The Daily Stoic - Peter Singer on Practicing Effective Altruism Daily
Episode Date: December 10, 2022Ryan speaks with professor of moral philosophy, author, and activist Peter Singer about the 10th anniversary edition of his book The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Povert...y, how Peter’s views on charitable giving have changed throughout the years, the connections between Effective Altruism and Stoicism, applying ethical philosophy to issues in our daily lives, and more.Peter is an Australian professor of moral philosophy who specializes in applied ethics. He is the Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University, and the founder of the Centre for Human Bioethics at Monash University. He is the author of numerous books and essays focusing on ethics, bioethics, global poverty, and animal rights, including The Most Good You Can Do, "Famine, Affluence, and Morality," and Animal Liberation. Peter is most known for developing and promoting Effective Altruism, the argument that effective giving involves balancing empathy with reason. In 2021, he won the esteemed Berggruen Prize for his work in the field of philosophy, and was awarded one million dollars, all of which he donated to charity.✉️  Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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                                         Welcome to the weekend edition of the Daily Stoke. Each weekday we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes.
                                         
                                         Something to help you live up to those four Stoke virtues of courage, justice, temperance, and wisdom.
                                         
                                         And then here on the weekend, we take a deeper dive into those same topics.
                                         
                                         We interview stoic philosophers.
                                         
                                         We explore at length how these stoic ideas can be applied to our actual lives and the
                                         
                                         challenging issues of our time.
                                         
                                         Here on the weekend, when you have. Here on the weekend when you have a
                                         
    
                                         little bit more space when things have slowed down be sure to take some time to
                                         
                                         think to go for a walk to sit with your journal and most importantly to prepare
                                         
                                         for what the week ahead may bring.
                                         
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                                         Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
                                         
    
                                         Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast.
                                         
                                         Writing for me has hit a little bit of a snack.
                                         
                                         I think I broke my middle finger playing basketball over the weekend, so I haven't been able
                                         
                                         to sign as many books downstairs at the store.
                                         
                                         And my typing has been a little screwed up as we got these two fingers taped together,
                                         
                                         but it's funny,
                                         
                                         it takes me back to when I broke my arm writing my first book. I might have already told this story
                                         
                                         before, but I broke my arm while I was writing Trust Me I'm Lying. And it set the book back
                                         
    
                                         in quite a bit, but it actually eventually ends up queuing up the obstacle as the way, because
                                         
                                         the walks that I ended up taking the extra time that I ended up taking because of it
                                         
                                         opened up all these wonderful little avenues. I guess my point is you never know where life is going
                                         
                                         to take you. And that takes me to today's guest. I'm writing now. The book that is tied up a little
                                         
                                         bit is my third book in this virtue series. I'm writing about justice. So when a book arrived,
                                         
                                         the 10th anniversary
                                         
                                         edition of the Life You Can Save by the philosopher Peter Singer, I was like, not only do I need
                                         
                                         to read this book, and not only was I planning to read this book, but he is someone I absolutely
                                         
    
                                         want to talk to on the podcast because he's one of the foremost thinkers in the world about these
                                         
                                         ideas, one of the most influential philosophers in the world, the Stokes turn up their noses
                                         
                                         at the so-called pen and ink philosophers.
                                         
                                         Well, Peter Singer is not just a professor
                                         
                                         and a teacher of philosophy, but his philosophy
                                         
                                         has guided billions of dollars of aid
                                         
                                         that's been given to people all over the world.
                                         
                                         It's changed how many people think about animal rights,
                                         
    
                                         whether they eat meat, don't eat meat, animal welfare.
                                         
                                         And he's one of the pioneers of what they call effective altruism, which thinks about
                                         
                                         effectively doing good, how one can do the most good with the good or the donations that
                                         
                                         they make.
                                         
                                         It's just an all around fascinating person.
                                         
                                         And I think put his money where his mouth is quite literally. He won the Bergeru in prize for philosophy in 2021,
                                         
                                         which has a million dollar prize.
                                         
                                         It's a prize given to thinkers whose ideas
                                         
    
                                         of profoundly shaped human self-understanding
                                         
                                         in advancement and rapidly changing world.
                                         
                                         And so what does a tenured philosophy professor do
                                         
                                         with a million dollars, they buy themselves a vacation home.
                                         
                                         Do they buy a house for their kids?
                                         
                                         Do they retire?
                                         
                                         What do they do with the money?
                                         
                                         Well, Peter Singer donated every cent of it to people in need, to the causes he had been
                                         
    
                                         championing about and talking about that he talks about in the life you can save, which
                                         
                                         I enjoyed so much.
                                         
                                         And then I bought one of his older books,
                                         
                                         which I'm reading next, called the Expanding Circle.
                                         
                                         And then I'm hoping to have him back on the podcast
                                         
                                         from one of his animal rights books.
                                         
                                         He teaches an online course you can check out
                                         
                                         called Effective Altruism,
                                         
    
                                         which I'll link to in today's show notes.
                                         
                                         You can follow him on Twitter at Peter Singer,
                                         
                                         follow him on Instagram at Peter underscore singer.
                                         
                                         Thank you so much Professor
                                         
                                         Singer for coming on the podcast. It was eye opening for me and provocative and
                                         
                                         interesting and I think it will be for all of you and I think it will make the
                                         
                                         new book better and enjoy.
                                         
                                         Well, I wanted to start really practically with you.
                                         
    
                                         Maybe you could help me with an ethical dilemma or debate I'm having with my wife.
                                         
                                         I would like to donate one of my kidneys as you talk about in the book, and my wife is
                                         
                                         quite concerned.
                                         
                                         She thinks that I should save them in case one of our children need them.
                                         
                                         How do you solve this?
                                         
                                         If you're prepared to donate your kidneys and your wife is not going to divorce you because
                                         
                                         you do it, I think you should go ahead with it.
                                         
                                         I think it's a wonderful thing to do.
                                         
    
                                         Now in saying that, I should say that I still have two kidneys, so I'm really in no position to tell your wife
                                         
                                         that she's wrong, but donating a kidney
                                         
                                         does make a huge difference to somebody who needs a kidney.
                                         
                                         Possibly say their life certainly make the quality
                                         
                                         of life vastly better, and the chances that you will need
                                         
                                         your kidney, either for one of your children
                                         
                                         or for yourself, are extremely
                                         
                                         small.
                                         
    
                                         It does strike me that if you do something so generous, I know karma isn't actually real,
                                         
                                         but I would like to think that if you put something like that out into the world, the
                                         
                                         chances of you dying in desperate need of a kindie
                                         
                                         and nobody coming to your rescue strikes me as pretty slim
                                         
                                         and also perhaps not a world you'd want to continue to live in either.
                                         
                                         Yeah, well, suddenly pretty slim, that's definitely true.
                                         
                                         Yeah, it would be a terrible ironic fate if you then
                                         
                                         did need a kidney for yourself. If you're one kidney, it's really unlikely, very few
                                         
    
                                         diseases would strike only one kidney, so generally, that's not the issue, but I suppose
                                         
                                         theoretically at least you could get hit by a car that just destroyed the kidney on the
                                         
                                         side that you had left. But yeah, what are the odds of that? Not very great.
                                         
                                         So why haven't you done it? You do seem like an exceedingly generous person and a person
                                         
                                         who lives the philosophy that you talk about. What's held you back from doing?
                                         
                                         Well, one thing is when I first heard about kidney, altaristic kidney donation, when it became accepted,
                                         
                                         which is not that long ago.
                                         
                                         I was already in my 60s and some people suggested
                                         
    
                                         that my kidneys were getting a little bit old to donate.
                                         
                                         But I'm not sure, maybe that was a kind of a rationalization.
                                         
