Rather than being wild speculation, I think this is clearly correct. And needs to be mentioned anytime someone criticizes EA for having too much focus on proven interventions instead of things like economic growth.
However there are other causes which can be good under such a moderate epistemic view: growing Effective Altruism, curing aging, fighting climate change, partisan politics, improving foreign policy, etc. All of these have been recognized by some Effective Altruists as important and will compete with economic growth for attention.
This is speculative, but I suspect many of the things you mentioned fall in the category of things that seem pretty impactful, potentially on par with EA’s main cause areas (poverty, animals, x-risk), but it doesn’t seem like it makes sense to devote that much EA manpower or resources to it right now—so a small number of EAs who identify one such area can work on it, and it’s great, (and the EA movement should encourage that, with sufficient justification of the impact), but I can see why the EA movement doesn’t put them as a main cause.
(I don’t necessarily agree with all of the ideas you mentioned as belonging to theses categories, and I probably don’t know enough about them to do so, though I can see many of them being such an area.)
A digression, but I do wonder if people working on these smaller, niche areas with an EA spirit, (assuming they did make the right call on the impact and it’s just an area that can’t absorb a lot of EA resources) feel sidelined or dismissed by the EA movement. (Might be the case for climate for instance.) And I wonder if this were really the case how the EA movement can be better at encouraging such independent thinking and work.
A digression, but I do wonder if people working on these smaller, niche areas with an EA spirit, (assuming they did make the right call on the impact and it’s just an area that can’t absorb a lot of EA resources) feel sidelined or dismissed by the EA movement. (Might be the case for climate for instance.) And I wonder if this were really the case how the EA movement can be better at encouraging such independent thinking and work.
The answer is simply to grow the EA movement so that more causes have adequate numbers of people working on them. Rather worrying about giving people equal slices of the pie.
Rather than being wild speculation, I think this is clearly correct. And needs to be mentioned anytime someone criticizes EA for having too much focus on proven interventions instead of things like economic growth.
However there are other causes which can be good under such a moderate epistemic view: growing Effective Altruism, curing aging, fighting climate change, partisan politics, improving foreign policy, etc. All of these have been recognized by some Effective Altruists as important and will compete with economic growth for attention.
This is speculative, but I suspect many of the things you mentioned fall in the category of things that seem pretty impactful, potentially on par with EA’s main cause areas (poverty, animals, x-risk), but it doesn’t seem like it makes sense to devote that much EA manpower or resources to it right now—so a small number of EAs who identify one such area can work on it, and it’s great, (and the EA movement should encourage that, with sufficient justification of the impact), but I can see why the EA movement doesn’t put them as a main cause.
(I don’t necessarily agree with all of the ideas you mentioned as belonging to theses categories, and I probably don’t know enough about them to do so, though I can see many of them being such an area.)
A digression, but I do wonder if people working on these smaller, niche areas with an EA spirit, (assuming they did make the right call on the impact and it’s just an area that can’t absorb a lot of EA resources) feel sidelined or dismissed by the EA movement. (Might be the case for climate for instance.) And I wonder if this were really the case how the EA movement can be better at encouraging such independent thinking and work.
The answer is simply to grow the EA movement so that more causes have adequate numbers of people working on them. Rather worrying about giving people equal slices of the pie.
Would you say that, almost 4 years later, we’ve made progress on that front?