Doing Good Better Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference by William MacAskill
7,872 ratings, 4.17 average rating, 967 reviews
Open Preview
Doing Good Better Quotes Showing 1-30 of 51
“One additional unit of income can do a hundred times as much to the benefit the extreme poor as it can to benefit you or I [earning the typical US wage of $28,000 or ‎£18,000 per year]. [I]t's not often you have two options, one of which is a hundred times better than the other. Imagine a happy hour where you could either buy yourself a beet for $5 or buy someone else a beer for 5¢. If that were the case, we'd probably be pretty generous – next round's on me! But that's effectively the situation we're in all the time. It's like a 99% off sale, or buy one, get ninety-nine free. It might be the most amazing deal you'll see in your life.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“The challenge for us is this: How can we ensure that, when we try to help others, we do so as effectively as possible?”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“We very often fail to think as carefully about helping others as we could, mistakenly believing that applying data and rationality to a charitable endeavor robs the act of virtue. And that means we pass up opportunities to make a tremendous difference.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“People who had previously purchased a “green” product were significantly more likely to both lie and steal than those who had purchased the conventional product. Their demonstration of ethical behavior subconsciously gave them license to act unethically when the chance arose.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Another common recommendation is to turn lights off when you leave a room, but lighting accounts for only 3% of household energy use, so even if you used no lighting at all in your house you would save only a fraction of a metric ton of carbon emissions. Plastic bags have also been a major focus of concern, but even on very generous estimates, if you stopped using plastic bags entirely you'd cut out 10kg CO2eq per year, which is only 0.4% of your total emissions. Similarly, the focus on buying locally produced goods is overhyped: only 10% of the carbon footprint of food comes from transportation whereas 80% comes from production, so what type of food you buy is much more important than whether that food is produced locally or internationally. Cutting out red meat and dairy for one day a week achieves a greater reduction in your carbon footprint than buying entirely locally produced food. In fact, exactly the same food can sometimes have higher carbon footprint if it's locally grown than if it's imported: one study found that the carbon footprint from locally grown tomatoes in northern Europe was five times as great as the carbon footprint from tomatoes grown in Spain because the emissions generated by heating and lighting greenhouses dwarfed the emissions generated by transportation.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“When thinking about risk from transport, you can think directly in terms of minutes of life lost per hour of travel. Each time you travel, you face a slight risk of getting into a fatal accident, but the chance of getting into a fatal accident varies dramatically depending on the mode of transport. For example, the risk of a fatal car crash while driving for an hour is about one in ten million (so 0.1 micromorts). For a twenty-year-old, that’s a one-in-ten-million chance of losing sixty years. The expected life lost from driving for one hour is therefore three minutes. Looking at expected minutes lost shows just how great a discrepancy there is between risks from different sorts of transport. Whereas an hour on a train costs you only twenty expected seconds of life, an hour on a motorbike costs you an expected three hours and forty-five minutes. In addition to giving us a way to compare the risks of different activities, the concept of expected value helps us choose which risks are worth taking. Would you be willing to spend an hour on a motorbike if it was perfectly safe but caused you to be unconscious later for three hours and forty-five minutes? If your answer is no, but you’re otherwise happy to ride motorbikes in your day-to-day life, you’re probably not fully appreciating the risk of death.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“We’re about one hundred times richer than the poorest billion people in the world, and we can do several hundred times more to help them than we can to help others in the rich countries we live in.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Responding to bereavement by trying to make a difference is certainly both understandable and admirable, but it doesn't give you good reason to raise money for one specific cause of death rather than any other. If that person had died in different circumstances it would have been no less tragic. What we care about when we lose someone close to us is that they suffered or died, not that they died from a specific cause. By all means, the sadness we feel at the loss of a loved one should be harnessed in order to make the world a better place. But we should focus that motivation on preventing death and improving lives per se, rather than preventing death and improving lives in one very specific way. Any other decision would be unfair on those we could have helped more.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Effective altruism is about asking "How can I make the biggest difference I can?" and using evidence and careful reasoning to try to find an answer. It takes a scientific approach to doing good. Just as science consists of the honest and impartial attempt to work out what's true, and a committment to believe the truth whatever that turns out to be. As the phrase suggests, effective altruism consists of the honest and impartial attempt to work out what's best for the world, and a commitment to do what's best, whatever that turns out to be.