                                         Maybe I'm just a coward when it comes to undergoing surgery,
                                         
                                         which I do find it a lot easier to give a substantial
                                         
                                         part of my income to people who need it than I do to give one of my bodily organs.
                                         
                                         Well, my wife's other argument was we've both already checked the Oregon
                                         
                                         donor box on our driver's license, so we've effectively already made the donation,
                                         
                                         we're just holding it in trust until we don't need it anymore.
                                         
    
                                         Yes, except that the chances are you're going to get older, like me, or even older before you die, hopefully.
                                         
                                         And by which time your kidney may not be very much good.
                                         
                                         Those checked boxes are really useful.
                                         
                                         Should you be in an accident and be brain dead or something like that.
                                         
                                         That's good, but unless you're going to spend a lot of time riding a motorcycle without
                                         
                                         a helmet, you're probably not going to end up like that.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's a good point.
                                         
                                         Well, I found the book very fascinating.
                                         
    
                                         I read the, obviously I was familiar with your work and then I read this 10 year anniversary
                                         
                                         edition.
                                         
                                         And you start off the book.
                                         
                                         You say something kind of interesting that I wanted to get some
                                         
                                         clarity on from you.
                                         
                                         You're saying at the beginning of the book, basically, you're going to be asking people
                                         
                                         to be far more generous than they currently are.
                                         
                                         You're going to ask developed nations to be more generous than they currently are.
                                         
    
                                         And yet you also say that this version of the book
                                         
                                         entails you scaling back to a certain degree
                                         
                                         what you expect people to give
                                         
                                         or what you think our obligations are.
                                         
                                         So talk to me about that tension
                                         
                                         and the evolution of your philosophy.
                                         
                                         Right, so my thing on this goes back,
                                         
                                         not just to the first edition of the book, The Life,
                                         
    
                                         you can say about to an article I wrote in 1972 called Famine Affleherence and Morality. And in that article, obviously
                                         
                                         I was quite young then, in that article, I argued that really that only ultimate limit
                                         
                                         of how much we should give is the point at which if we gave more, we would be harming ourselves more than we would be benefiting the person we were helping.
                                         
                                         And given the discrepancies between affluence in developed countries and people in extreme
                                         
                                         poverty and low income countries, that's a very demanding standard.
                                         
                                         Really, you have to empower us yourself to a pretty extreme level.
                                         
                                         And although there's a sense in which, yeah,
                                         
                                         ultimately, if you say,
                                         
    
                                         what's the best thing to do,
                                         
                                         that might be the best thing to do.
                                         
                                         But the effect of telling people that morality
                                         
                                         is that demanding is actually a big
                                         
                                         danna, right? I think they're less likely
                                         
                                         then to say, okay, I'm going to do this
                                         
                                         and more likely to say, wow, if morality is that demanding, too bad for morality, I'm just not
                                         
                                         going to take any notice of it. So my scaling back is kind of pragmatic. It's designed to produce
                                         
    
                                         the best consequences. And I think
                                         
                                         producing the best consequences don't come from asking people to make things that really
                                         
                                         they would inevitably see as a huge sacrifice, but rather from asking something less from
                                         
                                         them and convincing them that this is not really a sacrifice at all, but that this is something
                                         
                                         that, yes, though, in terms of money, there'll be a little less well-off, but in terms of satisfaction, purpose, in life, fulfillment,
                                         
                                         that'll actually be better off.
                                         
                                         Yeah, it strikes me as a trade-off between appealing to the handfuls of Gandhi's and Jesus's
                                         
                                         and saintly figures out in the world who would hear this call and cut everything
                                         
    
                                         to the bone, which might cumatively add up to a small amount of difference, or appealing
                                         
                                         to a large number of people to give slightly more than they might be inclined to give and cumulatively end up with a lot more aid or help or raw material and
                                         
                                         having to strike that balance is a difficult one.
                                         
                                         Yeah, so I think you put that very well. I think that's, it is an attempt to try to
                                         
                                         try to persuade people to give what will amount
                                         
                                         to the largest benefits for people in need.
                                         
                                         And I have become convinced that having a less demanding
                                         
                                         target about getting more people tonight,
                                         
    
                                         that will end up adding up to a greater sum.
                                         
                                         That is, I think the tension in a lot of philosophy, right? Because it's not
                                         
                                         that philosophy is naive, but there is, in kind of, a purity or an idealism in a lot of
                                         
                                         philosophical thinking, particularly when it gets to morality. But you use the word pragmatism
                                         
                                         there also for this philosophy to be brought into the world
                                         
                                         effectively that is a certain amount of pragmatism is required and yet if you have
                                         
                                         if all you're focused on is pragmatism you know you probably end up with
                                         
                                         simply maintaining the status quo.
                                         
    
                                         Yes that's right and it's very relevant in politics too.
                                         
                                         And if you go from philosophy to politics, you have to think about the effects of what you're
                                         
                                         advocating. And if the effects are going to be really negative, then you don't want to advocate
                                         
                                         that as a politician. You're not going to get anywhere. You're going to maybe
                                         
                                         damage the party that you're associated with and maybe lose a lot more besides. So I think
                                         
                                         it is, you know, similarly when a philosopher gets involved in practical ethics and talking about actual decision people make,
                                         
                                         you do have to think about what effect am I going to have?
                                         
                                         And is that overall effect going to be better or worse if I have a pure idealistic demand
                                         
    
                                         rather than one that is realistic for the circumstances you're in?
                                         
                                         It's interesting that philosophy that I write and think a lot about, which is stoicism,
                                         
                                         so ancient Greece and ancient Rome, philosophy and politics were inextricably linked.
                                         
                                         They were one and the same.
                                         
                                         The philosophers were often politicians.
                                         
                                         The politicians would consult philosophers with the exception of your work and a handful
                                         
                                         of other philosophers.
                                         
                                         It does feel like in the modern world, the two worlds could not be further apart and have really less influence on each other
                                         
    
                                         Does some extent that's true, but not entirely. I think I'm not the you know
                                         
                                         I only want to think about people are actually doing political philosophy say John Rose would be an example
                                         
                                         Not so recent though not not so recent I guess, no, but still
                                         
                                         certainly within my lifetime, maybe not yours. So I think his ideas had an influence on American
                                         
                                         politics anyway. So I think there is still a connection, but it's certainly quite right. It's not the same as it was in
                                         
                                         ancient Greece or Rome. Although, you know, the philosophers didn't always do too well. Did they look at
                                         
                                         Seneca's tutoring of Nero, for example? Didn't turn out right.
                                         
                                         Well, I think about that all the time, because either he was a mar-like figure saving us from a much worse outcome or he was a complete
                                         
    
                                         and utter hypocrite who debased his philosophy and depending on what is happening in the news
                                         
                                         and what side of the bed I woke up on, I can make the argument in either direction.
                                         
                                         Right, yes.
                                         
                                         I don't know.
                                         
                                         I can't come in on that, but I think it does so that it's hard for
                                         
                                         philosophy to have an impact on the real world. I mean, it does, but it doesn't always have it
                                         
                                         exactly in the direction that you want it to have. Yeah, I mean, there was an observation. I think
                                         
                                         it was from Cicero was talking about Cato, and he said, you know, Kato acted as if he lived
                                         
    
                                         in Plato's Republic instead of in the dregs of Romulus.
                                         
                                         And his point was that Kato went through the world,
                                         
                                         you know, thinking about these sort of big moral questions,
                                         
                                         you know, simply on their face,
                                         
                                         not about what was possible or impossible,
                                         
                                         you know, he's thinking about them, what's right and wrong,
                                         
                                         not what's easier, what's hard. And this was admirable and made impossible. You know, he's thinking about them, what's right and wrong, not what's easier, what's hard.
                                         
