Yeah. I have strong feelings that social norms or norms of discourse should never disincentivize trying to do more than the very minimum one can get away with as an apathetic person or as a jerk. For example, I’m annoyed when people punish others for honesty in cases where it would have been easy to tell a lie and look better. Likewise, I find it unfair if having the stated goal to make the future better for all sentient beings is somehow taken to imply “Oh, you care for the future of all humans, and even animals? That’s suspicious – we’re definitely going to apply extra scrutiny towards you.” Meanwhile, AI capabilities companies continue to scale up compute and most of the world is busy discussing soccer or what not. Yet somehow,”Are EAs following democratic processes and why does their funding come from very few sources?” is made into the bigger issue than widespread apathy or the extent to which civilization might be acutely at risk.
I think this is an undervalued idea. But I also think that there’s a distinct but closely related idea, which is valuable, which is that for any Group X with Goal Y, it is nearly always instrumentally valuable for Group X to hear about suggestions about how it can better advance Goal Y, especially from those who believe that Goal Y is valuable. Sometimes this will read as (or have the effect of) disincentivizing adopting Goal Y (because it leads to criticism), but in fact it’s often much easier to marginally improve the odds of Goal Y being achieved by attempting to persuade Group X to do better at Y than to persuade Group ~X who believes ~Y. I take Carla Zoe to be doing this good sort of criticism, or at least that’s the most valuable way to read her work.
I would also point out that I think the proposition that ” that social norms or norms of discourse should never disincentivize trying to do more than the very minimum one can get away with as an apathetic person or as a jerk” is both:
Probably undesirable to implement in practice because any criticism will have some disincentivizing effect.
Probably violated by your comment itself, since I’d guess that any normal person would be disincentivized to some extent by engaging in constructive criticism (above the baseline of apathy or jerkiness) that is likely to be labeled as immoral.
This is just to say that I value the general maxim you’re trying to advance here, but “never” is way too strong. Then it’s just a boring balancing question.
“Never” is too strong, okay. But I disagree with your second point. I feel like I was only speaking out against the framing that critics of EA are entitled to a lengthy reply because of EA being ambitious in its scope of caring. (This framing was explicit at least in the quoted paragraph, not necessarily in her post as a whole or her previous work.) I don’t feel like I was discouraging criticism. Basically, my point wasn’t about the act of criticizing at all, it was only about an added expectation that went with it, which I’d paraphrase as “EAs are doing something wrong unless they answer to my concerns point by point.”
I feel like I was only speaking out against the framing that critics of EA are entitled to a lengthy reply because of EA being ambitious in its scope of caring. (This framing was explicit at least in the quoted paragraph, not necessarily in her post as a whole or her previous work.)
Ah, okay. That seems more reasonable. Sorry for misunderstanding.
I think this is an undervalued idea. But I also think that there’s a distinct but closely related idea, which is valuable, which is that for any Group X with Goal Y, it is nearly always instrumentally valuable for Group X to hear about suggestions about how it can better advance Goal Y, especially from those who believe that Goal Y is valuable. Sometimes this will read as (or have the effect of) disincentivizing adopting Goal Y (because it leads to criticism), but in fact it’s often much easier to marginally improve the odds of Goal Y being achieved by attempting to persuade Group X to do better at Y than to persuade Group ~X who believes ~Y. I take Carla Zoe to be doing this good sort of criticism, or at least that’s the most valuable way to read her work.
I would also point out that I think the proposition that ” that social norms or norms of discourse should never disincentivize trying to do more than the very minimum one can get away with as an apathetic person or as a jerk” is both:
Probably undesirable to implement in practice because any criticism will have some disincentivizing effect.
Probably violated by your comment itself, since I’d guess that any normal person would be disincentivized to some extent by engaging in constructive criticism (above the baseline of apathy or jerkiness) that is likely to be labeled as immoral.
This is just to say that I value the general maxim you’re trying to advance here, but “never” is way too strong. Then it’s just a boring balancing question.
“Never” is too strong, okay. But I disagree with your second point. I feel like I was only speaking out against the framing that critics of EA are entitled to a lengthy reply because of EA being ambitious in its scope of caring. (This framing was explicit at least in the quoted paragraph, not necessarily in her post as a whole or her previous work.) I don’t feel like I was discouraging criticism. Basically, my point wasn’t about the act of criticizing at all, it was only about an added expectation that went with it, which I’d paraphrase as “EAs are doing something wrong unless they answer to my concerns point by point.”
Ah, okay. That seems more reasonable. Sorry for misunderstanding.