Food
I have written many times on the issue of food and food
supplies for past topics, with the most recent being: The Impact of Population
Growth
(https://www.philomadrid.com/2018/12/from-lawrence-sunday-philomadrid_14.html).
My general ethical and political position on the topic of
food supplies is the following. In principle countries already produce or can
produce enough food for everyone so none will go hungry. I discuss this issue
in the essay mentioned above. Briefly, the issue is more of management and
distribution rather than finance and quantity. And large corporations have
already shown us the way on how to deliver products throughout the world
cheaply and effective.
My other position is that if people need charity it’s
because their government is abusing their human rights. And today my position
is vindicated by the situation in the UK as reported by the United Nations
Human Rights Office. “GENEVA (22 May 2019) - The UK Government’s policies have
led to the systematic immiseration of millions across Great Britain,…….”(1) and
“Although the United Kingdom is the world’s fifth largest economy, one fifth of
its population (14 million people) live in poverty, and 1.5 million of them
experienced destitution in 2017.” (2).
The British example is a modern case of poverty in a
supposed advanced first world country where either by intention or consequence
of political policies or ideology people are forced into poverty to the extent
that they rely on food charities. The Trussell Trust reported handing out
1.6million three-day food supplies between April 2018- March2019. (3)
It might be argued that political ideology, and extreme
political ideologies in particular, are fated to cause disasters resulting in
many people becoming poor leading to famine as we know from some historical
examples. The Neo Liberal policies of Tory governments in the UK have led to
the above documented social disaster. Historical extremes include the Holodomor
Famine in Soviet Ukraine in 1932-1933 and the Great Chinese Famine in 1959 and
1961. Some might even argue that the Great depression of the 1930 in the USA
was also a failure of the capitalist system.
The philosophical hard question is: under what legitimacy or
mandate do political groups (parties) who hold power are allowed to introduce
policies that can adversely affect the welfare of people? At face value the
answer is no justification at all. But this question should be contrasted in
the context of sovereignty of states and the right for governments to rule (govern), at
least under their own constitution.
On the other side of the food topic spectrum, we have production
of food. The problems here start from what to grow as food staples and where to
grow it. For example should cattle be kept in large pens or left roaming in
open fields? In many cases cattle are kept in large forest or jungle clearings
without proper care of the land itself. All have positive and negative
consequences and in many cases we know precisely what the consequences are: for
example in the case of animals the more they are kept under unnatural
conditions the more likely they'll be affected by infectious diseases which
spread quickly in the population.
The economics of food production and food supplies is that
those who are responsible for growing our food or even preparing our food are
not necessarily fairly paid as much as those who manage food. This report from
Ireland, which I found at random from Google, is a good example: 'We might as
well be giving lambs away for free': Sheep farmers protest over 'savage' price
cuts -
Independent.ie.(4)
The issue goes up the chain to the point of sale which
includes fast food outlets or large supermarkets. Job-Applications.com (5), USA, an employment
agency who specialise in the fast food industry (found at random in Google),
report an average wage for a cook in a fast food restaurant to be between $7.25
– $9.00 per hour. Compare this with the figure reported in Trading Economics,
for the average hourly rate in the USA of $23.31. In other words the food we
eat might involve damage to the environment and even financial exploitation of
some people working in the industry.
Indeed food is a key human activity especially in the
production and supply of food and by definition that creates issues in
economics and politics which imply philosophical issues. An important issue in
the philosophy of food includes the aesthetics of food. Basically, can food be
art? Of course, the primary purpose of food is to provide nourishment for
survival: a Trussell Trust food parcel can hardly be described as art but then
again the Las Meninas can hardly be described as art given that paintings in
the 17th Century were more a vehicle for social status than art for art sake.
I would argue that the status of art can apply to food in the
same way that the title of art can apply to paintings, literature and music.