                                         And this was admirable and made him,
                                         
    
                                         you know, above most of the pragmatic philosophers
                                         
                                         of this time.
                                         
                                         And yet he was also pretty ineffectual,
                                         
                                         pretty unable to compromise,
                                         
                                         pretty, you know,
                                         
                                         pretty much stood alone apart from everyone else because everyone else understood
                                         
                                         that they weren't living in Plato's Republic.
                                         
                                         Right.
                                         
    
                                         And you could probably take that to current United States politics, and you could say some
                                         
                                         of those on the liberal wing of the Democrats in a somewhat similar position to Kato, maybe they think they're living in
                                         
                                         certainly some more ideal society, whether they're living in a country that is, I don't
                                         
                                         know, the, the, the drags of Trump's presidency, maybe.
                                         
                                         Well, I'll, I'll give you another stout concept that I think ties quite beautifully with
                                         
                                         your work, and I've been thinking about a lot.
                                         
                                         So I'm in the middle of now a series on the Cardinal Virtues. So I just did Courage. I wrote about discipline now. I'm
                                         
                                         writing about justice, which is why I was so excited to read this book, Yours. But are you familiar
                                         
    
                                         with high recleases, circles of concern? Very loosely, only. Circles are concerned, yes, but you want this scholarship, no, you better give me.
                                         
                                         Well, I'll summarize it for the listener, but it's this idea that we come into the world
                                         
                                         self-interested.
                                         
                                         We care about our own immediate survival.
                                         
                                         And then our circle expands a little bit.
                                         
                                         We care about our family.
                                         
                                         We care about people that look like us, people that look near us,
                                         
                                         but there are these concentric rings
                                         
    
                                         that get bigger and bigger and eventually include,
                                         
                                         not just people will never meet,
                                         
                                         but animals and everything that's ever lived.
                                         
                                         And he basically argued,
                                         
                                         and I think surprises people
                                         
                                         because they think of stoicism
                                         
                                         as such an individualistic philosophy.
                                         
                                         He said the work of philosophy was to try to pull
                                         
    
                                         these outer rings towards the center to care about more people and more things as you go through life.
                                         
                                         And when I read your work on veganism, on, you know, effective altruism, it strikes me,
                                         
                                         and long-termism, all of the stuff that's come out of your thinking, it strikes me that that's the work that you're doing
                                         
                                         trying to help people bring these outer concerns closer
                                         
                                         and closer to home and to have more impact on those
                                         
                                         seemingly far away or impossibly complex
                                         
                                         or difficult global issues.
                                         
                                         Right, you're absolutely right that that's what I'm doing.
                                         
    
                                         And in fact, I wrote a book in the 80s which got reissued more recently called the Expanding
                                         
                                         Circle, which talks about exactly that.
                                         
                                         But I trace that to W.A.H. Lecky, the historian of Rome.
                                         
                                         He wrote a wonderful book called The History of European Marles from Augustus to Schaulman, I think the subtitle is,
                                         
                                         and he talks about that expanding circle. That's where I got it from, and I was not aware that it
                                         
                                         came out of a historic philosophy. So that's something I've learned. Thank you.
                                         
                                         Yeah, and I think particularly with regards to animals, the idea that it's not just, hey, you should care about somebody who lives in a country that's not yours.
                                         
                                         But you should also care about an animal that can't even tell you that they're suffering
                                         
    
                                         or are in pain.
                                         
                                         Yes, yes, I think that's quite right.
                                         
                                         I've also been engaged in a dialogue with a Buddhist philosopher called Sheech-Away. And she argues that you can get there
                                         
                                         through Buddhist meditation, that you start by thinking about somebody that you love who's
                                         
                                         close to you and you imagine them suffering and you feel compassion for them then suffering.
                                         
                                         And then you transfer that to somebody who's a little further from you, and you feel the same empathy and compassion. And then you keep going outwards. And so then you
                                         
                                         also can end up with compassion for non-human animals, for example.
                                         
                                         One of the ways I do that is I think about how I feel about my kids and what they mean to me,
                                         
    
                                         and then I try to think about someone that I've never met or someone
                                         
                                         even that I dislike or that has done something horrible, and I try to think about how they
                                         
                                         think about their kids, and then I try to expand that further and I think, you know, how does
                                         
                                         this lioness think about their kids, or how does the, you know, the last living rhino think
                                         
                                         about its offspring, or, you know, its kin. And when you do that, I think
                                         
                                         you very quickly pick up on some idea of kinship or sameness between all living beings. And
                                         
                                         it makes it harder to be so indifferent to the fate of that other person or thing. Because
                                         
                                         as the Stokes would say, you realize that they have a nature not unlike your own.
                                         
    
                                         Yeah, that sounds a very similar sort of thing to what Chowhai was talking about.
                                         
                                         Do you have children?
                                         
                                         I do, I have three children and now I have four grandchildren as well.
                                         
                                         Oh, that's beautiful.
                                         
                                         Well, one of the things you do talk about in the book is this struggle, speaking of the circles of concern.
                                         
                                         We obviously all care a lot about our kids,
                                         
                                         and you talk about certain activists
                                         
                                         who are spending time in Africa or wherever,
                                         
    
                                         and they think about the,
                                         
                                         just the comforts and the things they would do
                                         
                                         for their children,
                                         
                                         and then the sort of indifference
                                         
                                         to the suffering of these other children.
                                         
                                         How do you think about that in your life?
                                         
                                         Like how do you think about obviously as a parent,
                                         
                                         you have this obligation,
                                         
    
                                         a specific obligation to these people,
                                         
                                         but I guess you would argue you don't,
                                         
                                         that doesn't exempt you from an obligation
                                         
                                         to these other people just because you're not
                                         
                                         biologically related to them.
                                         
                                         Yes, certainly not.
                                         
                                         People often say, well, should I give exactly the same weight to a stranger's child as
                                         
                                         I would to my own?
                                         
    
                                         And I think it's totally understandable that if you had to choose between saving your child
                                         
                                         and saving a child of a stranger, you would choose your own child.
                                         
                                         But on the other hand, the extent
                                         
                                         to which we give preference to our own children really reaches, I think, quite grotesque levels
                                         
                                         in modern society, where we think that we have to give our child all of the latest toys,
                                         
                                         whatever they might be, expensive, electronic, you know, Xboxes or whatever. And we don't
                                         
                                         do anything for the children of strangers.
                                         
                                         And I think it would be quite reasonable to say to your child
                                         
    
                                         and they would understand at least once they got to a certain age
                                         
                                         that, look, you know, you're not getting this
                                         
                                         even though your friends have it.
                                         
                                         Because do you know there are children
                                         
                                         who don't get enough to eat or who, you know,
                                         
                                         when they get sick, they can't go to the doctor
                                         
                                         because their parents can't afford it. Can't even have a book to read. So I think it's, we ought to be
                                         
                                         scaling back the preference for that entirely abolishing it. Yeah, I forget where I got this,
                                         
    
                                         but it definitely shaped it when I shaped me when I heard it. They were saying that, you know, not
                                         
                                         that long ago, when, if you heard someone say,
                                         
                                         hey, I think we should put in a pool for the kids,
                                         
                                         they meant we should put in a community center
                                         
                                         that has a pool, right?
                                         
                                         And now when you hear people say,
                                         
                                         we should put in a pool for the kids,
                                         
                                         they mean in their backyard.
                                         
    
                                         And so it's not just, you know, like,
                                         
                                         do you care about these suffering children far away,
                                         
                                         but it does seem like, especially in America, the sort of nuclear family and the protection
                                         
                                         and the advancement of the interests of a very small amount of people is the norm even
                                         
