“Update my views of the post” probably wasn’t the right phrase to use—better would be “update my views of whether the post is a good thing to have on the Forum in something like its current form”.
In general, I have a strong inclination that people should post content on the Forum if it is related to effective altruism and might be valuable to read for even a small fraction of users. I’m not concerned about too many posts being made (at least at the current level of activity).
I might be concerned if people seem to be putting more time/effort into posts than is warranted by the expected impact of those posts, but I have a high bar to drawing that conclusion; generally, I’d trust the author’s judgment of how valuable a thing is for them to publish over my own, especially if they are an expert writing about something on which I am a non-expert.
Even if the information in this post wasn’t especially new (I’m not sure which bits have and haven’t been discussed elsewhere), I expect it to be helpful to EA-aligned people who find themselves trying to communicate about longtermism with people outside of EA, for some of the reasons Will outlined. I can imagine referring to it as I work on an edition of the EA Newsletter or prepare for an interview with a journalist.
--
Finally, on hyphenation:
a. There are at least two occasions in the last two months that I, personally, have had to decide how to spell “longtermism” in something written for a public audience. And while I am an unusual case...
b. …hyphenation matters! Movements look less professional when they can’t decide how to express terms they often use in writing (hyphenation, capitalization, etc.) Something like this makes me say “huh?” before I even start reading the article (written by a critic of a movement in that case, but the general point stands).
These are far from the most important paragraphs ever published on the Forum, but they do take a stand on a point with two reasonable sides and argue convincingly for one of them, in a way that could change how many readers refer to a common term.
“Update my views of the post” probably wasn’t the right phrase to use—better would be “update my views of whether the post is a good thing to have on the Forum in something like its current form”.
In general, I have a strong inclination that people should post content on the Forum if it is related to effective altruism and might be valuable to read for even a small fraction of users. I’m not concerned about too many posts being made (at least at the current level of activity).
I might be concerned if people seem to be putting more time/effort into posts than is warranted by the expected impact of those posts, but I have a high bar to drawing that conclusion; generally, I’d trust the author’s judgment of how valuable a thing is for them to publish over my own, especially if they are an expert writing about something on which I am a non-expert.
Even if the information in this post wasn’t especially new (I’m not sure which bits have and haven’t been discussed elsewhere), I expect it to be helpful to EA-aligned people who find themselves trying to communicate about longtermism with people outside of EA, for some of the reasons Will outlined. I can imagine referring to it as I work on an edition of the EA Newsletter or prepare for an interview with a journalist.
--
Finally, on hyphenation:
a. There are at least two occasions in the last two months that I, personally, have had to decide how to spell “longtermism” in something written for a public audience. And while I am an unusual case...
b. …hyphenation matters! Movements look less professional when they can’t decide how to express terms they often use in writing (hyphenation, capitalization, etc.) Something like this makes me say “huh?” before I even start reading the article (written by a critic of a movement in that case, but the general point stands).
These are far from the most important paragraphs ever published on the Forum, but they do take a stand on a point with two reasonable sides and argue convincingly for one of them, in a way that could change how many readers refer to a common term.