Ewen macaskill biography of william
William MacAskill
Scottish philosopher and ethicist (born )
William MacAskill | |
---|---|
MacAskill in | |
Born | William David Crouch () 24 March (age37) Glasgow, Scotland |
Education | |
Spouse | Amanda Askell (divorced) |
Era | Contemporary philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
Institutions | |
Thesis | Normative Uncertainty() |
Doctoral advisors | |
Main interests | |
Notable ideas | |
Website |
William David MacAskill (néCrouch; born 24 March )[2] is a Scottish philosopher and author, as well as one of the originators of the effective altruism movement.[3][4][5] He was a Research Fellow at the Global Priorities Institute at the University of Oxford, co-founded Giving What We Can, the Centre for Effective Altruism and 80, Hours,[6] and is the author of Doing Good Better ()[7] and What We Owe the Future (),[8] and the co-author of Moral Uncertainty ().[9]
Early life and education
MacAskill was born William Crouch in and grew up in Glasgow.[1][5][10] He was educated at Hutchesons' Grammar School in Glasgow.[11] At the age of 15, after learning about how many people were dying as a result of AIDS, he made the decision to work towards becoming wealthy and giving away half of his money.[12] At the age of 18, MacAskill read Peter Singer's essay "Famine, Affluence, and Morality", which motivated his philosophical and charitable interests.[5]
MacAskill earned his BA in philosophy at Jesus College, Cambridge in and BPhil at St Edmund Hall, Oxford in He went on to be awarded a DPhil at St Anne's College, Oxford in (spending a year as a visiting student at Princeton University), supervised by John Broome and Krister Bykvist[sv].[citation needed] He then took up a junior research fellowship at Emmanuel College, Cambridge,[13] before being elected to an associate professorship at the University of Oxford in association with a Fellowship at Lincoln College, Oxford, which he left after one year.[14]
Career
Effective altruism
In , MacAskill and fellow Oxford graduate student Toby Ord co-founded the organisation Giving What We Can to encourage people to pledge to donate 10% of their income to charities "that you sincerely believe to be among the most effective at improving the lives of others".[1][15] He co-founded the Centre for Effective Altruism in as an umbrella organisation of Giving What We Can and 80, Hours,[16] which he co-founded with Benjamin Todd, to provide advice on how to use one's career to do the most good in the world.[1] In , MacAskill gave a TED talk on effective altruism at the TED conference in Vancouver.[17]
MacAskill has worked as chair of the advisory board at the Global Priorities Institute at the University of Oxford[18] and Director of the Forethought Foundation for Global Priorities Research.[19] He is an advisor to Longview Philanthropy.[20]
He was associated with Sam Bankman-Fried for a number of years and reportedly dismissed claims that Bankman-Fried was engaging in inappropriate conduct as a "he said-she said" during an effort in to oust Bankman-Fried from control of the now-failed trading firm Alameda Research.[21] He was a member of the FTX Future Fund, which granted $ million to effective altruism causes in , including $33 million to organizations directly connected to MacAskill.[21] Following the bankruptcy of FTX, MacAskill and the rest of the team resigned from the fund.[22]
In , as tech magnate Elon Musk sought funding for his purchase of Twitter, MacAskill liaised between Musk and Bankman-Fried.
Musk and MacAskill were previously acquainted; Musk described What We Owe the Future as "a close match for my philosophy".[23] MacAskill contacted Musk to arrange a conversation with Bankman-Fried, describing him as "my collaborator".[21] Ultimately, Bankman-Fried, whose corporate ventures were facing a case, United States v.
Bankman-Fried, did not participate in the acquisition.[24]
Analytic philosophy
One of the main focuses of MacAskill's research has been how one ought to make decisions under normative uncertainty; this was the topic of his DPhil thesis,[25] as well as articles in Ethics,[26]Mind[27] and The Journal of Philosophy.[28]
Books
Doing Good Better
Main article: Doing Good Better
MacAskill's first book, Doing Good Better, was published in [29][30][31][32] MacAskill argues that many of the ways people think about doing good achieve very little, but that by applying data and scientific reasoning to doing good, people can have a much larger positive impact.