                                         more than just thinking about people who live near you or people that live in your town
                                         
                                         or people that, you know, are part of your community or state or even country, we just have a very, very selfish, self-absorbed
                                         
                                         notion of what is ours.
                                         
                                         That's right.
                                         
    
                                         And it's significant that it's the fact that people can have a pool in their backyard,
                                         
                                         that those things exist now, which didn't always exist.
                                         
                                         That means that they don't have to get together with members of their community and say,
                                         
                                         hey, it wouldn't be great if our kids could go into a pool when it's hot.
                                         
                                         So let's work for the community, find some land, raise some money, produce a pool.
                                         
                                         And then you're doing that together as a community enterprise and also your kids are more likely
                                         
                                         to be meeting other kids
                                         
                                         in that area. So it is a loss of community that we can do all of these things just within the
                                         
    
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                                         and partying at night with your best friends and have it be 100% paid for?
                                         
                                         FTX Founder's Sam Bankman Freed lived that dream life, but it was all funded
                                         
                                         with other people's money, but he allegedly stole.
                                         
    
                                         Many thought Sam Bankman Freed was changing the game as he graced the pages of Forbes
                                         
                                         and Vanity Fair.
                                         
                                         Some involved in crypto saw him as a breath of fresh air from the usual Wall Street buffs
                                         
                                         with his casual dress and ability to play League of Legends during boardroom meetings.
                                         
                                         But in less than a year, his exchange would collapse, and SPF would find himself in a jail
                                         
                                         cell, with tens of thousands
                                         
                                         of investors blaming him for their crypto losses.
                                         
                                         From Bloomberg and Wondering, comes Spellcaster, a new six-part docu-series about the meteoric
                                         
    
                                         rise and spectacular fall of FTX, and its founder, Sam Beckman-Freed.
                                         
                                         Follow Spellcaster wherever you get your podcasts.
                                         
                                         Hey, prime members, you can listen to episodes at free on Amazon Music.
                                         
                                         Download the Amazon Music app today. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, I think philosophy sometimes gets caught up with these, these impossible questions that
                                         
                                         kind of exempt us from having to make, you know, real choices in the real world.
                                         
                                         Like I think about the trolley problem.
                                         
                                         Obviously, it's an interesting thought exercise, but really, you're never going to be, it's
                                         
                                         not going to happen to you where you're like, am I throwing the switch this way to kill
                                         
    
                                         these people or that people? But actually on a daily basis, you are asked,
                                         
                                         do you wanna make this product in America
                                         
                                         or do you wanna make it in a Chinese factory
                                         
                                         where children are having to work there.
                                         
                                         The environmental conditions are terrible or blah, blah, blah.
                                         
                                         And no one's going to die either way, but one's going to be more expensive than the other,
                                         
                                         so what do you choose?
                                         
                                         It strikes me that the moral choices that we actually face as human beings are less
                                         
    
                                         stark, but also less impossible.
                                         
                                         And maybe we get caught up in these sort of abstract moral questions instead of having to think about the more practical tangible
                                         
                                         ethical
                                         
                                         quandaries that modern life presents us
                                         
                                         Yeah, for us it was do spend a lot of time talking about hypotheticals and
                                         
                                         They're interesting as thought experiments. I think they helped to clarify people's ideas and to test
                                         
                                         What they really think about certain situations
                                         
                                         I verify people's ideas and to test what they really think about certain situations.
                                         
    
                                         I think some of the work helps us to understand where moral intuitions come from.
                                         
                                         Josh Green, who's a professor of psychology at Harvard, but
                                         
                                         you started off as a graduate student in philosophy here at Princeton, has done some
                                         
                                         interesting psychology work on the trolley problem, which as I say shows something about I think
                                         
                                         our evolved responses to hands-on violence that's playing a role there, but
                                         
                                         but in terms of trying to work out what we ought to do in our real life, yeah, we're not in those
                                         
                                         artificial situations where you can say well you know that this is going to happen if you do A
                                         
                                         and you know that that's going to happen if you do B and you know that's all you know
                                         
    
                                         so
                                         
                                         We do need to think about real life differently
                                         
                                         Right, it's like you're not asked should you value this kid over that kid
                                         
                                         But you are asked will you send your kid to private school or public school, right?
                                         
                                         and
                                         
                                         one of those has community consequences and kind of the other,
                                         
                                         the other doesn't, but neither choice is totally free. And we sort of make those unthinkingly or
                                         
                                         without much regard to the philosophical or moral consequences of that decision,
                                         
    
                                         even though it's actually the sort of quand of a quandary that life is put aside.
                                         
                                         Yeah, I think it's interesting that you raise that because that isn't an important example.
                                         
                                         It is a decision people may and they tend to make it
                                         
                                         simply on the basis of what they think will be best for their child
                                         
                                         and they might not even be right about that. But
                                         
                                         you're right, it has far more ramifications.
                                         
                                         So it has ramifications for the community
                                         
                                         in terms of if particularly educated people
                                         
    
                                         send their children to private schools,
                                         
                                         then there's less support for the public schools.
                                         
                                         They have a different student body
                                         
                                         and then it becomes a vicious spiral, right? Because then people say,
                                         
                                         well, I'm not going to send my child there because the only people there are people who don't have
                                         
                                         educated parents and you know, not going to be that academically gifted, so I don't want my
                                         
                                         children to be there. But if you have a strong public school in your area where everybody attends, it does a lot for the community.
                                         
                                         It maintains the level of the school.
                                         
    
                                         It helps to disadvantage people in the community who get to go to the same school as more advantage people.
                                         
                                         Plus, you're going to save a lot of money and then you can ask yourself, what can I do with that money?
                                         
                                         And that's where we get back to helping people in extreme poverty in low
                                         
                                         income countries. How did you not to to pry into your personal life but how did
                                         
                                         you make that decision with your own children as I my kids are very young so I'm
                                         
                                         thinking about this myself now. Right we send all of our children to public
                                         
                                         schools and interestingly our children have carried that on so all of our grandchildren are going to public schools as well.
                                         
                                         Now, I should say, we brought up our children
                                         
    
                                         in Melbourne, Australia, and the grandchildren are still there.
                                         
                                         No, it is sending their kids to a school
                                         
                                         where there's a serious fear that they'll
                                         
                                         be violenceed under them.
                                         
                                         So it's maybe easier than it is for
                                         
                                         some people in some neighbourhoods elsewhere. That's true and I can't say what I would
                                         
                                         have done if in that situation if I thought the public schools were really very rough
                                         
                                         and even dangerous places. But if you have a public school that is not that bad,
                                         
    
                                         and especially if you get together and talk to some of your friends about it
                                         
                                         with kids of the same age, and you send your kids to the same public school,
                                         
                                         you can have a real impact on the level of schooling in that community.
                                         
                                         Now that's very beautifully put.
                                         
                                         I had another specific question for you that I thought was quite interesting in the book.
                                         
                                         You talked about, as you're talking about effective altruism, Now, that's very beautifully put. I had another specific question for you that I thought was quite interesting in the book.
                                         
                                         As you're talking about effective altruism, you make this comparison.
                                         
                                         This is what it costs to raise a seeing eye dog.
                                         
    
                                         It's like $50,000.
                                         
                                         And then here's what it costs to cure someone of blindness in the developing world.
                                         
                                         It's like $7 or something like that.
                                         
                                         Which it totally makes sense.
                                         
                                         It's a very compelling,
                                         
                                         you know, example. It's like, do you want to make one person's life a little bit better,
                                         
                                         or do you want to radically transform hundreds or thousands of people's lives for the same cost?
                                         
                                         But I assume we're all on the same page that a blind person should have a seeing eye
                                         
    
                                         dog if it would be helpful to them.
                                         
