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This article discusses how difficult it is to be morally consistent when choosing what to eat. Applying a moral justification in a consistent manner may result in some unorthodox diets, such as one that just avoids pig and octopus. I distinguish two ways in which we might be inconsistent in our approach to food. We might fail to apply our morals in a consistent way, or we might fail to put our morals into practice at all. I argue that the latter represents a greater failing. Given the complexity of making food choices, the former is more excusable.

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This page is a summary of: DIETARY DOUBLE-THINK, Think, January 2019, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s1477175619000022.
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