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Dr Michael Plant

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Michael Plant Portrait

Home>Team>Dr Michael Plant

Dr Michael Plant

Founder & Research Director

Michael is a philosopher and global happiness researcher.
He is the Founder and Research Director of the Happier Lives Institute as well as a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the University of Oxford’s Wellbeing Research Centre. Full bio.

Selected Academic Publications

Moral Uncertainty, Proportionality and Bargaining

Journal Article|with Patrick Kaczmarek & Harry R. Lloyd|Forthcoming

A happy probability about happiness (and other) scales: an exploration and tentative defence of the cardinality assumption

Working paper|Wellbeing Research Centre|2024

William MacAskill, What We Owe The Future: A Million-Year View

Book Review|Utilitas|2023

The Meat Eater Problem

Journal Article|Journal of controversial ideas|2022

Doing good badly? Philosophical issues related to effective altruism

Doctoral Thesis|Oxford University|2019

Media Appearances

Selected Public Speaking

Taking happiness seriously: Can we? Should we?

Effective Altruism Global|2023

Back to Bentham? The Optimal Distribution of Well-being

Wellbeing Research Centre, Oxford|2021

Can I Get A Little Less Life Satisfaction, Please?

Wellbeing Research Centre, Oxford|2020

Michael has spoken at various academic venues, including the Global Priorities Institute, Oxford, on a range of topics such as the nature of wellbeing, the measurement of wellbeing, population ethics, the badness of death, and moral uncertainty.

Extended Bio

Michael Plant is a philosopher and global happiness researcher. He is the Founder and Research Director of the Happier Lives Institute (HLI) and a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Wellbeing Research Centre at the University of Oxford.

In 2019, Michael founded HLI to address the lack of rigorous research on the impact of charities on people’s happiness. Using hundreds of academic studies and subjective wellbeing data, HLI assesses the impact and cost-effectiveness of interventions, measured in Wellbeing Life-Years (WELLBYs), a method endorsed by the UK Treasury in 2021. HLI’s findings so far have highlighted the significant impact of treating depression at scale in Sub-Saharan Africa, with their work discussed in Vox and Devex, among other outlets.

Michael’s philosophical research extends to the nature and measurement of wellbeing, effective giving, moral uncertainty, and population ethics. His current project, Taking Happiness Seriously, is a book that aims to modernise J.S. Mill’s Utilitarianism with contemporary empirical insights. Michael has written articles for the New Statesman, Project Syndicate, the Huffington Post and The Conversation, and has been featured in The Times, The Economist, BBC1 and BBC Radio 4.

Michael earned his D. Phil. in Philosophy from the University of Oxford under the supervision of Peter Singer and Hilary Greaves. His thesis, “Doing Good Badly? Philosophical Issues Related to Effective Altruism”, critiques and develops views within the effective altruism movement. Additionally, Michael holds a first-class degree in philosophy from St Andrews and studied at the London School of Economics, where he was one mark short of a distinction – something he is definitely, absolutely, not still bitter about.

Between these degrees, Michael worked as a Parliamentary Researcher and briefly ventured into tech with a happiness tracker app. He now lives in Bristol with his fiancée and is eager to engage with new audiences and share insights on enhancing global happiness.