                                         How does, like, again, when we get in these questions, it can be so simple to go, like,
                                         
                                         yes, you pick one over the other, but who pays for the seeing eye dog, right?
                                         
                                         Like, how does that happen in your sort of worldview?
                                         
                                         What do you think about that?
                                         
                                         Well, I mean, we don't have unlimited resources, and I think we ought to prioritize the resources
                                         
                                         where they will do the most good.
                                         
                                         So if there is somebody who is blind, my priority would be for them to see again before somebody
                                         
    
                                         who is blind gets, but can't be helped to see again, gets a seeing eye dog.
                                         
                                         Sure.
                                         
                                         And that would be true, even if it costs the same to help somebody see and to help somebody get a seeing eye dog. And that would be true even if it cost the same to help somebody see and to help somebody get a seeing eye dog.
                                         
                                         So when, as you say, it costs hundreds of times less,
                                         
                                         possibly even thousands, but I'm not gonna go that far.
                                         
                                         Let's just say hundreds, hundreds of times less
                                         
                                         to restore sight in somebody in a low income country
                                         
                                         who has cataracts and can't see.
                                         
    
                                         Or to prevent people becoming blind from trachomasae, which is a common preventable cause of blindness
                                         
                                         in low-income countries. Then I think that's what you should do. And you should only be donating to
                                         
                                         seeing eye-dog societies when there's nobody left who you can help to see for the same
                                         
                                         cost as providing a seeing eye dog.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's so tough, I guess.
                                         
                                         We would like to live in a world where everyone can get what they need.
                                         
                                         It's very easy for people to say, let's do both.
                                         
                                         Actually, I had, there was a lecture at Princeton that I went to just a week or two ago,
                                         
    
                                         at which somebody was talking about more funding for the arts.
                                         
                                         I'm saying it's bad thing that our community doesn't do more funding for the arts.
                                         
                                         So I said, well, this is a community in which there are some people who have no health
                                         
                                         coverage, unlike
                                         
                                         other African countries, the United States does not provide universal health coverage.
                                         
                                         The United States also provides a very low level of overseas aid, about a quarter as much
                                         
                                         as some of the better countries, some of the European countries, a quarter as much in
                                         
                                         proportion to the national income as a percentage of national income. And I don't think we should be funding the arts, which mostly generally
                                         
    
                                         goes to, you know, arts that are patronized by fairly wealthy people, subsidies for the
                                         
                                         opera or whatever it might be. While we are not providing decent health care for everyone in the community,
                                         
                                         and even more while we are among the real laggards in terms of how much we
                                         
                                         help people in extreme poverty. And how popular does this make you with your
                                         
                                         humanities professors at Princeton? Not always popular, but that's okay. I can wear that.
                                         
                                         Yeah.
                                         
                                         I mean, it's tough because you are asking a person who has already suffered, a blind person
                                         
                                         to suffer more.
                                         
    
                                         But the alternative, you pay $50,000 for them to have a C&I dog, which could be transformative
                                         
                                         and improve their life so much, you're asking hundreds of people over here to not see
                                         
                                         it all.
                                         
                                         That's right.
                                         
                                         And they're likely to be there in low income countries.
                                         
                                         They don't get the assistance that a person who can't see would get in the United States,
                                         
                                         even without a seeing eye dog.
                                         
                                         Maybe perhaps their daughter has to look after them and therefore can't get right to work.
                                         
    
                                         So I think it's even tougher than it is to be unable to see in the United States.
                                         
                                         Well, and I guess the really challenging part
                                         
                                         of your work though is that actually,
                                         
                                         we're not choosing between those two things at all.
                                         
                                         People like you and me are choosing
                                         
                                         whether we wanna get a new car or not.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's right, or you know, upgrade our phone
                                         
                                         because there's a new iPhone at,
                                         
    
                                         a lot of your phone is still doing really
                                         
                                         what you need it to do.
                                         
                                         Yeah, or yeah, people are choosing to fly private because they don't want to sit with someone else on
                                         
                                         on an airplane. Meanwhile, they could save thousands or tens of thousands of lives
                                         
                                         with the money they spend. And this isn't even getting into the
                                         
                                         environmental consequences of their decision as well.
                                         
                                         Yes, certainly.
                                         
                                         That is another factor.
                                         
    
                                         We should be thinking about those environmental consequences
                                         
                                         as well as about the money we could be saving.
                                         
                                         So you got this famous award, right?
                                         
                                         And I was talking about it in your bio
                                         
                                         that you won a million dollar philosophical prize,
                                         
                                         which you then donated to people in need.
                                         
                                         What does it feel like?
                                         
                                         Because I imagine it's a strange feeling
                                         
    
                                         that not too many people have,
                                         
                                         where someone gives you a very large amount of money
                                         
                                         and there's probably this part of you
                                         
                                         that wants to think of it as yours,
                                         
                                         but you had, I guess
                                         
                                         the Stokes would say, both the Justice and the Discipline to not let it sit too long in your
                                         
                                         account or not at all. What did that process actually feel like of taking this life changing
                                         
                                         amount of money for you and directing it towards being truly life changing for a large amount of money for you and directing it towards being truly life-changing for a large amount of people.
                                         
    
                                         Yeah well I have to say it felt really good I was really glad to get the opportunity to do that.
                                         
                                         To be able to help all of these and was donated through effective charities and the life you can
                                         
                                         say has a list of independently assessed effective charities. So I was confident that the money was going to do what I was wanting it to do to help
                                         
                                         people to save the lives of children who would otherwise be vulnerable to malaria or as
                                         
                                         we were saying to restore sight in people or perhaps to provide mentoring and assistance
                                         
                                         so they could start a small business and work their way out of poverty
                                         
                                         help women who were suffering from
                                         
                                         obstetric fistulas which are life-ruining
                                         
    
                                         conditions which can be
                                         
                                         surgically repaired for about a thousand dollars. So
                                         
                                         Yeah, I was really pleased that there were a lot of different good things that I could do with this and certainly
                                         
                                         From my position obviously obviously I'm a Princeton
                                         
                                         professor, I'm not on the poverty line. So from my position, what I would have done with
                                         
                                         that extra million dollars was really putting a bit of icing on the cake, maybe it wasn't
                                         
                                         going to make any huge difference to improvement in my life. So I was fortunate to be in that
                                         
                                         situation. Yeah, I guess they say it's not a principle unless it costs you money.
                                         
    
                                         And then you got a large amount of money and you had to test the principle.
                                         
                                         It did cost me money, but it didn't cost me happiness.
                                         
                                         And that's truly more important than money, right?
                                         
                                         Money is an instrumental good for what you can do with it.
                                         
                                         And I think in terms of its what it does in terms of
                                         
                                         increasing your happiness, it is really very high level of diminishing marginal utility. So yes,
                                         
                                         if you're on 30 or 40 thousand dollars a year and you get a million dollars, it could make a big
                                         
                                         difference. But even you know, even then you wouldn't need the whole million. You could probably
                                         
    
                                         get most of the difference it would make in yourhow, happyness you would get for a couple of hundred thousand.
                                         
                                         Yeah, it's interesting. I don't want to get into some whole argument about whether money is real
                                         
                                         or not. The way that crypto people like to. But it is interesting that like, it's not really real,
                                         
                                         right? Like it's not like they gave you a brief case of cash and then you had to go put that in
                                         
                                         the safe in your house and then to spend it.
                                         
                                         It's like, it all goes into a spreadsheet somewhere.
                                         
                                         We're hoping someone is telling us that the number in the spreadsheet is getting larger
                                         
                                         or smaller, but it's all this kind of imaginary thing, especially after you reach a certain
                                         