For example, the book proposes that fair trade does very little to help the poorest farmers, that boycotting sweatshops is bad for the global poor,[30] and that people who pursue high-income careers could do more good than charity workers by donating large portions of their wealth to effective charities, i.e. earning to give.[32] However, in the same year the book was published, MacAskill deemphasised earning to give, saying "only a small proportion of people should earn to give long term".[33]
What We Owe the Future
Main article: What We Owe the Future
MacAskill's second book, What We Owe the Future, makes the case for longtermism.[34][35][36]:35–36 His argument has three parts: first, future people count morally as much as the people alive today; second, the future is immense because humanity may survive for a very long time; and third, the future could be very good or very bad, and our actions could make the difference.
The book also discusses how bad the end of humanity would be, which depends on whether the future will be good or bad and whether it is morally good for happy people to be born—a key question in population ethics. He concludes that the future will likely be positive on balance if humanity survives.[36]
Personal life
MacAskill (born Crouch) argued that men should consider changing their last names when they get married.
He and his now ex-wife, Amanda Askell, changed their last name to "MacAskill", her maternal grandmother's maiden name.[37] MacAskill and his former wife authored articles together on topics of ethical debate[38][39] before their separation in and later divorce.[1]
MacAskill has experienced both anxiety and depression.
As of , he lives in Oxford.[1] Out of concern for animal welfare, he is vegetarian.[10][40]
References
- ^ abcdefBajekal, Naina (10 August ).
"Want to Do More Good? This Movement Might Have the Answer". Time. Retrieved 10 August
- ^"Centre for Effective Altruism". Companies House. Director's details changed for William David Crouch on 5 November
- ^Thompson, Derek (15 June ).Biography of william shakespeare In the month and a half since the publication of his provocative new book, What We Owe the Future , he has been profiled or excerpted or reviewed or interviewed in just about every major American publication. Longview Philanthropy. The idea is predicated on brute arithmetic: Assuming humanity does not drive itself to premature extinction, future people will vastly outnumber present people, and so, the thinking goes, we ought to be spending a lot more time and energy looking out for their interests than we currently do. Contents move to sidebar hide.
"The Greatest Good". The Atlantic. ISSN Retrieved 29 July
- ^Diver, Tony (1 March ). "While the papers whine about Oxbridge debauchery, student altruism gets ignored". The Telegraph. Retrieved 15 August
- ^ abcLewis-Kraus, Gideon (8 August ).
"The Reluctant Prophet of Effective Altruism". The New Yorker. Retrieved 10 August
- ^Quaade, Sebastian (5 April ). "An Interview with William MacAskill, Founding Member of Effective Altruism". The Politic. Retrieved 29 July
- ^MacAskill, William (). Doing Good Better: Effective Altruism and a Radical New Way to Make a Difference.
London: Guardian Faber. ISBN. OCLC
- ^MacAskill, William (6 December ). What We Owe the Future by William MacAskill. Basic Books. ISBN. Retrieved 8 August
- ^MacAskill, William; Bykvist, Krister; Ord, Toby (). Moral Uncertainty(PDF). Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press.
ISBN.
- ^ abTett, Gillian (9 September ). "Philosopher William MacAskill: 'The world is a darker place than it was just five years ago'". Financial Times. Retrieved 26 January
- ^Morrison, Hamish (15 August ).
"William MacAskill: Effective altruism philosopher backs Scottish independence". The National. Retrieved 28 August
- ^Anthony, Andrew (21 August ). "William MacAskill: 'There are 80 trillion people yet to come. They need us to start protecting them'". The Guardian.
Retrieved 28 August
- ^"New People"(PDF). Oxford Philosophy.
- Citizenfour Characters - GradeSaver
- Clear
- Biography - Mr. Ewen MacAskill
- Will MacAskill Knows Effective Altruism Gets Weird Fast - The ...
p.7. Retrieved 29 July
- ^"Members: The Senior Common Room –16"(PDF). Lincoln College Record –16. p.9. Archived from the original(PDF) on 13 April Retrieved 29 July
- ^"Our pledge". Giving What We Can. Retrieved 30 March
- ^"What's bad about being good?".
News. University of St Andrews.
Ewen macaskill biography of william hurt Buy Book. Ewen is the former defence and intelligence correspondent for The Guardian having worked for the UK media organisation for 22 years. Contents move to sidebar hide. MacAskill: I think the media is important!20 September Retrieved 28 August
- ^MacAskill, William (April ). What are the most important moral problems of our time? (video). TED.
