Titles

Peter Singer & Jim Mason

The Way We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter

Peter Singer & Jim Mason

336 pages | 2nd May, 2006 | Non-fiction | Health; Diets & Weight Loss

Peter Singer & Jim Mason

A thought-provoking look at how what we eat profoundly affects all living things—and how we can make more ethical food choices

Five Principles for Making Conscientious Food Choices

  1. Transparency: We have the right to know how our food is produced.
  2. Fairness: Producing food should not impose costs on others.
  3. Humanity: Inflicting unnecessary suffering on animals is wrong.
  4. Social Responsibility: Workers are entitled to decent wages and working conditions.
  5. Needs: Preserving life and health justifies more than other desires.

Peter Singer, the groundbreaking ethicist who “may be the most controversial philosopher alive” (The New Yorker), now sets his critical sights on the food we buy and eat: where it comes from, how it’s produced, and whether it was raised humanely. Teaming up once again with attorney Jim Mason, his coauthor on the acclaimed Animal Factories, Singer explores the impact our food choices have on humans, animals, and the environment.

In The Way We Eat, Singer and Mason examine the eating habits of three American families with very different diets. They track down the sources of each family’s food to probe the ethical issues involved in its production and marketing. What kinds of meat are most humane to eat? Is “organic” always better? Wild fish or farmed? Recognizing that not all of us will become vegetarians, Singer and Mason offer ways to make the best food choices. As they point out: “You can be ethical without being fanatical.”

Peter Singer is widely acknowledged as the father of the animal rights movement and one of the most renowned writers on contemporary ethics. He is co-founder of The Life You Can Save, an organization that aims to help those living in extreme poverty; and Animals Australia, that country’s largest and most effective animal organization. His many other books include Why Vegan?, The Life You Can Save, Writings on an Ethical Life, Rethinking Life and Death, and Practical Ethics. Since 1999, Singer has served as Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University’s Center for Human Values. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.

Jim Mason is the author of An Unnatural Order and the coauthor of Animal Factories. He is also an attorney and the fifth generation of a Missouri farming family.

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US: Rodale Books