I agree that all sorts of selection biases are going to be at play in this sort of project: the methodology would be a minefield and I don’t have all the answers.
I agree that there’s going to be a selection bias towards people who think cause prio is hard. Honestly, I guess I also believe that ethics is hard, so I was basically assuming that worldview. But maybe this is a very contentious position? I’d be interested to hear from anyone who thinks that cause prio is just really easy.
More generally, I agree that I/CEA can’t just defer our way out of this problem or other problems: you always need to choose the experts or the methodology or whatever. But, partly because ethics seems hard to me, I feel better about something like what I proposed, rather than just going with our staff’s best guess (when we mostly haven’t engaged deeply with all of the arguments).
I agree that there’s going to be a selection bias towards people who think cause prio is hard.
To be more explicit, there’s also a selection bias towards esotericism. Like how much you think most of the work is “done for you” by the rest of the world (e.g. in developmental economics or moral philosophy), versus needing to come up with the frameworks yourself.
I agree that all sorts of selection biases are going to be at play in this sort of project: the methodology would be a minefield and I don’t have all the answers.
I agree that there’s going to be a selection bias towards people who think cause prio is hard. Honestly, I guess I also believe that ethics is hard, so I was basically assuming that worldview. But maybe this is a very contentious position? I’d be interested to hear from anyone who thinks that cause prio is just really easy.
More generally, I agree that I/CEA can’t just defer our way out of this problem or other problems: you always need to choose the experts or the methodology or whatever. But, partly because ethics seems hard to me, I feel better about something like what I proposed, rather than just going with our staff’s best guess (when we mostly haven’t engaged deeply with all of the arguments).
To be more explicit, there’s also a selection bias towards esotericism. Like how much you think most of the work is “done for you” by the rest of the world (e.g. in developmental economics or moral philosophy), versus needing to come up with the frameworks yourself.