One thing that I think is helpful is to do the best you can to separate “EA the set of ideas” from “EA the set of people.” People involved with EA form something akin to a broad social group. Like any social group, they have certain norms and tendencies that are annoying and off-putting. Being snobbish about intelligence is one of these tendencies. My advice is to take the parts of “EA the set of ideas” that work for you and ignore the parts of the community that you find annoying. Maybe for you that means ignoring certain kinds of forum posts or maybe it means not going on the forum at all. Maybe it means giving 2 percent of your income to an effective charity and not worrying that you don’t give more. Maybe it means being on the lookout for a job where you could have a higher impact but targeting organizations that are not EA-branded. The bottom line is that you do not need to be involved in EA the community to take EA the set of ideas seriously.
This is not at all to concede that you cannot do high-impact things while being engaged in the community. I am happy with the impact I have and I went to a state school with standardized test scores that were nothing to brag about. This is just to say that if you find the community annoying, you don’t need it to “Do EA”.
This is definitely a good point. I have had really great experiences with every EA i’ve met and actually talked too—I guess it’s what I see online that I’ve struggled with. I could definitely make more of an effort to not get so tied up in the parts which don’t work for me.
One thing that I think is helpful is to do the best you can to separate “EA the set of ideas” from “EA the set of people.” People involved with EA form something akin to a broad social group. Like any social group, they have certain norms and tendencies that are annoying and off-putting. Being snobbish about intelligence is one of these tendencies. My advice is to take the parts of “EA the set of ideas” that work for you and ignore the parts of the community that you find annoying. Maybe for you that means ignoring certain kinds of forum posts or maybe it means not going on the forum at all. Maybe it means giving 2 percent of your income to an effective charity and not worrying that you don’t give more. Maybe it means being on the lookout for a job where you could have a higher impact but targeting organizations that are not EA-branded. The bottom line is that you do not need to be involved in EA the community to take EA the set of ideas seriously.
This is not at all to concede that you cannot do high-impact things while being engaged in the community. I am happy with the impact I have and I went to a state school with standardized test scores that were nothing to brag about. This is just to say that if you find the community annoying, you don’t need it to “Do EA”.
This is definitely a good point. I have had really great experiences with every EA i’ve met and actually talked too—I guess it’s what I see online that I’ve struggled with. I could definitely make more of an effort to not get so tied up in the parts which don’t work for me.