With respect to why some viscerally reject the idea, I think many see charity as a sort of morally repugnant paternalism that demeans its supposed beneficiaries. (I can sympathize with this, although it seems like a rather less pressing consideration than famine and plague.)
You might actually be able to cut ideologies up - or at least the instinctive attitudes that tend to precede them - according to how comfortable they are with charity and what they see it as encompassing: liberals think charity is great; socialists find charity uncomfortable and think it would be best if the poor took rather than passively received; libertarians either also find charity uncomfortable but extend that feeling to any system that socialists might hope to establish, or think charity is great but that the social democratic stuff liberals like isn't charity.
It might also be possible to view this unease as stemming from formally representing charity as purchasing status. I give you some money, I feel great, you feel crummy (but eat.) It's a bit like prostitution: one doesn't have to deny that both parties are on net better off from any given transaction to hold that something exploitative is going on. For socialists and some libertarians, a world sustained by charity (whatever that is) is intolerable and people should instead take what is theirs (whatever that is.) Others think charity is great because - to put it, well, very uncharitably - it lets them be the johns. (One of Aristotle's arguments against socialism is that if we owned all things in common, he wouldn't be able to grow in generosity by lending slaves to his friends.)
I would guess that it is much easier for people to recategorize what falls into the "charity" bucket than to flip their valence on the bucket itself.
I think the problem with charity reflects an ethical question: what exactly does it mean that something is "good", and if something is "good" what should be the consequences for our behavior?
The traditional answer is that it is proper to reward doing "good" things socially, but they should not be enforced legally. One will be celebrated as a hero for saving people from a burning house, but one will not be charged with murder for not saving people from a burning house.
On the other hand, doing "bad" things should be pu...
The current issue of the Oxford Left Review has a debate between socialist Pete Mills and two 80,000 hours people, Ben Todd and Sebastian Farquhar: The Ethical Careers Debate, p4-9. I'm interested in it because I want to understand why people object to the ideas of 80,000 hours. A paraphrasing:
As a socialist, Mills really doesn't like the argument that the best way to help the world's poor is probably to work in heavily capitalist industries. He seems to be avoiding engaging with Todd and Farquhar's arguments, especially replaceability. He also really doesn't like looking at things in terms of numbers, I think because numbers suggest certainty. When I calculate that in 50 years of giving away $40K a year you save 1000 lives at $2K each, that's not saying the number is exactly 1000. It's saying 1000 is my best guess, and unless I can come up with a better guess it's the estimate I should use when choosing between this career path and other ones. He also doesn't seem to understand prediction and probability: "every revolution is impossible, until it is inevitable" may be how it feels for those living under an oppressive regime but it's not our best probability estimate. [1]
In a previous discussion a friend also was mislead calculations. When I said "one can avert infant deaths for about $500 each" their response was "What do they do with the 500 dollars? That doesn't seem to make sense. Do they give the infant a $500 anti-death pill? How do you know it really takes a constant stream of $500 for each infant?". Have other people run into this? Bad calculations also tend to be distributed widely, with people saying things like "one pint of blood can save up to three lives" when the expected marginal lives saved is actually tiny. Maybe we should focus less on estimates of effectiveness in smart-giving advocacy? Is there a way to show the huge difference in effect between the best charities and most charities without using these?
Maybe I should have way more of these discussions, enough that I can collect statistics on what arguments and examples work and which don't.
(I also posted this on my blog)
[1] Which is not to say you can't have big jumps in probability estimates. I could put the chance of revolution at 5% somewhere based on historical data but then hear some new information about how one has just started and sounds really promising which bumps my estimate up to 70%. But expected value calculations for jobs can work with numbers like these, it's just "impossible" and "inevitable" that break estimates.