider it as a colonial hangover. A quick research on the origin of tipping leads us to England from were it spread to colonial countries. As one only tipped one’s social inferiors, which ideally shouldn’t exist in the brave new world. Tipping is a way of treating servers as servants and not employees. Ideally, if paying for a job well done is the only motto, then we should also pay dentists, doctors, govt. employees(ironically, it’s called bribe in govt. office parlance
) or any other employee who does a great job; but we don’t.
oOo
The bill was Rs. 70. I handed a hundred rupee note & the delivery boy took out 3 ten rupee notes from his pocket. I took only two. He replied in English, “Thank you, sir”
Please share your opinions.
Business khoon mein hai?
In India you need around 165 licenses to open a hotel.
You need around 30-40 lakhs to be a franchisee of any decent joint.
In Madhya Pradesh you may get upto Rs. 25000 if you want to dig up a well for plantation purpose.
9 out of 10 businesses fail to sustain the first five years. Out of the ones that survive, 9 out of 10 fail to run successfully in the next 5 years.
In my humble opinion, I believe that there is a lack of entrepreneurship education/ awareness among the vast majority of the masses in India. The white collared Job class( aka Middle class) parents are still suffering from the Industrial Age hangover where the sole motive of acquiring a good education is to secure a job.
‘Business khoon mein hai’ is a cliche in India. And why not, the knowledge a business owner shares with her children at the dinner table is completely different from what an employee shares with her sons and daughters at the end of the day. What do you think?