    
                                         point and you don't have excessive spending habits,
                                         
                                         that number gets exponentially larger
                                         
                                         quite quickly, right?
                                         
                                         That's the power of compounding interest
                                         
                                         in all these things.
                                         
                                         And yet, taking it out of that spreadsheet
                                         
                                         makes it quite real, like very real
                                         
                                         to a large amount of people as you did.
                                         
    
                                         But for some reason, I think we get stuck trying,
                                         
                                         I know I certainly do, so I'm not trying to judge other people,
                                         
                                         but it's like, well, it came in, and I should put it here,
                                         
                                         and you have these systems, you don't,
                                         
                                         we're really good at building architecture in our lives
                                         
                                         or systems that make our net worth go higher,
                                         
                                         but we don't have the same system or prioritization
                                         
                                         of making our net impact number go higher, or the net lives we've saved in the course of
                                         
    
                                         our life number going higher.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's right.
                                         
                                         And that's exactly what the organization I found in the life you can say if I grew out
                                         
                                         of the book is trying to do.
                                         
                                         It's trying to change that culture.
                                         
                                         So the people have the sense that
                                         
                                         that's part of their life, giving is part of their life, helping people in greater need than they
                                         
                                         are, is part of their life. It's a regular thing that they do. Maybe they make a regular recurring
                                         
    
                                         monthly donation, there's one good way to do it. And so they feel good about that and they don't
                                         
                                         they don't feel that it's a loss.
                                         
                                         And I've talked to people who grew up in families where they did that right from the start.
                                         
                                         And they just see that as part of their life.
                                         
                                         But if they start out with what they've got in, minus whatever it might be, the 10% or
                                         
                                         something, might be less if they're poorer or more if they're wealthier, that's going at.
                                         
                                         And you can think of it as a way of improving yourself as you go along.
                                         
                                         So just as if you're a runner, you might do a certain run every day or a few times a week,
                                         
    
                                         and you time yourself and you think, hey, that's great. I broke my personal best today. So you can do that
                                         
                                         with giving. Last year I gave X percentage. This year I'm going to give X plus Y percent and that'll
                                         
                                         be my personal best. Sure. Sure. Yeah, there's a quote from Anne Frank that I loved and I was reading
                                         
                                         more about it. I guess it was the motto of the Frank family, but it's no one ever became poor by giving,
                                         
                                         which I think is a beautiful way of expressing
                                         
                                         what we're talking about.
                                         
                                         Exactly, I think that's quite right.
                                         
                                         Yeah.
                                         
    
                                         And the other thing I wanted to pick up going back
                                         
                                         to what you just said before,
                                         
                                         is about if you don't have excessive spending habits
                                         
                                         and that presumably fits with the stoic view as well.
                                         
                                         Sure.
                                         
                                         It's really important that your spending is modest, that you keep it constrained, that
                                         
                                         you don't think I have to have, as we're just saying, whatever new thing comes at.
                                         
                                         Because if you live modestly, you can live a very satisfactory life. And it's then pretty
                                         
    
                                         easy to say, I don't need this. You know, this
                                         
                                         is not something I really need to spend money on.
                                         
                                         Yeah, there's a there's a quote in Marcus really says, meditation that I think about often.
                                         
                                         He says that the blessing of his life was that he never knew want like he always had what
                                         
                                         he needed. And then anytime anyone ever asked him for something, he always had enough to give to them.
                                         
                                         So he was saying that he was rich, not just because he didn't need anything, but he always
                                         
                                         had a surplus big enough that he could help people who did need something.
                                         
                                         And I thought that was a kind of a beautiful and concise definition of wealth.
                                         
    
                                         That's a great definition of wealth, but is it applicable to a world in which everybody
                                         
                                         can email you or, you know, and you're much more aware of the fact there are people in
                                         
                                         need in countries far away from us.
                                         
                                         Of course, Mike is already as ruled over a large-dramon empire, but I guess people couldn't
                                         
                                         actually come up to him and ask him for money in the
                                         
                                         way that they could now have emailed him.
                                         
                                         Well, there is kind of a magnificent scene in Marcus' life in the depths of the Antonin
                                         
                                         plague.
                                         
    
                                         Rome's treasury is depleted, and he holds this sale on the lawn of the palace where he
                                         
                                         sells his wife's silken robes and their silver goblets and their furniture and their
                                         
                                         jewels.
                                         
                                         He just sells it all.
                                         
                                         The point being in his view was that he should suffer first before asking other people
                                         
                                         to suffer.
                                         
                                         I've always found that to be kind of a beautiful embodiment of both leadership and what stoicism is actually supposed to be about.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's really fascinating. When I think back on my childhood, I don't remember many
                                         
    
                                         parents talked a lot about money, about saving money, about being smart with money, about working hard and all these things.
                                         
                                         But I just don't really remember much in the way
                                         
                                         of a practice of generosity or charitable giving.
                                         
                                         So that wasn't like a, I feel like that wasn't a muscle.
                                         
                                         I think we went to church and I would see them put
                                         
                                         a little bit of money in the basket or whatever.
                                         
                                         But there wasn't much in the way of like that as a muscle.
                                         
                                         And I think that's one of the things I've
                                         
    
                                         took from what you just said is that this is something
                                         
                                         that's a little unnatural or a little,
                                         
                                         we're a little unpracticed in it.
                                         
                                         And it's actually something you have to try to get good at
                                         
                                         and try to push yourself to get better at just in the way
                                         
                                         that you might
                                         
                                         have a fitness goal or a diet or a career goal, you should have sort of some charitable
                                         
                                         or impact goals also.
                                         
    
                                         Yes, I think that's right.
                                         
                                         And maybe the reason that we have to work at that is that after all, we are descended
                                         
                                         from millions of generations of beings who had to survive
                                         
                                         first. And I had to think of themselves to survive. And I had to think of the, if there
                                         
                                         were mammals anyway, they had to think of helping their children to survive. Otherwise, they
                                         
                                         wouldn't have passed on the genes.
                                         
                                         Scarcity versus abundance. Yeah, that's right. Exactly. And so I think we have inherited this idea
                                         
                                         of think about yourself first and think about your children,
                                         
    
                                         but we also have the capacity to see that we are just
                                         
                                         one among what's now 8 billion people in the world.
                                         
                                         And some of them, fortunately,
                                         
                                         a diminishing number of them, but maybe 7,800 million
                                         
                                         of them are in extreme poverty, where they're
                                         
                                         living on what to us is like buying a cup of coffee somewhere, two dollars a day.
                                         
                                         And yet for us, that's to spend two dollars on something is just nothing.
                                         
                                         We don't even think about it.
                                         
    
                                         So, that's the world we live in and that's why we have
                                         
                                         directly, I think, developed that sense of it is one world as you were saying before.
                                         
                                         We can think about them and how they feel and how their parents feel when their child
                                         
                                         would die, how we would feel if our child were to die. So that can help us to get in the habit of to make it something that feels perfectly
                                         
                                         natural to us, to share some of our good fortune with them.
                                         
                                         Do you think it also has something to do with sort of like who are our heroes?
                                         
                                         Like who do we celebrate?
                                         
                                         Who do we hold up as people that know, people that we wanna be like?
                                         
    
                                         I was really surprised as I was reading the book.
                                         
                                         You have like a section or a chapter on Yonik Silver
                                         
                                         who I happen to know pretty well.
                                         
                                         I've known for a long time.
                                         
                                         I always knew him as a successful business person.
                                         
                                         I've seen him at a bunch of conferences.
                                         
                                         We've had dinner a few times.
                                         
                                         Nice guy, I knew him to be a good parent and a friendly person,
                                         
    
                                         but I had no idea about his other sort of work on the side.
                                         
