You make a huge unspoken assumptions that people actually care about charities getting their stated work done. There’s very little evidence for it, and plenty of evidence against it. As far as we know people donate time and money to charities to signal their moral character to others, and to receive pleasant feelings of contributing in return.
So you’d be right, if your basic assumption wasn’t so completely mistaken. To be honest this assumption is extremely common, so it’s not just your mistake, but it doesn’t make it any less false.
You mistake my assumptions. I am talking to people who I assume care at least a little about actual impact on the real world, and trying to pry them loose from a charitable world optimized mostly around pleasant feelings.
I think most of these people (whose actions achieve more in signaling and warm fuzzy feelings than getting the stated work done) do genuinely care, they’re just doing it wrong.
You make a huge unspoken assumptions that people actually care about charities getting their stated work done. There’s very little evidence for it, and plenty of evidence against it. As far as we know people donate time and money to charities to signal their moral character to others, and to receive pleasant feelings of contributing in return.
So you’d be right, if your basic assumption wasn’t so completely mistaken. To be honest this assumption is extremely common, so it’s not just your mistake, but it doesn’t make it any less false.
You mistake my assumptions. I am talking to people who I assume care at least a little about actual impact on the real world, and trying to pry them loose from a charitable world optimized mostly around pleasant feelings.
I think most of these people (whose actions achieve more in signaling and warm fuzzy feelings than getting the stated work done) do genuinely care, they’re just doing it wrong.
Agreed. The signalling and warm fuzzy feelings provide false feedback about the actual validity of individual volunteering.