That would be like saying "there are unicorns living on a distant star; prove me wrong). Your statement is wrong because the science hasn't been done. Many people would like to know whether an organically grown tomato is "healthier" than an industrially grown tomato (one grown in dead, mineral deficient soil, supplemented by NPK fertiliz…
That would be like saying "there are unicorns living on a distant star; prove me wrong). Your statement is wrong because the science hasn't been done. Many people would like to know whether an organically grown tomato is "healthier" than an industrially grown tomato (one grown in dead, mineral deficient soil, supplemented by NPK fertilizers, genetically modified so it can be sprayed with herbicides and pesticides). Absent the research, reasonable people will just employ their common sense. Answering your statement would also require a scientific definition of health, but that, unfortunately, also doesn't exist. Science, together with its methods, operates within certain rules. Opinions and isolated studies don't make science.
That would be like saying "there are unicorns living on a distant star; prove me wrong). Your statement is wrong because the science hasn't been done. Many people would like to know whether an organically grown tomato is "healthier" than an industrially grown tomato (one grown in dead, mineral deficient soil, supplemented by NPK fertilizers, genetically modified so it can be sprayed with herbicides and pesticides). Absent the research, reasonable people will just employ their common sense. Answering your statement would also require a scientific definition of health, but that, unfortunately, also doesn't exist. Science, together with its methods, operates within certain rules. Opinions and isolated studies don't make science.
Check out Dr. Andrea Love on Substack