I don’t think I’ve ever called myself an effective altruist, part of it is the small identity idea mentioned in the original post and another part is that it doesn’t seem correct to call myself effective when there are large uncertainties about the prioritisation of causes and interventions, so new evidence could come up showing I was actually very ineffective.
On a more practical level, it’s easier to have conversations with people who are newer to EA or are sceptical of certain aspects of it when I’m not calling myself an EA and making it seem like something you are either in or out of.
It’s also probably easier to find flaws in a topic when it isn’t part of your identity, it reduces the chance of defensiveness, and I think I should try and make it easy to always be open to potential problems in EA.
I don’t think I’ve ever called myself an effective altruist, part of it is the small identity idea mentioned in the original post and another part is that it doesn’t seem correct to call myself effective when there are large uncertainties about the prioritisation of causes and interventions, so new evidence could come up showing I was actually very ineffective.
On a more practical level, it’s easier to have conversations with people who are newer to EA or are sceptical of certain aspects of it when I’m not calling myself an EA and making it seem like something you are either in or out of.
It’s also probably easier to find flaws in a topic when it isn’t part of your identity, it reduces the chance of defensiveness, and I think I should try and make it easy to always be open to potential problems in EA.