That was my first thought, but I expect many other individuals/institutions have already made large efforts to preserve such info, whereas this is probably the only effort to preserve core EA ideas (at least in one place)? And it looks like the third folder—“Non-EA stuff for the post-apocalypse”—contains at least some of the elementary resources you have in mind here.
But yeah, I’m much more keen to preserve arguments for radical empathy, scout mindset, moral uncertainty etc. than, say, a write-up of the research behind HLI’s charity recommendations. Maybe it would also be good to have an even small folder within “Main content (3GB)” with just the core ideas; the “EA Handbook” (39MB) sub-folder could perhaps serve such a purpose in the meantime.
Might be worth buying a physical copy of The Knowledge too (I just have).
And if anyone’s looking for a big project...
If we take catastrophic risks seriously and want humanity to recover from a devastating shock as far and fast as possible, producing such a guide before it’s too late might be one of the higher-impact projects someone could take on.
Another easy thing you can do, which I did several years ago, is download Kiwix onto your phone, which allows you to save offline versions of references such as Wikipedia, WikiHow, and way, way more. Then also buy a solar-powered or hand-crank USB charger (often built into disaster radios such as this one which I purchased).
For extra credit, store this data on an old phone you no longer use, and keep that and the disaster radio in a Faraday bag.
That was my first thought, but I expect many other individuals/institutions have already made large efforts to preserve such info, whereas this is probably the only effort to preserve core EA ideas (at least in one place)? And it looks like the third folder—“Non-EA stuff for the post-apocalypse”—contains at least some of the elementary resources you have in mind here.
But yeah, I’m much more keen to preserve arguments for radical empathy, scout mindset, moral uncertainty etc. than, say, a write-up of the research behind HLI’s charity recommendations. Maybe it would also be good to have an even small folder within “Main content (3GB)” with just the core ideas; the “EA Handbook” (39MB) sub-folder could perhaps serve such a purpose in the meantime.
Anyway, cool project! I’ve downloaded :)
Yeah i guess that makes sense. But uh.… have other institutions actually made large efforts to preserve such info? Which institutions? Which info?
Huh, maybe not.
Might be worth buying a physical copy of The Knowledge too (I just have).
And if anyone’s looking for a big project...
Another easy thing you can do, which I did several years ago, is download Kiwix onto your phone, which allows you to save offline versions of references such as Wikipedia, WikiHow, and way, way more. Then also buy a solar-powered or hand-crank USB charger (often built into disaster radios such as this one which I purchased).
For extra credit, store this data on an old phone you no longer use, and keep that and the disaster radio in a Faraday bag.
All done :-) (already had a solar/crank charger+radio). Thank you!