I’m a Senior Researcher for Rethink Priorities, a Professor of Philosophy at Texas State University, a Director of the Animal Welfare Economics Working Group, the Treasurer for the Insect Welfare Research Society, and the President of the Arthropoda Foundation. I work on a wide range of theoretical and applied issues related to animal welfare. You can reach me here.
Bob Fischer
Nope, not assuming neartermism. The report has the details. Short version: across a range of decision theories, chickens look really good.
That said, I totally agree that from a purely conceptual perspective, we should “be more open-minded about how we should think of the different ‘buckets’ in a Worldview-Diversified portfolio, and cautious of completely dismissing common-sense priorities (even as we give significant weight and support to a range of theoretically well-supported counterintuitive cause areas).”
Admittedly, we weren’t factoring in the (ostensible) ripple effects, but our modeling indicates that if we’re interested in robust goodness, we should be spending on chickens.
Also, for the reasons that @Ariel Simnegar already notes, even if there are unappreciated benefits of investing in GHD, there would need to be a lot of those benefits to justify not spending on animals. Could work out that way, but I’d like to see the evidence. (When I investigated this myself, making the case seemed quite difficult.)
Thanks for the idea, Pablo. I’ve added summaries to the sequence page.
Hi Ramiro. No, we haven’t collected the CURVE posts as an epub. At present, they’re available on the Forum and in RP’s Research Database. However, I’ll mention your interest in this to the powers that be!
I agree with Ariel that OP should probably be spending more on animals (and I really appreciate all the work he’s done to push this conversation forward). I don’t know whether OP should allocate most neartermist funding to AW as I haven’t looked into lots of the relevant issues. Most obviously, while the return curves for at least some human-focused neartermist options are probably pretty flat (just think of GiveDirectly), the curves for various sorts of animal spending may drop precipitously. Ariel may well be right that, even if so, the returns probably don’t fall off so much that animal work loses to global health work, but I haven’t investigated this myself. The upshot: I have no idea whether there are good ways of spending an additional $100M on animals right now. (That being said, I’d love to see more extensive investigation into field building for animals! If EA field building in general is cost-competitive with other causes, then I’d expect animal field building to look pretty good.)
I should also say that OP’s commitment to worldview diversification complicates any conclusions about what OP should do from its own perspective. Even if it’s true that a straightforward utilitarian analysis would favor spending a lot more on animals, it’s pretty clear that some key stakeholders have deep reservations about straightforward utilitarian analyses. And because worldview diversification doesn’t include a clear procedure for generating a specific allocation, it’s hard to know what people who are committed to worldview diversification should do by their own lights.
Thanks for all this, Hamish. For what it’s worth, I don’t think we did a great job communicating the results of the Moral Weight Project.
As you rightly observe, welfare ranges aren’t moral weights without some key philosophical assumptions. Although we did discuss the significance of those assumptions in independent posts, we could have done a much better job explaining how those assumptions should affect the interpretation of our point estimates.
Speaking of the point estimates, I regret leading with them: as we said, they’re really just placeholders in the face of deep uncertainty. We should have led with our actual conclusions, the basics of which are that the relevant vertebrates are probably within an OOM of humans and shrimps and the relevant adult insects are probably within two OOMs of the vertebrates. My guess is that you and I disagree less than you might think about the range of reasonable moral weights across species, even if the centers of my probability masses are higher than yours.
I agree that our methodology is complex and hard to understand. But it would be surprising if there were a simple, easy-to-understand way to estimate the possible differences in the intensities of valenced states across species. Likewise, I agree that “there are tons of assumptions and simplifications that go into these RP numbers, so any conclusions we can draw must be low confidence.” But there are also tons of assumptions and biases that go into our intuitive assessments of the relative moral importance of various kinds of nonhuman animals. So, a lot comes down to how much stock you put in your intuitions. As you might guess, I think we have lots of reasons not to trust them once we take on key moral assumptions like utilitiarianism. So, I take much of the value of the Moral Weight Project to be in the mere fact that it tries to reach moral weights from first principles.
It’s time to do some serious surveying to get a better sense of the community’s moral weights. I also think there’s a bunch of good work to do on the significance of philosophical / moral uncertainty here. I If anyone wants to support this work, please let me know!
Thanks for your question, Moritz. We distinguish between negative results and unknowns: the former are those where there’s evidence of the absence of a trait; the latter are those where there’s no evidence. We penalized species where there was evidence of the absence of a trait; we gave zero when there was no evidence. So, not having many negative results does produce higher welfare range estimates (or, if you prefer, it just reduces the gaps between the welfare range estimates).
Of course!
Thanks so much for the vote of confidence, JWS. While we’d certainly be interested in working more on these assumptions, we haven’t yet committed to taking this particular project further. But if funding were to become available for that extension, we would be glad to keep going!
