Friday, April 10, 2015

Source research

Source A- Fox, Michael A. "Vegetarianism and Planetary Health." Indiana University Press 5.2 (2000): 163-74. Web. 29 Mar. 2015.


Is there any evidence from Source A that supports any of the claims made in the other sources?
Source A and source B both has multiple claims about how a vegetarian diet is good for you and how they can prevent you from having heart disease and possibly stops cancer.
Is there any evidence from Source A that challenges or refutes any of the claims made in the other sources? 
Source A somewhat refutes source C in the event that vegetarianism isn't always a healthy diet since technically eating a cheese pizza, pop, and candy is being "vegetarian".
How does Source A help the reader to better understand the other sources? 
Source A helps build on the fact of source D; it gives the exact percentage that heart disease is reduced when those who are omnivorous begin vegetarian diets.
Imagine your sources as people you are introducing to each other for the first time. How would you introduce them to each other?
I would introduce source A and state how they might know each other (or there relevance; degrees) then introduce source B and include his degrees and lastly show how they both agree or refute to start a conversation between themselves.

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