                                         His focus on effective altruism and his charitable work.
                                         
                                         And it just struck me as one how often we celebrate
                                         
                                         one kind of success in a person's life.
                                         
                                         And because they maybe they don't want
                                         
                                         to seem holier than that, maybe they don't want to seem
                                         
                                         holier than now or they don't want to seem like
                                         
                                         they're doing it to get attention.
                                         
    
                                         Maybe we know less about the good they're doing on the side,
                                         
                                         but just that also so much of what we celebrate,
                                         
                                         like Forbes has their list of the richest people,
                                         
                                         they don't have a list of like the people
                                         
                                         who have helped the most people with their wealth. Right, and yeah,
                                         
                                         that's what we need, an impact assessment of what people have done. And it's not just how much
                                         
                                         they've given, because the people who, you know, we know are giving, and certainly this is true
                                         
                                         around Princeton, many other places, well, other people whose names are on buildings. Yeah, sure.
                                         
    
                                         And they've given, but they've given on condition that the money be used for a building,
                                         
                                         and then it gets named after them.
                                         
                                         And that may not be the best use,
                                         
                                         even the Princeton could make of their money, right?
                                         
                                         But they're less likely to give that scholarships
                                         
                                         for the needy because nobody sees their name
                                         
                                         on the scholarship in quite the same way.
                                         
                                         So that's one thing, but you're right. In a way, you
                                         
    
                                         said something like, you don't want to appear self-righteous. In a way, we're too modest,
                                         
                                         not the people who are giving for the buildings, but the rest of us are too modest. And we
                                         
                                         don't go public about what we're doing. So you know, you're like silver and yet you never knew
                                         
                                         the philanthropy that that he was doing. So, um, why is that? I think it's because he's inhibited
                                         
                                         about seeming to boast about it. Yeah. Um, so he doesn't do that. But because he doesn't do that,
                                         
                                         other people don't think about giving that much. And there's plenty of good research and psychology that says,
                                         
                                         if you know that other people are helping,
                                         
                                         helping strangers, let's say,
                                         
    
                                         then you're more likely to help than if you think,
                                         
                                         oh, well, why should I help?
                                         
                                         Why am I the only one who's helping?
                                         
                                         You know, there's other people around
                                         
                                         who are just as well off or better than me.
                                         
                                         And if you don't know that they're helping,
                                         
                                         you're less likely to help yourself.
                                         
                                         Yeah, it's, we not only don't encourage it,
                                         
    
                                         we even have like a slur that we throw at it,
                                         
                                         we call it virtue signaling, right?
                                         
                                         Like we not only don't celebrate the good stuff
                                         
                                         that people are doing, but that we criticize them
                                         
                                         if they dare to talk about it too much or if they're
                                         
                                         not modest enough about what they've done.
                                         
                                         Right.
                                         
                                         So, virtually signaling is the current sort of trainee turn that comes out of evolutionary
                                         
    
                                         theory.
                                         
                                         Yeah.
                                         
                                         But otherwise we call them do-gooders, right?
                                         
                                         And that also has a bit of a pejorative sense to it to be a do-gooder.
                                         
                                         I don't know if you know the book by
                                         
                                         Larissa McFarquire called Strangers Drowning. It's a fascinating book because
                                         
                                         it has different chapters on different do-gooders who are really truly admirable.
                                         
                                         Some of them are giving money, some of them might be giving a kidney, some of them
                                         
    
                                         are taking in kids who are in need,
                                         
                                         abandoned kids, disabled kids and so on.
                                         
                                         And she mingles that, it's not just the stories,
                                         
                                         but she mingles it with some sort of philosophical discussion
                                         
                                         about altruism, about how much people can do
                                         
                                         under the circumstances in which altruism arises.
                                         
                                         And it's a really interesting study which shows the possibilities
                                         
                                         for some of us that what people can do. And I found it really inspiring as well as intellectually
                                         
    
                                         stimulating. Well, you know, it's funny, right? Like, the buying the Ferrari is visible, right?
                                         
                                         You can see that they bought the Ferrari and that's either impressive or whatever it means to you,
                                         
                                         but by definition not buying the Ferrari is not visible and sending the money overseas or to this
                                         
                                         charity or anonymously donating here is again by definition not visible. And so we kind of have this
                                         
                                         condition not visible. And so we kind of have this conflict in which not doing good is inherently more visible, inherently more rewarded than doing good. And so there's this sort of
                                         
                                         disparity in terms of credit. And then what do we signal to people is important. Like we
                                         
                                         signal having a nice car
                                         
                                         is important because people have nice cars and we see it and it says something about them
                                         
    
                                         and the other thing by not having the signal we don't know about them so we have no sense
                                         
                                         of how important it is or how prevalent it is.
                                         
                                         Yeah and even more glaring example than the nice cars I find is the really expensive watches, the
                                         
                                         Rolexes or brightlings or whatever it might be, which don't do any better than this
                                         
                                         Casio.
                                         
                                         In fact, they're worse really in terms of keeping time or you have to wind them or something
                                         
                                         like that or they don't have the multiple functions.
                                         
                                         But people pay $5,000, $10 10,000, 20,000 for one of those
                                         
    
                                         watches.
                                         
                                         And it does nothing except say, I'm really wealthy because otherwise I couldn't have afforded
                                         
                                         this watch.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's a good point, man.
                                         
                                         It's tough.
                                         
                                         And then where do you draw the line?
                                         
                                         Do you need the Casio watch at all?
                                         
                                         I have an Apple watch,
                                         
    
                                         it's certainly more expensive than you're watch,
                                         
                                         but I tell myself, hey, it's not a Rolex, you know,
                                         
                                         and all of a sudden, you know, you get down
                                         
                                         and well, why don't you just look at the sun and guess, you know?
                                         
                                         Yeah, you could do that, but not at night, maybe.
                                         
                                         Yes, sure.
                                         
                                         You know, you can use your phone, I suppose, but that's a bit less convenient.
                                         
                                         I carry a watch.
                                         
    
                                         And maybe having an Apple Watch has some functionality for you.
                                         
                                         So as your time doing some things, that's fine.
                                         
                                         But actually, I got given a brightling recently for a talk
                                         
                                         that I did in Switzerland instead of getting paid for it.
                                         
                                         They gave me a brightling.
                                         
                                         If any of your listeners would like a brightling
                                         
                                         and it's prepared to donate, I think it's minus around $6,000 is prepared to donate
                                         
                                         $6,000 to charity. It's unused, unworn. I'd like them to just send me an email and it's theirs.
                                         
    
                                         You should have an auction for it. Well, that would be an idea. Maybe that's what we should be
                                         
                                         doing. I'll talk to people at the life you can say, maybe we'll do that. You should wear it precisely once so that
                                         
                                         it could be Peter Singer's Brightling. And then it's now worth $50,000 because it has
                                         
                                         this story behind it. And now you've helped even more, but by attaching a story to it
                                         
                                         and a narrative and a cause to it, you took something that could have provided $6,000 in value.
                                         
                                         And now you've got $50,000 in that.
                                         
                                         OK, right.
                                         
                                         I'm going to take back what I just said.
                                         
    
                                         You need to know that $50,000 to affect your charity.
                                         
                                         And it's yours.
                                         
                                         There you go.
                                         
                                         There you go.
                                         
                                         That's a beautiful idea.
                                         
                                         I do think about that.
                                         
                                         How do you, when you are good at something,
                                         
                                         you command in the system that we have,
                                         
    
                                         you command a price that the market sets.
                                         
                                         And obviously, you don't want to accept less than what the market accepts,
                                         
                                         because that only helps the multi-billion dollar publisher that would have paid you X and instead is paying
                                         
                                         you three X.
                                         
