To the extent that switches to lifestyle take attention and willpower, I think it’s often a question of whether those attention and willpower had opportunity costs. I agree that this is hard to test, so we should fall back on experience/theory/common sense. You seem to be asserting that there won’t be opportunity costs, which seems prima facie surprising.
(This is an argument against pushing people to switch to vegnism; it doesn’t provide an argument for pushing people to stop being vegn.)
To the extent that switches to lifestyle take attention and willpower, I think it’s often a question of whether those attention and willpower had opportunity costs. I agree that this is hard to test, so we should fall back on experience/theory/common sense. You seem to be asserting that there won’t be opportunity costs, which seems prima facie surprising.
(This is an argument against pushing people to switch to vegnism; it doesn’t provide an argument for pushing people to stop being vegn.)