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The Humanities of Diet

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1914 book by Henry S. Salt
The Humanities of Diet
First edition cover
AuthorHenry S. Salt
LanguageEnglish
Subject
Genre
  • Essays
  • dialogues
  • poetry
PublisherVegetarian Society
Publication date
January 1914
Publication placeUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Media typePrint
Pages70
OCLC 21491494

The Humanities of Diet: Some Reasonings and Rhymings is a 1914 book by the British writer and social reformer Henry S. Salt. Published in Manchester by the Vegetarian Society, it combines short essays, dialogues, and poems in support of ethical vegetarianism and animal rights. The book drew on Salt's earlier writings on the subject, including an article of the same name in The Fortnightly Review in 1896 and a pamphlet published by William Reeves in 1897, and added further material.

In later animal ethics writing, Salt's phrase "logic of the larder" has been used in discussions of the replaceability argument, the view that farmed animals can benefit from being bred for food if their lives are worth living.

Background

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Henry S. Salt (1851–1939)

Henry S. Salt (1851–1939) was born in Naini Tal, India, and educated at Eton College and King's College, Cambridge. He taught classics at Eton from 1875 to 1884, then settled at Tilford in Surrey, where he became a vegetarian and wrote on humanitarianism and social reform.[1]

During the late 1880s and 1890s, Salt published pamphlets and books on vegetarianism and animal rights, including Flesh or Fruit? An Essay on Food Reform (1888) and Animals' Rights Considered in Relation to Social Progress (1892). His later writing also addressed corporal punishment, literary subjects, and political topics.[1]

Publication history

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Salt published an article titled "The Humanities of Diet" in The Fortnightly Review in September 1896.[2] In 1897, it was expanded and reissued as a 22-page pamphlet, published in London by William Reeves as no. 23 in The Humanitarian League's Publications series.[3] [4]

In January 1914, the Vegetarian Society in Manchester published The Humanities of Diet: Some Reasonings and Rhymings, a 70-page volume that reprinted earlier writings by Salt alongside new material.[5] [6]

Content

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The book combines short essays, dialogues, and poems. Its themes include opposition to slaughter and meat-eating, criticism of indifference to animal suffering, and satire of arguments used to defend killing animals for food.[7]

Several pieces present arguments about humane diet, including "The Humanities of Diet", "Grace Before Meat", "Logic of the Larder", and "The Moralist at the Shambles". Others use parody, dialogue, or character sketches, including "A Chat with Professor Grillman", "Paterfamilias at the Breakfast Table", and "Mr. Facing-Both-Ways". The volume also includes poems and dramatic pieces centred on animals and slaughter, including "A Cow Mourning for Her Calf", "The Dying Ox", and "Voices of the Voiceless", as well as seasonal or topical pieces including "The Joys of Christmas" and Christmas sketches.[7]

Reception

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Manchester City News review, January 1914

Reviewing the book in January 1914, the Manchester City News described Salt as writing from a humane opposition to meat-eating, using satire and parody against "the human carnivore". It described the essays as serious, though often "very wittily serious", and praised the verse as sharp-edged. The review noted Salt's comparison between a "mixed diet" and cannibalism, and concluded that the book combined "wisdom as well as wit".[8]

The Vegetarian Messenger and Health Review described the book as a contribution to vegetarian literature, quoting Salt's description of opposition to flesh-eating as a protest against a practice he called a "relic of savagery".[9] The review also commented on the book's physical production, describing it as well printed and bound in green cloth to match earlier Vegetarian Society editions of Salt's work.[9]

Legacy

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In animal ethics, the replaceability argument holds that farmed animals can be said to benefit from being bred for food, because demand for meat is the reason they are brought into existence. On this view, if such animals have lives worth living, replacing animal products with alternatives can be presented as depriving them of lives. Salt is credited with using the phrase "logic of the larder" for this position in The Humanities of Diet.[10] [11] [12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Oxbury, H. F. (23 September 2004). "Salt, Henry Shakespear Stephens (1851–1939), classical scholar and publicist" . Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37932 . Retrieved 2 February 2026. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ "The Humanities of Diet". The Fortnightly Review . 60 (357): 426–435. September 1896. Retrieved 2 February 2026 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Salt, Henry S. (1897). The Humanities of Diet. London: W. Reeves – via Google Books.
  4. ^ "Humanitarian League Publications". Henry S. Salt Society. Retrieved 2 February 2026.
  5. ^ Aoyagi, Akiko; Shurtleff, William (26 March 2022). History of Vegetarianism and Veganism Worldwide (1430 BCE to 1969): Extensively Annotated Bibliography and Sourcebook (PDF). Soyinfo Center. p. 805. ISBN 978-1-948436-73-1.
  6. ^ "Books Received" . The Guardian . 13 January 1914. p. 12. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
  7. ^ a b "The Humanities of Diet". Henry S. Salt Society. Retrieved 2 February 2026.
  8. ^ "Humanity-and a Sword" . Manchester City News . 24 January 1914. p. 2. Retrieved 23 February 2026 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  9. ^ a b "Humanities of Diet". The Vegetarian Messenger and Health Review . February 1914.
  10. ^ Lamey, Andy (28 March 2019). "The Logic of the Larder". Duty and the Beast: Should We Eat Meat in the Name of Animal Rights?. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316672693.008. ISBN 978-1-316-67269-3.
  11. ^ Robison-Greene, Rachel (6 October 2022). "Meat Replacements and the Logic of the Larder". Prindle Post. Prindle Institute for Ethics . Retrieved 1 February 2026.
  12. ^ Matheny, Gaverick; Chan, Kai M. A. (1 December 2005). "Human Diets and Animal Welfare: the Illogic of the Larder" . Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics . 18 (6): 579–594. doi:10.1007/s10806-005-1805-x. ISSN 1573-322X.
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