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“In buying Fairtrade products, you’re at best giving very small amounts of money to people in comparatively well-off countries. You’d do considerably more good by buying cheaper goods and donating the money you save to one of the cost-effective charities mentioned in the previous chapter.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“We should certainly feel outrage and horror at the conditions sweatshop laborers toil under. The correct response, however, is not to give up sweatshop-produced goods in favor of domestically produced goods. The correct response is to try to end the extreme poverty that makes sweatshops desirable places to work in the first place.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“According to the most rigorous estimates, the cost to save a life in the developing world is about $3,400 (or $100 for one QALY). This is a small enough amount that most of us in affluent countries could donate that amount every year while maintaining about the same quality of life. Rather than just saving one life, we could save a life every working year of our lives. Donating to charity is not nearly as glamorous as kicking down the door of a burning building, but the benefits are just as great. Through the simple act of donating to the most effective charities, we have the power to save dozens of lives. That’s”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“We don’t usually think of achievements in terms of what would have happened otherwise, but we should. What matters is not who does good but whether good is done; and the measure of how much good you achieve is the difference between what happens as a result of your actions and what would have happened anyway.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“If the international response to natural disasters was rational, we would expect a greater amount of funding to be provided to larger disasters and to disasters that occur in poorer countries, which are less able to cope. But that’s not what happens. Funding seems to be allocated in proportion with how evocative and widely publicized the disaster is, rather than on the basis of its scale and severity.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“When it comes to doing good, fat-tailed distributions seem to be everywhere. It’s not always true that exactly 80 percent of the value comes from the top 20 percent of activities—sometimes things are even more extreme than that, and sometimes less. But the general rule that most of the value generated comes from the very best activities is very common.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Your choice of career is a choice about how to spend more than eighty thousand hours over the course of your life, which means it makes sense to invest a considerable amount of time in the decision. If you were to spend just 1 percent of your working time thinking about how to spend the other 99 percent, that would mean you’d spend eight hundred hours, or twenty working weeks, on your career decision.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Ironically, the law of diminishing returns suggests that, if you feel a strong emotional reaction to a story and want to help, you should probably resist this inclination because there are probably many others like you who are also donating. By all means, you should harness the emotion you feel when a natural disaster strikes, but remind yourself that a similar disaster is happening all the time—and then consider donating to wherever your money will help the most rather than what is getting the most attention.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“The good I do is not a matter of the direct benefits I cause. Rather, it is the difference I make.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“If, for example, encouraging someone to buy fair-trade causes that person to devote less time or money to other, more effective activities, then promoting fair-trade might on balance be harmful.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“However, this debate is strange for another reason: even if scientists had not already shown that man-made climate change is happening, the mere fact that man-made climate change might be happening is enough to warrant action.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“When a disaster strikes, the emotional centers of our brain flare up: we think—emergency! We forget there is an emergency happening all the time, because we’ve grown accustomed to everyday emergencies like disease and poverty and oppression.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“decisions can be potentially disastrous. It would be nice if the PlayPump were an isolated example of unreflective altruism, but sadly it’s just an extreme example of a much more general trend. We very often fail to think as carefully about helping others as we could, mistakenly believing that applying data and rationality to a charitable endeavour robs the act of virtue. And that means we pass up opportunities to make a tremendous difference. Imagine, for example, that you’re walking down your”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: Effective Altruism and a Radical New Way to Make a Difference
