I donât understand what you think Holden /â OpenPhilâs bias is. I can see why they might have happened to be wrong, but I donât see what in their process makes them systematically wrong in a particular way.
I also think itâs generally reasonable to form expectations about who in an expert disagreement is correct using heuristics that donât directly engage with the content of the arguments. Such heuristics, again, can go wrong, but I think they still carry information, and I think we often have to ultimately rely on them when thereâs just too many issues to investigate them all.
I donât understand what you think Holden /â OpenPhilâs bias is.
Itâs not the kind of bias youâre thinking of; not a cognitive or epistemic bias, that is. Itâs dovish bias, as in a bias to favor expansionary policy. The non-biased alternative would be a nondiscretionary target that does not systematically favor either expansionary or contractionary policy.
(If we want to talk about epistemic bias, and if I allow myself to be more provocative, there could also be a different kind of bias, social desirability: âyou kind of value all people equally and you care a lot about how the working class is doing and what their bargaining power isâ sounds good and is the kind of language you expect to find in a political party platform. This was in an interview and in a response prompted by Ezra Klein, but just seeing language like that used could be a red flag.)
I also think itâs generally reasonable to form expectations about who in an expert disagreement is correct using heuristics that donât directly engage with the content of the arguments.
Yes, but:
Not when making high-risk grants, where the value comes from your inside-view evaluations of the arguments for each grant (or category of grants, if youâre funding multiple people working on the same or similar things but you have evaluated these things for yourself in sufficient detail to be confident that the grants are overall worth doing).
Not as a substitute for directly engaging with the content of the arguments, but in addition to doing that and as a way to guide your engagement with the arguments (to help you see the context and know what arguments to look at). Unless you really donât have the time to engage with the arguments, but there are a lot of hours in a year and this is kind of Open Philanthropyâs job.
Never while framing as a good thing the fact that youâre deferring to experts instead of engaging with the arguments yourself, never while implying that there would be something wrong about engaging with the arguments yourself instead of (or in addition to) deferring to experts.
I donât understand what you think Holden /â OpenPhilâs bias is. I can see why they might have happened to be wrong, but I donât see what in their process makes them systematically wrong in a particular way.
I also think itâs generally reasonable to form expectations about who in an expert disagreement is correct using heuristics that donât directly engage with the content of the arguments. Such heuristics, again, can go wrong, but I think they still carry information, and I think we often have to ultimately rely on them when thereâs just too many issues to investigate them all.
Itâs not the kind of bias youâre thinking of; not a cognitive or epistemic bias, that is. Itâs dovish bias, as in a bias to favor expansionary policy. The non-biased alternative would be a nondiscretionary target that does not systematically favor either expansionary or contractionary policy.
(If we want to talk about epistemic bias, and if I allow myself to be more provocative, there could also be a different kind of bias, social desirability: âyou kind of value all people equally and you care a lot about how the working class is doing and what their bargaining power isâ sounds good and is the kind of language you expect to find in a political party platform. This was in an interview and in a response prompted by Ezra Klein, but just seeing language like that used could be a red flag.)
Yes, but:
Not when making high-risk grants, where the value comes from your inside-view evaluations of the arguments for each grant (or category of grants, if youâre funding multiple people working on the same or similar things but you have evaluated these things for yourself in sufficient detail to be confident that the grants are overall worth doing).
Not as a substitute for directly engaging with the content of the arguments, but in addition to doing that and as a way to guide your engagement with the arguments (to help you see the context and know what arguments to look at). Unless you really donât have the time to engage with the arguments, but there are a lot of hours in a year and this is kind of Open Philanthropyâs job.
Never while framing as a good thing the fact that youâre deferring to experts instead of engaging with the arguments yourself, never while implying that there would be something wrong about engaging with the arguments yourself instead of (or in addition to) deferring to experts.