I think collections like this are helpful, but it’s a misleading to say it presents the “frontier of publicly available knowledge.”
Taking just the first section on moral truth as an example, it seems like a huge overstatement to say this collection of podcasts and forum posts gets people to the frontier of this subject. Philosophers have spent a long time on this, writing thousands of papers. And at a glance, it seems like all of OPs linked resources don’t even intend to give an overview of the literature on meta-ethics. They instead present their own personal perspectives.
And all of the resources in this section are EA/rationalist affiliated. Surely there have been some people who’ve said intelligent things about the nature of morality prior to Yudkowsky’s birth, right? Neglecting these voices seems like an oversight, especially given the stated goal of getting readers to the frontier of publicly available knowledge.
Going forward, I’d suggest making more modest claims about what can be accomplished by a reading list like this and expanding the range of perspectives that’s considered worth listening to.
I think collections like this are helpful, but it’s a misleading to say it presents the “frontier of publicly available knowledge.”
Taking just the first section on moral truth as an example, it seems like a huge overstatement to say this collection of podcasts and forum posts gets people to the frontier of this subject. Philosophers have spent a long time on this, writing thousands of papers. And at a glance, it seems like all of OPs linked resources don’t even intend to give an overview of the literature on meta-ethics. They instead present their own personal perspectives.
And all of the resources in this section are EA/rationalist affiliated. Surely there have been some people who’ve said intelligent things about the nature of morality prior to Yudkowsky’s birth, right? Neglecting these voices seems like an oversight, especially given the stated goal of getting readers to the frontier of publicly available knowledge.
Going forward, I’d suggest making more modest claims about what can be accomplished by a reading list like this and expanding the range of perspectives that’s considered worth listening to.