- ^"People". Global Priorities Institute.Ewen macaskill biography of william shakespeare Early detection becomes absolutely crucial. He was associated with Sam Bankman-Fried for a number of years and reportedly dismissed claims that Bankman-Fried was engaging in inappropriate conduct as a "he said-she said" during an effort in to oust Bankman-Fried from control of the now-failed trading firm Alameda Research. Ewen MacAskill Investigative journalism. MacAskill: Yeah.
Archived from the original on 23 June Retrieved 29 July
- ^"Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life". The New York Times. 9 August ISSN Retrieved 17 August
- ^"People". Longview Philanthropy. Retrieved 28 August
- ^ abcAlter, Charlotte (15 March ).
"Exclusive: Effective Altruist Leaders Were Warned About Sam Bankman-Fried Years Before FTX Collapsed". Time. Retrieved 15 March
- ^"Sam Bankman-Fried's 'Effective Altruism' Team Resigns Amid FTX Meltdown". Gizmodo. 11 November Retrieved 11 November
- ^Kulish, Nicholas (8 October ).
"How a Scottish Moral Philosopher Got Elon Musk's Number". The New York Times. ISSN Retrieved 12 May
- ^"How a Scottish Moral Philosopher Got Elon Musk's Number". New York Times. 8 October Retrieved 15 March
- ^MacAskill, William (). Normative Uncertainty (DPhil thesis).
University of Oxford.
- ^MacAskill, William (1 April ). "The Infectiousness of Nihilism". Ethics. (3): – doi/ ISSN S2CID
- ^MacAskill, William (October ). "Normative Uncertainty as a Voting Problem". Mind. (): – doi/mind/fzv ISSN
- ^MacAskill, William ().
"Smokers, Psychos, and Decision-Theoretic Uncertainty". The Journal of Philosophy. (9): – doi/jphil ISSNX.
- ^Srinivasan, Amia (24 September ). "Stop the Robot Apocalypse". London Review of Books. pp.3–6. ISSN Retrieved 9 September
- ^ abShariatmadari, David (20 August ).
"Doing Good Better by William MacAskill review – if you read this book, you'll change the charities you donate to". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 September
- ^Cowen, Tyler (14 August ). "Effective Altruism: Where Charity and Rationality Meet". The New York Times. ISSN Retrieved 29 July
- ^ ab"Effective Altruism: A Better Way to Lead an Ethical Life".
Intelligence Squared. 4 December Retrieved 8 December
- ^"80, Hours thinks that only a small proportion of people should earn to give long term".Ewen macaskill biography of william MacAskill in This year, it fielded its first major political candidate in the U. Basic Books. Stern: Shifting out of pandemic gear, I was wondering whether there are major lobbying efforts under way to persuade billionaires to convert to EA, given that the potential payoff of persuading someone like Jeff Bezos to donate some significant part of his fortune is just massive.
80, Hours. 6 July Retrieved 8 January
- ^Burkeman, Oliver (25 August ). "What We Owe the Future by William MacAskill review – a thrilling prescription for humanity". The Guardian. ISSN Retrieved 12 May
- ^"What We Owe the Future by William MacAskill — our obligation to the unborn billions".
Financial Times. Retrieved 12 May
- ^ abMacAskill, William (). What We Owe the Future. New York: Basic Books.
- Ewen macaskill biography of william hamilton
- Ewen macaskill biography of william blake
- Ewen macaskill biography of william butler
ISBN.
- ^MacAskill, William (5 March ). "Men Should Consider Changing Their Last Names When They Get Married". The Atlantic. Retrieved 29 July
- ^MacAskill, Amanda; MacAskill, William (9 September ). "To truly end animal suffering, the most ethical choice is to kill wild predators (especially Cecil the lion)".
Quartz. Retrieved 29 July
- ^MacAskill, William; MacAskill, Amanda (19 November ). "The truth about animal charities, cats and dogs". The Guardian.
Ewen macaskill biography of william hamilton: It has seemed to me like his giving so far is relatively small scale. Whereas 10 percent, I think, is achievable yet at the same time really is a difference compared to what they otherwise would have been doing. Early life and education [ edit ]. And so the key difference is the pro-life person wants to extend the franchise just a little bit to the 10 million unborn fetuses that are around at the moment.
ISSN Retrieved 29 July
- ^MacAskill, William (). "How to Act". What we owe the future. Basic Books. p. ISBN.