Michael Pollan makes an interesting argument in his article Our National Eating Disorder. Pollan
introduces the idea of the “omnivore’s dilemma” suggesting that we simply have
too many food choices. For species such as cows or horses, their diet is strict
and set. As herbivores they do not have many options other than grass or
leaves. Same thing goes for those who are strictly carnivores. There is no
wavering from their diet. However, we as omnivores have many more options.
Pollan identifies one of the “central questions of life,” especially for
omnivores, as “what should we have for dinner?” For the human race, the options
are endless. Therefore, we must sectionalize our food- determining what is
healthy and what is not, foods that improve performance and those that will
inhibit our maximum potential, etc. According to Pollan, we strive for order in
the overwhelming amount of options.
With this dilemma that we face has heavily influenced the American
culture. With all the choices we have come to create fads. One example that
Pollan uses is “carbophobia.” Though carbs themselves are not inherently
unhealthy for you, someone along the way determined that they would cause the
doomful end of humans, therefore people stopped consuming them. Instead of
simply cutting back the amount of carbs they were consuming, bread was
completely removed from the dining table. In a way, this is how we as omnivores
solve this dilemma. This is seen over and over again as new diet plans come out
and the latest trends are spread throughout the media.
I found this article really interesting because I had never
thought about this position behind why we eat what we do. Obviously I always
knew that I had a choice, and have asked the famous question “what’s for dinner”
more times than I can count. I also found it interesting how companies
immediately tag-on to these fads to please the customer and yield maximum
benefits.
i have noticed that whatever the current diet for the time is, there seems to be more products coming out about it. I still eat bred regardless of any fad.
ReplyDeleteI like how you analyze the word omnivore and relate it to carnivore and herbivore. I never took this into consideration but since many of us are omnivores we have an endless supply of what we can eat.
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