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You Are What You Eat By Michael Pollan

Satisfactory Essays

“You are what you eat” is a famous quote said by French physician Anthelme Brillat-Savarin. If this were to be true we would be walking talking corn people according to Michael Pollan’s book the Omnivore's Dilemma. In his book he tried to answer a question so simple yet complex :”What should I have for dinner?” At first glance this question can be very simple basing solely off personal experience yet when truly looked at you have more questions you have to ask yourself;How many calories are in this?Is this a GMO?How much fat and sugar is in this? What do all these things even mean? Throughout his novel he explores the food chain from the tiniest of seed to the questionable pop tart.Michael Pollan thoroughly convinces you why you should eat …show more content…

The antibiotics these animals consume with their corn at this very moment are selecting, in their gut and wherever else in the environment they end up, for new strains of resistant bacteria that will someday infect us and withstand the drugs we depend on to treat that infection.”(Pollan 81) This statement shows that the diet of the animals we eat is directly related to us while also explaining how the antibiotics they take will eventually affect us.Through these examples Pollan explains why synthetic nitrogen and processed meat are bad for human-beings.
Polan’s weakest rhetorical device that was used in the Omnivore’s Dilemma was his use of ethos. “In Ames the following afternoon I met a Mexican American agronomist named Ricardo Salvador, a professor at Iowa state University, who told me he’d had a similar reaction the first time he'd seen kernels littering Iowa roads in October.”(Polan 58) This statement gives an expert’s opinion of how the reader should feel about corn being scattered across the road. The professor later references a statement by Friar Sahagún “If they saw dry grains of maize scattered on the ground, they quickly gathered them up, saying “Our Sustenance suffereth it lieth weeping. If we should not gather it up, it would accuse us before our Lord. It would say,”O, Our Lord,”this vassal picked me not up when I lay scattered upon the ground. Punish him!Or perhaps we should starve.”(Polan 58)

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