Modern culture maintains sharp categorical distinctions between pharmaceuticals (medicine), dietary supplements, and food — distinctions codified in law, enforced by regulatory bodies, enforced by social norms, and internalized by individuals who may accept healthy food enthusiastically while rejecting "medicine" for the same condition, or vice versa. This paper argues that these distinctions, while useful for regulatory and safety purposes, are philosophically moot at the level of the individual's relationship to their own body and health. All three categories share a single defining feature: they are substances taken by a living organism for the purpose of optimal physiological function. The biochemistry does not recognize the category. Aspirin came from willow bark (food). Metformin came from French lilac (food). Statins came from fungal metabolites (food-adjacent). Vitamin D is simultaneously a nutrient and a hormone. Turmeric is simultaneously a spice and an anti-inflammatory agent. The boundary between "medicine" and "food" is historically contingent, culturally constructed, and pharmacologically arbitrary. The practical implication is direct: a person who rejects pharmaceutical treatment for a documented medical condition while accepting supplements, functional foods, or dietary interventions for the same condition is not exercising principled philosophical judgment — they are navigating a culturally constructed category distinction that their biochemistry does not respect. And a person who accepts pharmaceuticals but rejects supplements or dietary optimization is making the same error from the opposite direction. The GILE framework's Environment dimension encompasses the body's full biochemical environment — all substances, regardless of regulatory classification. Optimal Environment management requires engaging the full substance landscape without arbitrary categorical exclusions.
Brandon Charles Emerick (Tue,) studied this question.