Abstract

Clean Meat is an emerging technology which promises to revolutionize the global food market. Alongside technological developments, the social impact of this innovation is being explored. Consumer acceptance will depend on multiple factors. For Orthodox Jews, the critical question will be whether the food can be defined as Kosher. In the absence of an exact precedent in Talmudic case law, scholars have begun to examine which set of principles would govern the status of the meat product. Traditionally, meat is permitted for kosher consumption only when it derives from a kosher species which has been kosher slaughtered in accordance with strict regulations. There is room to suggest that this same set of rules would determine the status of any product derived through cellular agriculture, and thus the source cells would have to be extracted from a kosher species and only after kosher slaughter. Another approach would be to view the process as so different from the traditional growth of meat that it may be defined as kosher, even where traditional meat would not. Three determining factors will be: 1. The source of the original cells from which clean meat will be produced (animal species and cell type) 2. The nature of the growth medium and 3. The exact nature of the process involved, which will determine whether the final product is considered a new entity or merely an inheritance of the starter cells. An authoritative ruling must be based on an in-depth appreciation of the scientific methods involved.

Highlights

  • Clean meat known as cultured, cell-based, or lab-grown meat refers to a meat product created entirely in a lab through methods of cell culture and tissue engineering, as opposed to muscle tissue which grew in an animal

  • The kosher question becomes especially significant when bearing in mind that, as of 2018, at least 4 companies involved in the development of cellular agriculture are based in Israel (Benjamin, 2018)

  • Viewing the original cells as a meat entity means that the normal rules governing meat would apply to it. The main concern this raises is that even meat from a kosher species is forbidden for consumption until the animal has undergone ritual slaughter

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Summary

A Jewish Religious Perspective on Cellular Agriculture

Reviewed by: Raul Rodriguez-Herrera, Universidad Autónoma de Coahuila, Mexico Guadalupe Virginia Nevárez-Moorillón, Autonomous University of Chihuahua, Mexico. There is room to suggest that this same set of rules would determine the status of any product derived through cellular agriculture, and the source cells would have to be extracted from a kosher species and only after kosher slaughter. Another approach would be to view the process as so different from the traditional growth of meat that it may be defined as kosher, even where traditional meat would not.

INTRODUCTION
CULTURE METHOD
Nullification
A new entity
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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