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William Alcott quotes
None, so far as I know, will affirm, or at least with any show of reason maintain, that anatomy, so far as that goes, is in favor of flesh-eating.
William Alcott
The world, I mean our own portion of it, sometimes seems to me like one mighty slaughter-house - one grand school for the suppression of every kind and tender and brotherly feeling - one grand process of education to the entire destitution of all moral principle - one vast scene of destruction to all moral sensibility, and all sympathy with the woes of those around us. Is it not so?
William Alcott
The destruction of animals for food, in its details and tendencies, involves so much of cruelty as to cause every reflecting individual - not destitute of the ordinary sensibilities of our nature - to shudder.
William Alcott
If perfect health is the best preventive and security against disease, and if a well-selected and properly administered vegetable diet is best calculated to promote and preserve that perfect health, then this part of the subject - what I have ventured to call the medical argument - is at once disposed of. The superiority of the diet I recommend is established beyond the possibility of debate. Now, that this is the case - namely, that this diet is best calculated to promote perfect health - I have no doubt.
William Alcott
No child, I think, can walk through a common market or slaughter-house without receiving moral injury; nor am I quite sure that any virtuous adult can.
William Alcott