“Nehmen wir an, Sie retten einem Menschen das Leben: Sie kommen an einem brennenden Gebäude vorbei, halten an, treten die Tür ein, laufen durch Rauch und Flammen, finden ein Kind und tragen es hinaus. Die Erinnerung an diesen Augenblick würde Sie Ihr Leben lang begleiten. Würden Sie mehreren Menschen das Leben retten – indem Sie an einem Tag ein Kind aus einem brennenden Haus tragen, in der folgenden Woche einen Ertrinkenden aus einem Fluss retten und sich wieder eine Woche später in die Flugbahn einer Kugel werfen –, so würden Sie zu der Überzeugung gelangen, Ihr Leben sei wirklich ungewöhnlich. Sie kämen in die Zeitung. Sie wären ein Held. Nun, Sie können viel mehr tun. Den sorgfältigsten Schätzungen zufolge kostet es in den Entwicklungsländern rund 3400 Dollar (oder 100 Dollar pro qualitätskorrigiertem Lebensjahr), ein Menschenleben zu retten. Dieser Betrag ist so gering, dass ihn die meisten Einwohner der reichen Länder jedes Jahr aufbringen könnten, ohne ihre Lebensqualität erheblich zu verringern. Anstatt nur einen Menschen zu retten, könnten wir in jedem Jahr unseres Erwerbslebens ein Leben retten. Hilfsorganisationen Geld zu spenden ist natürlich nicht annähernd so spektakulär, wie in ein brennendes Haus zu laufen, aber der Nutzen ist ebenso groß. Einfach dadurch, dass wir Geld für die effektivsten Hilfsprogramme spenden, können wir Dutzende Menschenleben retten. Verblüffend, nicht wahr?”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“One difference between investing in a company and donating to a charity is that the charity world often lacks appropriate feedback mechanisms. Invest in a bad company, and you lose money; but give money to a bad charity, and you probably won’t hear about its failings.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“There’s some reason to think that the rise in ethical consumerism could even be harmful for the world, on balance. Psychologists have discovered a phenomenon that they call moral licensing, which describes how people who perform one good action often compensate by doing fewer good actions in the future.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Before making a decision, don't merely try to weigh all the pros and cons as you currently see them (though that is a good thing to do). Ask yourself: What is the single most important piece of information that would be most useful for my career decision? Now, what can I do in order to gain that information?”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Things may even be worse than that, however. There’s some reason to think that the rise in ethical consumerism could even be harmful for the world, on balance. Psychologists have discovered a phenomenon that they call moral licensing, which describes how people who perform one good action often compensate by doing fewer good actions in the future. For example, in a recent experiment, participants were told to choose a product from either a selection of mostly “green” items (like an energy-efficient lightbulb) or from a selection of mostly conventional items (like a regular lightbulb). They were then told to perform a supposedly unrelated visual perception task: a square box with a diagonal line across it was displayed on a computer screen, and a pattern of twenty dots would flash up on the screen; the subjects had to press a key to indicate whether there were more dots on the left or right side of the line. It was always obvious which was the correct answer, and the experimenters emphasized the importance of being as accurate as possible, telling the subjects that the results of the test would be used in designing future experiments. However, the subjects were told that, whether or not their answers were correct, they’d be paid five cents every time they indicated there were more dots on the left-hand side of the line and five cents every time they indicated there were more dots on the right-hand side. They therefore had a financial incentive to lie, and they were alone, so they knew they wouldn’t be caught if they did so. Moreover, they were invited to pay themselves out of an envelope, so they had an opportunity to steal as well. What happened? People who had previously purchased a “green” product were significantly more likely to both lie and steal than those who had purchased the conventional product. Their”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“If you care about animal suffering, you should certainly alter your diet, either by cutting out the most harmful products (at least eggs, chicken, and pork), or by becoming vegetarian or vegan. However, there’s no reason to stop there. In terms of making a difference to the lives of animals, the impact you can have through your donations seems even greater than the impact you can have by changing your own behavior. According to Animal Charity Evaluators (a research charity I helped to set up), by donating to charities like Mercy For Animals or the Humane League, which distribute leaflets on vegetarianism, it costs about one hundred dollars to convince one person to stop eating meat for one year. If you can donate more than that to animal advocacy charities per year, then your decision about how much to donate to animal advocacy is even more important, in terms of impact, than the decision about whether to become vegetarian yourself.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“Of all the animals raised for food, broiler chickens, layer hens, and pigs are kept in the worst conditions by a considerable margin. The only quantitative estimates of farmed animal welfare I’ve been able to find come from Bailey Norwood, an economist and agricultural expert. He rated the welfare of different animals on a scale of –10 to 10, where negative numbers indicate that it would be better, from the animal’s perspective, to be dead rather than alive. He rates beef cattle at 6 and dairy cows at 4. In contrast his average rating for broiler chickens is –1, and for pigs and caged hens is –5. In other words, cows raised for food live better lives than chicken, hens, or pigs, which suffer terribly.”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference
“The most effective ways to cut down your emissions are to reduce your intake of meat (especially beef, which can cut out about a metric ton of CO2eq per year), to reduce the amount you travel (driving half as much would cut out two metric tons of CO2eq per year and one fewer round-trip flight from London to New York would eliminate a metric ton of CO2eq), and to use less electricity and gas in the home (especially by installing loft insulation, which would save a metric ton of CO2eq for a detached house).”
William MacAskill, Doing Good Better: How Effective Altruism Can Help You Make a Difference

« previous 1