In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto

vegetarian



Join best-selling author Michael Pollan (Food Rules, The Botany of Desire) on a fascinating journey to answer the question: What should I eat to be healthy? Cutting through confusion and busting myths and misconceptions, In Defense of Food shows how common sense and old-fashioned wisdom can help us rediscover the pleasures of eating and avoid the chronic diseases so often associated with the modern diet. Pollan’s journey of discovery takes him from the plains of Tanzania, where one of the world’s last remaining tribes of hunter-gatherers still eats the way our ancestors did, to Loma Linda, California, where a group of Seventh Day Adventist vegetarians live longer than almost anyone else on earth, and eventually to Paris, where the French diet, rooted in culture and tradition, proves surprisingly healthy. Along the way he shows how a combination of faulty nutrition science and deceptive marketing practices have encouraged us to replace real food with scientifically engineered “food-like substances.” And he explains why the solution to our dietary woes is in fact remarkably simple: Eat Food. Not Too Much. Mostly Plants.

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2 Comments

  1. I recently watched this film. I think it has some relevant insights regarding the role of industry in the health issues facing the west (though it occasionally falls back upon "Nature Woo" as a solution). Also, while it touches on some narrow case efforts, it never really provides an answer for how the poor can financially afford to eat a more healthy diet. It's good otherwise and provides a reasonable overview of some steps that we can take to improve our health in a modern industrial civilization.

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