the understanding of the process is more important.
Why?
Well, to the extent that I agree, I'd say because it helps people understand where their food comes from. It's one of those hypocrisy things - in my experience, a lot of people who eat meat tend to be very squeamish about what has to happen to an animal to turn it into a delicious steak. I mean, it's certainly one thing to be put off your appetite in the immediate sense by gore, and that's perfectly reasonable, but most people I've talked to prefer not to think about it at all, ever, and that tells me that, on some level, they aren't really okay with it, and need to lie (by omission) to themselves in order to make life more convenient. Myself, I'm a happy omnivore, so I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with eating meat - but I
do think something's wrong with needing to ignore the life that went into it.
If you can't accept your actions' consequences, don't take them, basically. It's all opinion, and I don't really go looking for occasions to bludgeon people with this one, but here we are.
Anyway, the reason I came in here to post: I had an idea earlier today that involved packing circles of various sizes. Evidently this is outrageously complicated - skimming various Wikipedia pages has filled me with a sense of dread as to what actually trying to implement some of this stuff would involve learning. There's just so much! Not that it isn't awesome, it's just terrifying how complicated a problem this turns out to be.