10本のエピソード

Harvard Effective Altruism presents interviews with leading academics and other distinguished guests on doing good better, and striving to make the biggest difference in the world.

Lightbulb Moment Effective Altruism at Harvard

    • 社会/文化

Harvard Effective Altruism presents interviews with leading academics and other distinguished guests on doing good better, and striving to make the biggest difference in the world.

    Max Bazerman

    Max Bazerman

    We welcome Max Bazerman as our first guest of the second season! Professor Bazerman is the Jesse Isidor Straus Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School, where he focuses on applied behavioral psychology and ethical decision making. He is author and co-author of more than 200 articles and 20 books, including The Power of Noticing.

    • 54分
    Lant Pritchett

    Lant Pritchett

    In this episode, we interview Lant Pritchett, Professor of the Practice of International Development at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. After obtaining his PhD in Economics from MIT, he worked at the World Bank for many years, and was a contributor to the first Copenhagen consensus, a project that seeks to establish priorities in addressing environmental issues. In his book, Let Their People Come, Pritchett argues that the best way the developed world can help impoverished countries is to allow for immigration of low-skilled workers. We talk about this, and a whole lot more.

    • 1 時間15分
    Spencer Greenberg

    Spencer Greenberg

    How to introduce Spencer Greenberg? He’s a man who wears many hats– entrepreneur, doctorate in applied math from New York University, researcher, startup founder, and he’s extremely productive in his spare time, too! He founded Spark Wave, a startup foundry which creates novel software products designed to solve problems in the world. A few of the issues they’ve tackled are scalable care for depression, and technology for improving social science. He also founded ClearerThinking.org, which offers free tools and training programs, that have been used by over 150,000 people, designed to help improve decision-making and reduce biases in people’s thinking.

    • 1 時間14分
    Bryan Caplan

    Bryan Caplan

    Bryan Caplan is an economist and professor of economics at George Mason University, research fellow at the Mercatus Center, adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and a frequent contributor to Freakonomics as well as publishing his own blog, EconLog. He’s also the author of the books The Myth of the Rational Voter, Selfish Reasons to Have More Kids, and The Case Against Education. He is a self-described libertarian and anarchocapitalist, but in his popular works I mostly think of him as a contrarian.

    • 1 時間46分
    Scott Weathers

    Scott Weathers

    Scott is a student at the Harvard Chan School of Public Health and the Associate Project Director of Charity Science: Health – a new charity founded within the effective altruism community with the goal of becoming one of the most cost-effective organizations in the global health space.

    Before joining the Charity Science team, Scott conducted cost­-effectiveness analyses on global health interventions as a summer intern at the WHO. He has experience working at the Center for Global Development and the US Department of State.

    • 51分
    Brian Tomasik

    Brian Tomasik

    Brian Tomasik writes about ethics, animal welfare, and far-future scenarios from a suffering-focused perspective, all of which you can find on reducing-suffering.com.
    He helped to found Foundational Research Institute, a think tank that explores crucial considerations for reducing suffering in the long-run future. (Full-disclosure, Holly is currently a contractor for FRI.)
    Previously, Brian earned to give as a programmer at FlyHomes, and before that at Microsoft.
    Brian is something of a cult figure in EA. You’ll see in the interview that he has an extremely thoroughly thought out viewpoint that still strikes a lot of EAs as very unituitive. That combination is pretty irresistable. Brian has changed our minds a lot and convinced me of the importance of a lot of things I previously overlooked. And he does it with such serenity and goodwill that you can’t help but like him while he’s dutifully showing you how wrong you are. Ales and I really loved the experience, and we hope you will, too.

    • 1 時間22分

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