2. Do you think if all the movements coordinate with each other, the results will be more
effective?
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
Sapiens can cooperate in flexible ways with countless numbers of strangers. That’s why we rule the world, whereas ants eat our leftovers and chimps are locked up in zoos.
The historian, Yuval Harari, claims in his book Sapiens that better coordination has been the key driver of human progress. He highlights innovations like language, religion, human rights, nation states and money as valuable because they improve cooperation among strangers.1
If we work together, we can do far more good. This is part of why we started the effective altruism community in the first place: we realised that by working with others who want to do good in a similar way — based on evidence and careful reasoning — we could achieve much more. (If you’re new to effective altruism, and want to get involved in person, see this short guide).
But unfortunately we, like other communities, often don’t coordinate as well as we could.
Instead, especially in effective altruism, people engage in “single-player” thinking. They work out what would be the best course of action if others weren’t responding to what they do. But once you’re part of a community that does respond to your actions, this assumption breaks down. We need to develop new rules of thumb for doing good — the strategies and approaches that work well in a single-player situation often don’t work once you’re collaborating with a community.
In this article, we’ll overview everything we’ve learned about how best to coordinate. By this we mean how individuals within a group can best work together to maximise their collective impact.
We’ll start by covering the basic mechanisms of coordination, including the core concepts in economics that are relevant, and some new concepts like indirect trade and shared aims communities.
We’ll also list the practical ways in which doing good changes when coordinating.
We’ll use the effective altruism community as a case study. However, we think the same ideas apply to many communities with common aims, such as environmentalism, social enterprise, international development, and so on.
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
When all movement work together more force will be applied at once. Whereas if one is applied at a time only small amount of force is applied
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