Hi Teo. Those are important uncertainties, but our sequences doesn’t engage with them. There’s only so much we could cover! We’d be glad to do some work in this vein in the future, contingent on funding. Thanks for raising these significant issues.
Hi David. There are two ways of talking about personal identity over time. There’s the ordinary way, where we’re talking about something like sameness of personality traits, beliefs, preferences, etc. over time. Then, there’s “numerical identity” way, where we’re talking about just being the same thing over time (i.e., one and the same object). It sounds to me like either (a) you’re running these two things together or (b) you have a view where the relevant kinds of changes in personality traits, beliefs, preferences, etc. result in a different thing existing (one of many possible future Davids). If the former, then I’ll just say that I meant only to be talking about the “numerical identity” sense of sameness over time, so we don’t get the problem you’re describing in the intra-individual case. If the latter, then that’s a pretty big philosophical dispute that we’re unlikely to resolve in a comment thread!
Thanks for this. You’re right that we don’t give an overall theory of how to handle either decision-theoretic or moral uncertainty. The team is only a few months old and the problems you’re raising are hard. So, for now, our aims are just to explore the implications of non-EVM decision theories for cause prioritization and to improve the available tools for thinking about the EV of x-risk mitigation efforts. Down the line—and with additional funding!---we’ll be glad to tackle many additional questions. And, for what it’s worth, we do think that the groundwork we’re laying now will make it easier to develop overall giving portfolios based on people’s best judgments about how to balance the various kinds and degrees of uncertainty.
Thanks for all the productive discussion, everyone. A few thoughts.
First, the point of this post is to make a case for the conditional, not for contractualism. So, I’m more worried about “contractualism won’t get you AMF” than I am about “contractualism is false.” I assumed that most readers would be skeptical of this particular moral theory. The goal here isn’t to say, “If contractualism, then AMF—so 100% of resources should go to AMF.” Instead, it’s to say, “If contractualism, then AMF—so if you put any credence behind views of this kind at all, then it probably isn’t the case that 100% of resources should go to x-risk.”
Second, on “contractualism won’t get you AMF,” thanks to Michael for making the move I’d have suggested re: relevance. Another option is to think in terms of either nonideal theory or moral uncertainty, depending on your preferences. Instead of asking, “Of all possible actions, which does contractualism favor?” We can ask: “Of the actual options that a philanthropist takes seriously, which does contractualism favor? It may turn out that, for whatever reason, only high-EV options are in the set of actual options that the philanthropist takes seriously, in which case it doesn’t matter whether a given version of contractualism wouldn’t select all those options to begin with. Then, the question is whether they’re uncertain enough to allow other moral considerations to affect their choice from among the pre-set alternatives.
Finally, on the statistical lives problem for contractualism, I’m mostly inclined to shrug off this issue as bad but not a dealbreaker. This is basically for a meta-theoretic reason. I think of moral theories as attempts to systematize our considered judgments in ways that make them seem principled. Unfortunately, our considered judgments conflict quite deeply. Some people’s response to this is to lean into the process of reflective equilibrium, giving up either principles or judgments in the quest for perfect consistency. My own experience of doing this is that the push for *more* consistency is usually good, whereas the push for *perfect* consistency almost always means that people endorse theories with implications that I find horrifying *that they come to believe are not horrifying,* as they follow from a beautifully consistent theory. I just can’t get myself to believe moral theories that are that revisionary. (I’m reporting here, not arguing.) So, I prefer relying on a range of moral theories, acknowledging the problems with each one, and doing my best to find courses of action that are robustly supported across them. In my view, EAC is based on the compelling thought that we ought to protect the known-to-be-most vulnerable, even at the cost of harm to the group. In light of this, what makes identified lives special is just that we can tell who the vulnerable are. So sure, I feel the force of the thought experiments that people offer to motivate the statistical lives problem; sure, I’m strongly inclined to want to save more lives in those cases. But I’m not so confident to rule out EAC entirely. So, EAC stays in the toolbox as one more resource for moral deliberation.
This is the right place to press, Michael. These are exactly the probabilities that matter. Because I tend to be pretty pessimistic about our ability to reduce AI risk, I tend to think the numbers are going to break in favor of AMF. And on top of that, if you’re worried that x-risk mitigation work might sometimes increase x-risk, even a mild level of risk aversion will probably skew things toward AMF more strongly. But it’s important to bring these things out. Thanks for flagging.
Good question, Eli. I think a lot here depends on keeping the relevant alternatives in view. The question is not whether it’s permissible to coordinate climate change mitigation efforts (or what have you). Instead, the question is whether we owe it to anyone to address climate change relative to the alternatives. And when you compare the needs of starving children or those suffering from serious preventable diseases, etc., to those who might be negatively affected by climate change, it becomes a lot more plausible that we don’t owe to anyone to address those things over more pressing needs (assuming we have a good chance of doing something about those needs / moving the needle significantly / etc.).
