As you only have a limited time on this earth, the most valuable thing you possess is time. So the most valuable thing you can give to someone is your time, devotion and love. Ignoring some one you could help is wrong.
I can’t help thinking that whilst giving money to charity is laudable, and I give when ever I can, it is only a minor thing, and gives an excuse not to do more. Is giving to charity just an excuse to get stinking rich?
Working for nothing for a charity would be a far superior act of altruism.
You are erroneously centering the cost to the giver instead of the value to the receiver.
Money enables a charity to obtain the resources it needs, including potentially, the time of someone who can serve its mission and do more good than you could with your time.
If you are very well-suited to help a charity-perhaps you have special skills it needs or the organization is new and needs help in absence of having funds for staff-giving of your time can be very helpful.
But money, given the huge variety of capacities that it can enable, is extremely valuable.
In any case, effective altruism is about centering the effect of one’s activity, not the cost to the giver. Dear sacrifice is certainly appreciated, but one should try to leverage it toward achieving a better world.
As you only have a limited time on this earth, the most valuable thing you possess is time. So the most valuable thing you can give to someone is your time, devotion and love. Ignoring some one you could help is wrong.
I can’t help thinking that whilst giving money to charity is laudable, and I give when ever I can, it is only a minor thing, and gives an excuse not to do more. Is giving to charity just an excuse to get stinking rich?
Working for nothing for a charity would be a far superior act of altruism.
You are erroneously centering the cost to the giver instead of the value to the receiver.
Money enables a charity to obtain the resources it needs, including potentially, the time of someone who can serve its mission and do more good than you could with your time.
If you are very well-suited to help a charity-perhaps you have special skills it needs or the organization is new and needs help in absence of having funds for staff-giving of your time can be very helpful.
But money, given the huge variety of capacities that it can enable, is extremely valuable.
In any case, effective altruism is about centering the effect of one’s activity, not the cost to the giver. Dear sacrifice is certainly appreciated, but one should try to leverage it toward achieving a better world.