I hope to eventually/maybe soon write a longer post about this, but I feel pretty strongly that people underrate specialization at the personal level,even as there are lots of benefits to pluralization at the movement level and large-funder level. There are just really high returns to being at the frontier of a field. You can be epistemically modest about what cause or particular opportunity is the best, not burn bridges, etc, while still “making your bet” and specializing; in the limit, it seems really unlikely that e.g. having two 20 hr/wk jobs in different causes is a better path to impact than a single 40 hr/wk job.
I think this applies to individual donations as well; if you work in a field, you are a much better judge of giving opportunities in that field than if you don’t, and you’re more likely to come across such opportunities in the first place. I think this is a chronically underrated argument when it comes to allocating personal donations.
I hope to eventually/maybe soon write a longer post about this, but I feel pretty strongly that people underrate specialization at the personal level, even as there are lots of benefits to pluralization at the movement level and large-funder level. There are just really high returns to being at the frontier of a field. You can be epistemically modest about what cause or particular opportunity is the best, not burn bridges, etc, while still “making your bet” and specializing; in the limit, it seems really unlikely that e.g. having two 20 hr/wk jobs in different causes is a better path to impact than a single 40 hr/wk job.
I think this applies to individual donations as well; if you work in a field, you are a much better judge of giving opportunities in that field than if you don’t, and you’re more likely to come across such opportunities in the first place. I think this is a chronically underrated argument when it comes to allocating personal donations.