Very interesting, Jakob! I’ll have to contact Tomi to get his draft. Thanks for the heads up about this work. And, of course, I’ll be curious to see what you’re working on when you’re able to share!
Hi David. It’s probably true that if you accept that picture of persons, then the implications of contractualism are quite counterintuitive. Of course, I suspect that most contractualists reject that picture.
Thanks for your question, Eli. The contractualist can say that it would be callous, uncaring, indecent, or invoke any number of other virtue theoretic notions to explain why you shouldn’t leave broken glass bottles in the woods. What they can’t say is that, in some situation where (a) there’s a tradeoff between some present person’s weighty interests and the 20-years-from-now young child’s interests and (b) addressing the present person’s weighty interests requires leaving the broken glass bottles, the 20-years-from-now young child could reasonably reject a principle that exposed them to risk instead of the present person’s. Upshot: they can condemn the action in any realistic scenario.
Thanks so much for this, Jakob. Really great questions. On the application part, let me first quote something I wrote to MSJ below:
I was holding the standard EA interventions fixed, but I agree that, given contractualism, there’s a case to be made for other priorities. Minimally, we’d need to evaluate our opportunities in these and similar areas. It would be a bit surprising if EA had landed on the ideal portfolio for an aim it hasn’t had in mind: namely, minimizing relevant strength-weighted complaints.
That being said, a lot depends here on the factors that influence claim strength. Averting even a relatively low probability of death can trump lots of other possible benefits. And cost matters for claim strength too: all else equal, people have weaker claims to large amounts of our resources than they do to small amounts. So, yes, it could definitely work out that, given contractualism, EA has the wrong priorities even within the global health space, but isofar as some popular interventions are focused on inexpensive ways of saving lives, we’ve got at least a few considerations that strongly support those interventions. That being said, we can’t really know unless we run the numbers.
Re: the statistical lives problem for the ex ante view, I have a few things to say—which, to be clear, don’t amount to a direct reply of the form, “Here’s why the view doesn’t face the problem.” First, every view has horrible problems. When it comes to moral theory, we’re in a “pick your poison” situation. There are certainly some views I’m willing to write off as “clearly false,” but I wouldn’t say that of most versions of contractualism. In general, my approach to applied ethics is to say, “Moral theory is brutally hard and often the best we can do is try to assess whether we end up in roughly the same spot practically regardless of where we start theoretically.” Second, and in the same spirit, my main goal here is to complement Emma Curran’s work: she’s already defended the same conclusion for the ex post version of the view. So, it’s progress enough to show that, whichever way you go, you get something other than prioritizing x-risk. Third, the ex ante view doesn’t imply that we should prioritize one identified person over any number of “statistical” people unless all else is equal—and all else often isn’t equal. I grant that there are going to be lots of cases where identified lives trump statistical lives, but for the kinds of reasons I mentioned when thinking about your great application question, we still need to sort out the details re: claim strength.
Really appreciate the very helpful engagement!
Thanks for your discussion of the Moral Weight Project’s methodology, Carl. (And to everyone else for the useful back-and-forth!) We have some thoughts about this important issue and we’re keen to write more about it. Perhaps 2024 will provide the opportunity!
For now, we’ll just make one brief point, which is that it’s important to separate two questions. The first concerns the relevance of the two envelopes problem to the Moral Weight Project. The second concerns alternative ways of generating moral weights. We considered the two envelopes problem at some length when we were working on the Moral Weight Project and concluded that our approach was still worth developing. We’d be glad to revisit this and appreciate the challenge to the methodology.
However, even if it turns out that the methodology has issues, it’s an open question how best to proceed. We grant the possibility that, as you suggest, more neurons = more compute = the possibility of more intense pleasures and pains. But it’s also possible that more neurons = more intelligence = less biological need for intense pleasures and pains, as other cognitive abilities can provide the relevant fitness benefits, effectively muting the intensities of those states. Or perhaps there’s some very low threshold of cognitive complexity for sentience after which point all variation in behavior is due to non-hedonic capacities. Or perhaps cardinal interpersonal utility comparisons are impossible. And so on. In short, while it’s true that there are hypotheses on which elephants have massively more intense pains than fruit flies, there are also hypotheses on which the opposite is true and on which equality is (more or less) true. Once we account for all these hypotheses, it may still work out that elephants and fruit flies differ by a few orders of magnitude in expectation, but perhaps not by five or six. Presumably, we should all want some approach, whatever it is, that avoids being mugged by whatever low-probability hypothesis posits the largest difference between humans and other animals.
That said, you’ve raised some significant concerns about methods that aggregate over different relative scales of value. So, we’ll be sure to think more about the degree to which this is a problem for the work we’ve done—and, if it is, how much it would change the bottom line.