Jacques Louis Buttner (born 1876) was a French American physician and vegetarianism activist. Buttner obtained his M.D. from Yale Medical School in 1909 and received the Campbell Gold Medal for the highest rank on his examination and the Keese Prize for his thesis. In 1916, Buttner was described by the editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association as a "recognized representative in the literature of vegetarianism." He argued for vegetarianism from a scientific basis. Buttner practiced medicine in New Haven, Connecticut. He was a member of the New Haven County Medical Association. In 1923, The New International Encyclopedia'''s entry for vegetarianism noted that "Buttner described a vegetarian as one who does not habitually make use of flesh food, in contradistinction to the habitual meat eater." Buttner is best known for his vegetarian book A Fleshless Diet, published in 1910. It was widely reviewed in medical journals with a mixed response. Buttner argued that comparative anatomy and nutrition demonstrates that man is suited for a fleshless diet and that meat is dangerous and unnecessary. His recommended diet consisted of vegetables, eggs and milk. Buttner wrote that "It is not illogical for vegetarians to use milk and eggs, as these animal products are distinctly less toxic than meat and also less likely to be disease-laden. They are obtained with a minimum of suffering on the part of the animals which furnish them to us." A review in the American Physical Education Review, praised the book for compiling useful dietetic research but commented that it failed to show scientific discretion in the selected material. A review in the Journal of the American Medical Association recommended the book as a reference work whether or not one accepts Buttner's conclusions. A review in The Medical Standard, noted that the book was a "piece of special pleading for the propaganda which it is designed to promote [...] We may say this, however, for Dr.