4.6 • 12.2K Ratings
🗓️ 29 August 2022
⏱️ 67 minutes
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Most of us worry about money sometimes, but what if we changed the way we thought about our relationship to finances? Today’s guest, William MacAskill, offers a framework in which to do just that. He calls it effective altruism. One of the core arguments of effective altruism is that we all ought to consider giving away a significant chunk of our income because we know, to a mathematical near certainty, that several thousand dollars could save a life.
Today we’re going to talk about the whys and wherefores of effective altruism. This includes how to get started on a very manageable and doable level (which does not require you to give away most of your income), and the benefits this practice has on both the world and your own psyche.
MacAskill is an associate professor of philosophy at Oxford University and one of the founders of the effective altruism movement. He has a new book out called, What We Owe the Future, where he makes a case for longtermism, a term used to describe developing the mental habit of thinking about the welfare of future generations.
In this episode we talk about:
Podcast listeners can get 50% off What We Owe the Future using the code WWOTF50 at Bookshop.org.
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0:00.0 | This is the 10% happier podcast. |
0:06.4 | I'm Dan Harris. |
0:08.8 | Hey people, I think many, if not most, if not all of us, worry about money sometimes. |
0:16.4 | I certainly do, and I'm a little sheepish to admit it, given how fortunate I've been |
0:20.7 | in my life and yet I still worry about finances quite a bit actually. |
0:25.6 | My guest today has been one of the most provocative voices in my head when it comes to how I think |
0:31.1 | about spending the money I'm lucky enough to earn and by extension what my obligations |
0:36.1 | are as a human. |
0:38.4 | Will McCaskill is an associate professor of philosophy at Oxford University and one |
0:42.0 | of the founders have something called the effective altruism movement. |
0:46.5 | I'm going to let him define that, but as I understand it, one of their core arguments |
0:50.5 | is that we all ought to consider giving away a significant chunk, maybe 10%, maybe way |
0:55.9 | more of our income because we know to a mathematical near certainty that several thousand dollars |
1:03.1 | can save somebody's life. |
1:05.9 | The beauty and the genius of McCaskill's approach is that he's not at all strident |
1:10.2 | or self-righteous or dogmatic about any of this. |
1:13.4 | Just as the Buddha does, McCaskill frames his message in terms of both collective well-being |
1:19.6 | and personal self-interest. |
1:22.1 | As you're going to hear him describe, he practices what he preaches and he believes |
1:25.8 | his life is way happier as a result. |
1:28.7 | I should say I'm not the only one who's been moved by McCaskill's message. |
1:32.5 | You may remember a few months ago we had the meditation teacher Matthew Brenn silver on |
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