I spent some time with Claude this morning trying to figure out why I find it cringe calling myself an EA (I never call myself an EA, even though many in EA would call me an EA).
The reason: calling myself “EA” feels cringe because it’s inherently a movement/community label—it always carries that social identity baggage with it, even when I’m just trying to describe my personal philosophical views.
I am happy to describe myself as a Buddhist or Utilitarian because I don’t think it does those things (at least, not within the broader community context I find myself in—Western, Online, Democratic, Australia, etc).
I spent some time with Claude this morning trying to figure out why I find it cringe calling myself an EA (I never call myself an EA, even though many in EA would call me an EA).
The reason: calling myself “EA” feels cringe because it’s inherently a movement/community label—it always carries that social identity baggage with it, even when I’m just trying to describe my personal philosophical views.
I am happy to describe myself as a Buddhist or Utilitarian because I don’t think it does those things (at least, not within the broader community context I find myself in—Western, Online, Democratic, Australia, etc).
Reminds me of keeping your identity small by Paul Graham