                                         But just because they are paying you that doesn't mean you're actually worth that or you
                                         
                                         need that.
                                         
                                         And so reading your work and as I've been writing this book about justice, I am trying to think more and more about how does one, you know, sort of
                                         
                                         pay it forward or effectively use the surplus that their skills or
                                         
    
                                         unique set of circumstances has created for them because again, just putting
                                         
                                         it in a spreadsheet and congratulating yourself that it's a large number at the end of your
                                         
                                         life is not particularly meaningful.
                                         
                                         No, it's not.
                                         
                                         So, I face this when I get invited to give talks, sometimes talks for corporations, sometimes
                                         
                                         talks for universities or other institutions.
                                         
                                         And I don't need the money, but I don't want to do it for free.
                                         
                                         And also, I would, you know, I get more invitations than I could possibly accept.
                                         
    
                                         So I ask for a donation to one of the life you can save recommended charities,
                                         
                                         and depending on how much time is involved, how much travel, what the institution is,
                                         
                                         I'll vary that amount.
                                         
                                         But I take that as the sign of recognition that they want me
                                         
                                         enough that they're prepared to make a sizable donation.
                                         
                                         Plus, it's doing some good.
                                         
                                         I find that, I guess I could just charge the fee and then donate it myself, but I'm
                                         
                                         happy to do it either way.
                                         
    
                                         Well, I sometimes think about that.
                                         
                                         My books have been popular with the armed forces, and so I'll often get requests. And I go, well, these are soldiers.
                                         
                                         You're speaking to them, I think they do important work
                                         
                                         and blah, blah, blah.
                                         
                                         And then I go 50% of the US budget
                                         
                                         goes to the defense department.
                                         
                                         I don't wanna keep it in there.
                                         
                                         And first off, it's my taxpayer dollars
                                         
    
                                         that I'm just getting back in some form or another.
                                         
                                         But yeah, I think sometimes people
                                         
                                         who have this sense of money is not important to me.
                                         
                                         I want to do good in the world.
                                         
                                         They feel guilty making money
                                         
                                         or asking for what they are worth.
                                         
                                         And I do think effective altruism has been clever and innovative
                                         
                                         in this idea of earning to give or thinking about how,
                                         
    
                                         you just not accepting money for your services
                                         
                                         doesn't really help anyone.
                                         
                                         But if you can leverage those services to do good for other people,
                                         
                                         then I think you found a way to solve that problem.
                                         
                                         I think that's right, yes.
                                         
                                         And recognizing that money can do good for others,
                                         
                                         that it's fungible in that way,
                                         
                                         is the first step towards thinking, yeah, sure.
                                         
    
                                         I don't have to feel bad that I'm asking for money for this.
                                         
                                         If I'm asking for, as you say, the US military or from corporations or institutions that
                                         
                                         can afford it and that would normally expect to pay that for a speaker, let's say.
                                         
                                         But let's do something more positive with it than just use it to enrich myself.
                                         
                                         In which case, I would feel bad about asking some of those sums.
                                         
                                         What about, is there an ethical line, like let's say some foreign government of ill-repute
                                         
                                         wanted to pay you to give a talk?
                                         
                                         Now ostensibly you could get that money and it's better for you to have it than them
                                         
    
                                         to have it and then you could use it to do good
                                         
                                         But would you draw a line there like can one take on can one
                                         
                                         On take money unethically to then use ethically or how do you think about that?
                                         
                                         Well, I think it does depend on on what the effective taking it will be
                                         
                                         Is the is the foreign government or this could also be a corporation, for example,
                                         
                                         this has been debated about tobacco corporations. Are they using it to improve their image so that
                                         
                                         people will think this is fine, we don't need to regulate tobacco, we don't need to put big warnings warnings on cigarette packs and they're okay. In that case, you know, maybe you
                                         
                                         shouldn't be taking that money or allowing your money to be used for them. But
                                         
    
                                         if they're not doing that, and particularly, let's say, if it's a foreign
                                         
                                         government and you can say what you want about it, and that's my clear, then
                                         
                                         maybe you can actually do good within that country as well as using the money
                                         
                                         for some good. So it's going to depend on the particular situation that you're in.
                                         
                                         Yeah, have you seen this new golf lead that the Saudis have funded?
                                         
                                         Yes, I've heard about that. Yeah. Yeah, so I'm wondering if you take a hundred million dollar
                                         
                                         guaranteed payment, but then you use
                                         
                                         it for good.
                                         
    
                                         Is that the same as just taking the money because they're paying you so much more than the
                                         
                                         PGA tour?
                                         
                                         Yeah, it's an interesting question.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's a tough one.
                                         
                                         Does it make any difference to what the Saudis do or to their position in the world that they're
                                         
                                         sponsoring the Skull? I think probably not really. People know what they've done. They know
                                         
                                         about the Kishoggi murder and they know that they haven't been very helpful right now in the
                                         
                                         context of the Ukraine war and the energy shortage in terms of keeping prices down a little bit.
                                         
    
                                         prices down a little bit. So I think they know that anyway and if I were good enough golf it would be off at $100 million for playing with the Saudi golf league. I'd probably take
                                         
                                         it because that would be a lot of good that I could do with that money.
                                         
                                         Yeah, it's tricky and to go to your donation, it's easy for regular people to sit around
                                         
                                         and going, you should never do it, or you should do it and donate it. But that's because
                                         
                                         you're not looking at, you know, a large number with a lot of zeros after it being dangled
                                         
                                         in front of you. It gets tricky once, once, you know, once it's your money or potentially your money.
                                         
                                         Yeah, I mean, it can get tricky, but if you've decided before you went into it that you
                                         
                                         were going to give this money, and maybe you say that publicly so that people know that
                                         
    
                                         you're doing that and it makes it harder for you to back down without getting embarrassed,
                                         
                                         you can do that.
                                         
                                         Yeah, I guess that's why these pledges are so effective
                                         
                                         and some of these labels can be so effective
                                         
                                         is that they keep us honest or they force us to give,
                                         
                                         as you say in the book,
                                         
                                         past the point where it hurts a little bit.
                                         
                                         Yeah, that's right.
                                         
    
                                         I think public pledges and saying things
                                         
                                         about you're giving in public, it certainly should help.
                                         
                                         Well, I thought the book was fascinating
                                         
                                         and it certainly changed how I think about a lot of things
                                         
                                         and I really appreciate what you do.
                                         
                                         And I think this is what philosophy is supposed to do,
                                         
                                         which is it's supposed to challenge us
                                         
                                         and it's supposed to make us better people,
                                         
    
                                         not just involve a bunch of unpronounceable names
                                         
                                         and impossible to solve proofs or problems.
                                         
                                         Yeah, I think it's important to get people to realize
                                         
                                         that philosophy is relevant to anybody's everyday life.
                                         
                                         The humanities are not in such great shape in all areas.
                                         
                                         They have to compete with the STEM subjects.
                                         
                                         And, you know, there are some things that go on in some of the humanities that I don't think are particularly worthwhile,
                                         
                                         but I think philosophy really is something special.
                                         
    
                                         I've seen this throughout my career that students have changed their lives because of classes that they've taken with me or people have read reading things that they've read that have changed their
                                         
                                         lives in philosophy. So I think it's got to be there. It's a society in which people didn't
                                         
                                         think deeply about how they ought to live would be really an impoverished society.
                                         
                                         No, that's right.
                                         
                                         And I think that's why we've been struggling with these questions for so long, is that they're
                                         
                                         really hard and really vexing.
                                         
                                         But as we get a little bit closer, hopefully we get a little bit better each time, each
                                         
                                         generation. Hey, it's Ryan. Thank you for listening to the Daily Stoic podcast. I just wanted to
                                         
    
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