Regarding your (1), the idea that the term is unwelcoming and hierarchical, it doesn’t really seem that way to me (and certainly doesn’t seem that way to me). I hear people talk about hardcore gamers, Christians, sports fans, Republicans, rock and roll enthusiasts, and tons of other things, including both the people in these groups and outsiders looking in on them, all without sounding like they think the hardcoreness is necessarily good, admirable, or high-status. So the term doesn’t really feel connotated the way you suggest, and thus doesn’t really seem unwelcoming or hierarchical to me. (And this is related to the below point; you seem to think the term is more positive than I think it is so think it does more to make all the different aspects of what people mean by the term sound better than I think it does).
I think people feel excluded by it being highlighted to them that other people are more hardcore than them (or, if you prefer, any of “Are actually having a significant positive impact on the world” “Are deeply committed to overarching EA principles, e.g. impartiality, cost effectiveness, cause prioritization, etc.” “Are deeply embedded in the current EA community, e.g. buying into the community’s specific priorities/frameworks, spending lots of time with other EAs, etc.” “Work themselves extremely hard to try to maximize impact”) if they don’t believe themselves to be the same way and think others see that thing as good. And you know, it’s the case that some people aren’t hardcore EAs (or aren’t far in the directions you suggest make up the term), and other people in the community maybe think that’s worse than if they were more hardcore, but I think getting rid of the term just (somewhat) obscures an important facet of reality (that people vary on these dimensions, that some people think it’s good to move farther in one direction on the relevant dimensions), and will only make people feel better inasmuch as it obscures reality from them.
And on the second point, about distorting thinking… it’s always the case that using categories obscures some detail about within-category differences. I guess the relevant thing is whether they are useful/carves nature at its joints. I happen to think “hardcore EA” does (e.g. I think your sub-points 1-4 are pretty correlated), but that’s debatable. But just saying that there are different dimensions at play (including positive and negative ones) doesn’t mean the category isn’t useful.
Finally, sorry, but I kind of don’t believe you actually don’t think the term “hardcore EA” or the category/cluster it refers to is useful, otherwise it seems weird to suggest alternate terms (“Super bought-in EAs.” or “Drank the kool-aid EAs.”) instead of lobbying for abolishing the category entirely.
Huh, I don’t feel very sold on this point.
Regarding your (1), the idea that the term is unwelcoming and hierarchical, it doesn’t really seem that way to me (and certainly doesn’t seem that way to me). I hear people talk about hardcore gamers, Christians, sports fans, Republicans, rock and roll enthusiasts, and tons of other things, including both the people in these groups and outsiders looking in on them, all without sounding like they think the hardcoreness is necessarily good, admirable, or high-status. So the term doesn’t really feel connotated the way you suggest, and thus doesn’t really seem unwelcoming or hierarchical to me. (And this is related to the below point; you seem to think the term is more positive than I think it is so think it does more to make all the different aspects of what people mean by the term sound better than I think it does).
I think people feel excluded by it being highlighted to them that other people are more hardcore than them (or, if you prefer, any of “Are actually having a significant positive impact on the world” “Are deeply committed to overarching EA principles, e.g. impartiality, cost effectiveness, cause prioritization, etc.” “Are deeply embedded in the current EA community, e.g. buying into the community’s specific priorities/frameworks, spending lots of time with other EAs, etc.” “Work themselves extremely hard to try to maximize impact”) if they don’t believe themselves to be the same way and think others see that thing as good. And you know, it’s the case that some people aren’t hardcore EAs (or aren’t far in the directions you suggest make up the term), and other people in the community maybe think that’s worse than if they were more hardcore, but I think getting rid of the term just (somewhat) obscures an important facet of reality (that people vary on these dimensions, that some people think it’s good to move farther in one direction on the relevant dimensions), and will only make people feel better inasmuch as it obscures reality from them.
And on the second point, about distorting thinking… it’s always the case that using categories obscures some detail about within-category differences. I guess the relevant thing is whether they are useful/carves nature at its joints. I happen to think “hardcore EA” does (e.g. I think your sub-points 1-4 are pretty correlated), but that’s debatable. But just saying that there are different dimensions at play (including positive and negative ones) doesn’t mean the category isn’t useful.
Finally, sorry, but I kind of don’t believe you actually don’t think the term “hardcore EA” or the category/cluster it refers to is useful, otherwise it seems weird to suggest alternate terms (“Super bought-in EAs.” or “Drank the kool-aid EAs.”) instead of lobbying for abolishing the category entirely.