But, like music, paintings or literature, not all examples of food are examples
of art. The biggest drawback of food as art is that each example of food as art
can only be enjoyed by one person; only one person can consume the artness of
food unlike say painting. Basically, the “artness” of food must reside in the
taste and digestive after effects of the food rather than how the food looks.
Even more, for something to be art it must be created or made by human beings.
We do not really attribute artness to nature, but we certainly attribute beauty
to nature. A particular peach might be exceptionally beautiful, but does that
make a peach melba made with this beautiful peach a work of art? Certainly not
it’s the chef or cook that will turn a beautiful peach into an artistic peach
melba.
Another quirky aspect of food as art is that the work of art
itself has to be destroyed for a human being to enjoy the full artness of the food.
The half life of an artistic piece of food can be measured in hours: the half
life of Las Meninas is probably hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years.
And the residual question for us is this: is the artness of the piece of food
we have in front of us, as individuals, in the food itself or is the artness in
the recipe of the food?
At the very least we have to accept that the chef of an
artisitc piece of food must be able to recreate his/her artistic creation to the
same standard and quality every time. This is very similar to music, where the
composer of the music is not necessarily the one who will reproduce the artness
for us, the audience. The artness of music is usually reproduced for us by
others, although one might be hard pressed to claim logical identity if someone
reproduced a work by The Beatles or Elvis Presley. Thus, can a dish or cake
recipe have the lofty status and majesty of say the music score by Beethoven of
the No. 9 Symphony, Ode to Joy? Is the recipe of a Christmas pudding the
equivalent of the score for Ode to Joy in gastronomy?
One of the main discussion issues in aesthetics is the fact
that the appreciation of art is subjective. Some people like the Las Meninas in
the Prado and some don’t, but there is no question that Las Meninas is art. But
like a chef, Velazques was himself creating a subjective work which of course
people have still hailed as a masterpiece. But the bottom line is that this is
the subjective work of an individual in the same subjective way that someone
may or may not like the painting.
But unlike a painting or a piece of music, one cannot step
away from a piece of food if one does not like that food or worse, say if one
is allergic to one of the ingredients. In the involved/implicated debate we are
implicated in the Las Meninas but fully involved, like the pig in an English
breakfast, in the case of the Christmas pudding. We can walk away from the Las
Meninas, but once we bite into a slice of Christmas pudding, there is no going
back.
And this leads us to a serious question on whether to afford
the status of art to food. Food can cause us harm in a way in which the Ode to
Joy will never do no matter how much we hate it. Can we declare that: art ought
not cause harm to people? Maybe we might add art must not cause harm when
appreciated as art? Sure if the painting we call Las Meninas fell on someone it
will cause them serious harm, but that’s not what I mean. A modern context example
of this moral question would be a laser display that might cause harm to those
exposed to the laser beam.
I conclude with three questions: Could it well be that a
necessary condition for the status of art has is to be “do no harm” to those
enjoying the art? And would the potential of causing harm, for example
allergenic ingredients in the food, an a priori factor to exclude food from
being art? But when food causes harm, eg fast food, who is morally and legally
responsible; those who provide the food or the state who allows such practices?
Best Lawrence
(1) UN expert laments UK’s ‘doubling down on failed
anti-poor policies’ (press release)
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24636&LangID=E
(2) Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and
human rights (Great Britain)
https://undocs.org/A/HRC/41/39/Add.1
(3) The Trussell Trust – End of year stats
https://www.trusselltrust.org/news-and-blog/latest-stats/end-year-stats/
(4) 'We might as well be giving lambs away for free': Sheep
farmers protest over 'savage' price cuts
- Independent.ie
https://www.independent.ie/business/farming/sheep/lamb-prices/we-might-as-well-be-giving-lambs-away-for-free-sheep-farmers-protest-over-savage-price-cuts-38128115.html
(5) Fast Food Restaurant Job Salaries -
Job-Applications.com USA
https://www.job-applications.com/fast-food-restaurant-jobs/fast-food-salaries/
(6) Trading Economics - United States Average Hourly Wages
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/wages
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