Colin McNickle At Large

Weekend essay: To eat a talking pea

“If peas can talk, should we eat them?” asked a very deep New York Times “think piece” a few years back.

 
To which more than a few people might retort: “Yes, but only after you drown them in hot butter!”

 
Michael Marder, author of “Plant-Thinking: A Philosophy of Vegetal Life,” posited that because research suggests common peas can “communicate” — and “inquiring into justifications for consuming vegetal beings thus reconceived” — we have reached “one of the final frontiers of dietary ethics.”

 
Do tell.

 
Mr. Marder cited the peer-reviewed findings of Israeli scientists “that a pea plant subjected to drought conditions communicated its stress to other such plants, with which it shared its soil.” Roots “talk” and other pea plants activate “appropriate defenses and adaptive responses,” he said.

 
Well, yes, they do

 
But while the “renewable” aspects of perennial plants may be accepted by humans “as a gift of vegetal being” and integrated into their diets, he adds, “it would be harder to justify the cultivation of peas and other annual plants, the entire being of which humans devote to externally imposed ends.”

 
Huh?

 
“In other words,”Marder attempted to translate, “ethically inspired decisions cannot postulate the abstract conceptual unity of all plants … .”

 
It seems, he says, the recent findings in cellular and molecular biology “mean that eating preferences … must practically differentiate between vegetal what-ness and who-ness, while striving to keep the latter intact.”

 
Thank goodness he cleared that up, eh?

 
Obviously, human rights for annual vegetable plants will be The Next Great Cause?
Marder’s book, by the way, generated a long Los Angeles Times review that, printed out, consumed 21 pages of standard copying paper. Offered the reviewer:

 
“(T)here is much of value in ‘Plant-Thinking’ for any reader interested in passionate arguments carefully designed to help us detox from our own humanist arrogance.”
Being a card-carrying member of the American Humanist Arrogance Society, there’s only one appropriate response:

 
“Hey, can I have the singing pearl onions with those talking peas?”

 
Colin McNickle is a senior fellow and media specialist at the Allegheny Institute for Public Policy (cmcnickle@alleghenyinstitute.org).

Colin McNickle

Colin received his B.G.S. from Ohio University. The 40-year journalism veteran joined the Institute in October 2016. That followed a 22-year career with the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 18 as director of editorial pages for Trib Total Media. Prior that, Colin had a long and varied career in media — from radio, newspapers and magazines, to United Press International and The Associated Press.

Picture of Colin McNickle
Colin McNickle

Colin received his B.G.S. from Ohio University. The 40-year journalism veteran joined the Institute in October 2016. That followed a 22-year career with the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 18 as director of editorial pages for Trib Total Media. Prior that, Colin had a long and varied career in media — from radio, newspapers and magazines, to United Press International and The Associated Press.

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