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6 Minute English

Is it wrong to eat plants?

6 Minute English

BBC

Language Learning, Education

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 29 June 2023

⏱️ 6 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We are kind to animals. What about plants?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is a download from BBC Learning English. To find out more, visit our website.

0:18.0

Hello, this is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil.

0:22.0

And I'm Rob.

0:23.0

Many people these days choose not to eat meat, and for vegetarians eating animals is wrong.

0:30.0

But what about digging up a carrot or picking apples from a tree? Is that wrong too?

0:36.0

I don't think so, Neil. Plants aren't alive in the same way as animals, are they?

0:41.0

They can't think or feel pain, and even vegetarians need to eat something.

0:46.0

Fruit, vegetables, rice beans, they all come from plants.

0:50.0

It's true that plants don't have brains or nerves, but according to some scientists, they're much more than passive things rooted in the ground.

1:00.0

Plants can learn and remember, they solve problems, and can even recognise other plants in their family.

1:07.0

So, given the amazing things plants do, is it right to eat them?

1:12.0

That's what we'll be discussing in this programme, and as usual, we'll be learning some new useful vocabulary as well.

1:19.0

But first, I have a question for you, Neil. Anyone who's seen cows grazing knows it's usually animals that eat plants.

1:27.0

But some plants have turned the evolutionary tables to eat animals instead.

1:32.0

So, which tropical plant is famous for trapping insects to eat?

1:37.0

Is it A, the corpse flower, B, the American skunk cabbage, or C, the Venus fly trap?

1:44.0

I think it's C, the Venus fly trap.

1:47.0

Ok, Neil, we'll find out if that's the right answer later in the programme.

1:51.0

Plants have been on the planet for hundreds of millions of years longer than humans, and have used that time to evolve special skills.

2:00.0

Here's Professor Rick Carbon, a biologist at the University of California, explaining more to James Wong, botanist and presenter of BBC Radio 4 programme, is eating plants wrong.

2:12.0

Without eyes, plants can perceive a lot of information about light, without noses, plants can perceive chemical information, without ears, plants can perceive sounds.

2:25.0

And so, we've come to realise that plants are very perceptive about what's going on in their environments.

...

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