Saturday, May 31, 2025

Plutarch on Eating Meat

Plutarch’s (Animal) Lives and the Matter of Eating

Plutarch (ca. 45–120 CE) wrote about the virtues of historical people. In a similar vein, consider the merits of wild and domestic animals who are essentially without vice and do not seek to control the bodies or minds of others. Truth is in small lives, not necessarily in the history of mighty men. Therefore, we can see among our nonhuman relatives the virtues of generosity, patience, and forgiveness. Can we say the same of many people who abuse animals and only perceive them as food? In the words of renowned classicist Edith Hamilton, “Plutarch was the first man to write about treating animals kindly” (Plutarch vol. 1, xvi). A key to Plutarch is that he focuses on greatness of character or doing good in spite of circumstances; the emphasis is not on power. In contrast, place that idea next to big game trophy hunters or circus/entertainment animal producers, as only a few instances.

What is the necessity of life? After reflection, one comes to realize it’s the same for plants, animals, insects, and humans (even microbes) – to survive and pass along genes. What then is the ethical business of life? That is, contemplate who among all living species evinces truth, goodness, and tolerance over militaristic or corporate control of others. Plutarch questions why one would put to her lips dead flesh she’s implicit in killing. Corpses have become food in the human ethos. He asks how one could eat that being who only just before slaughter was communicating, walking, and living in animated consciousness. Given that picture, imagine how horrified he’d be with concentrated animal feeding operations. Nonetheless, about two thousand years ago Plutarch says that for humans, animals as food contradicts nature and is unnecessary, compared with obligate carnivores. For example, humans do not eat lions or wolves, he says. Instead, we kill animals who are, in his words, harmless and gentle.

Nature gives life to animals, and we rob them of that vitality for our pleasure, not for our sustenance. Moreover, how much food is wasted uselessly, notes Plutarch, in the feeding of animals whose bodies are later often discarded partly uneaten. We are not built as carnivores, Plutarch avers. How could a human, he asks, entirely eat with little bites a cow or pig while it’s still alive. Rather than possessing beaks, claws, talons, or large teeth to gnaw raw flesh, we violently employ mallets, machines, knives, and guns. Furthermore, the dead animal must be butchered, cooked, and seasoned so meticulously for consumption that it’s not as it was when alive; it has been deceptively transformed. We see this dark shadow in how parents misinform their children about the origins of hamburgers, chicken nuggets, or hot dogs.

If, as Plutarch asks, meat is delectable, why then must we treat it with vinegar, honey, salt, pepper, olive oil, wine, herbs, spices, cheese, etc.? He intimates how such cooking and piquant preparations actually embalm the animal for human ingestion. Plutarch sees the problem not in the stomach (or physiology) but in the temperament of greed (or mind) that is willing to torture animals and fatten them as human food. Where he sees and queries, most of us simply veil our eyes and follow a custom. Yet, habits can be modified and improved.

Preceding much contemporary animal studies (to say nothing of Buddhists, Hindus, Jains, etc.), Plutarch postulates that animals have “souls” in their intelligence, feelings, and imaginations building from the ideas of Pythagoras and Empedocles who say justice is fair treatment of other living beings. As with tyrants, many people wield force over animals. Anticipating Immanuel Kant, Plutarch perspicaciously asserts that cruelty to animals corrodes one’s moral character; he goes further by suggesting that harming animals is a form of celebratory lawlessness against nature. Whose disposition and hands, we ask, will continue to be stained by disregard for all life forms? Who among us is willing to change ways?

References

Hamilton, Edith. Introduction. Plutarch: Selected Lives and Essays. Louise Ropes Loomis, trans. Roslyn, NY: Walter J. Black, 1951. vii-xxiv.

Plutarch. “The Eating of Meat.” Plutarch: Selected Lives and Essays. Louise Ropes Loomis, trans. Roslyn, NY: Walter J. Black, 1951. Vol. 2, 333-339.

- Gregory F. Tague, Ph.D. and Fredericka A. Jacks

Copyright©2025 by Gregory F. Tague. All Rights Reserved. This post was generated by human brains and not by machine AI algorithms. Pixabay image by Pezibear.