I’m working on impact markets – markets to trade nonexcludable goods. (My profile.)
I have a conversation menu and a Calendly for you to pick from!
If you’re also interested in less directly optimific things – such as climbing around and on top of boulders or amateurish musings on psychology – then you may enjoy some of the posts I don’t cross-post from my blog, Impartial Priorities.
Pronouns: Ideally she or they. I also still go by Denis and Telofy in various venues.
I love this research! Thank you so much for doing it!
My gut reaction to the results is that it’s odd that humans are so high up in terms of their capacity for welfare. Just as an uninformative prior, I would’ve expected us to be somewhere in the middle. Less confidently, I would’ve expected a similar number of orders of magnitude deviation from the human baseline in either direction, within reason. E.g. +/- ~.5 OOM.
Plus, we are humans, so there’s a risk that we’re biased in our favor. It could be simply a bias from our ability to emphasize with other humans. But it could also be the case that there are countless more markers of sentience that humans don’t have (but many other sentient animals do) that we are prone to overlook.
Have you investigated what the sources of this effect might be? There might be any number of biases at work as I mentioned, but perhaps our lives have become so comfy most of the time that we perceive slight problems very strongly (e.g., a disapproving gaze). If then something really bad happens, it feels enormously bad?
(I’ve in the past explicitly assumed that most beings with a few (million) neurons have a roughly human capacity for welfare – not because I thought that was likely but because I couldn’t tell in which direction it was off. Do you maybe already have a defense of the results for people like me?)
In any case, I’ll probably just adopt your results into my thinking now. I don’t expect them to change my priorities much given all the other factors.
Thank you again! <3