I’m a senior software developer in Canada (earning ~US$70K in a good year) who, being late to the EA party, earns to give. Historically I’ve have a chronic lack of interest in making money; instead I’ve developed an unhealthy interest in foundational software that free markets don’t build because their effects would consist almost entirely of positive externalities.
I dream of making the world better by improving programming languages and developer tools, but AFAIK no funding is available for this kind of work outside academia. My open-source projects can be seen at loyc.net, core.loyc.net, ungglish.loyc.net and ecsharp.net (among others).
He doesn’t talk or quote specifics, as if to shield his claim from analysis. “tendentious”? “abstruse”? He’s complaining that I, as an EA, am “abstruse” meaning obscure/difficult to understand, but I’m the one that has to look up his words in the dictionary. As for how EAs “seem”, if one doesn’t try to understand them, they may “seem” different than they are.
Hmm, I’ve been around here awhile and I recall no suggestions to hoard money for interstellar colonization. Technically I haven’t been feeding the poor ― I just spent enough on AMF to statistically save one or two children from dying of malaria. But I’m also trying to figure out how AGI ruin might play out and whether there’s a way to stop it, so I assume deBoer doesn’t like this for some reason. The implication of the title seems to be that because I’m interested in the second thing, I’m engaged in a “Shell Game”?
I haven’t seen any debates about that. Maybe deBoer doesn’t want the question raised at all? Like, when he squishes a bug, it bothers him that anyone would wonder whether pain occurred? I’ve seen people who engage in “moral obvious-ism”: “whatever my moral intuitions may be, they are obviously right and yours are obviously wrong”. deBoer’s anti-EA stance might be simply that.
The second sentence there is surely inaccurate, but the third is the crux of the matter: he claims it’s “self-evidently ludicrous” to think extinction of predators is preferable to the suffering and death of prey. It’s an appeal-to-popularity fallacy: since the naturalistic fallacy is very popular, it is right. But also, deBoer implies, since one EA argues this, it’s evidence that the entire movement is mad. Like, is debate not something intellectuals should be doing?
So, maybe he’s never met anyone who did mainstream things like give to cancer research or local volunteering. But it’s a straw man anyway, since he simply ignores key elements of EA like tractability, comparing different causes with each other via cost-effectiveness estimates and prioritization specialists, etc.
Yet he is objecting to it, and there are huge websites filled with the EA content which… counts as “no content”?
But oh well, haters gonna hate. Wait a minute, didn’t Scott Alexander respond to this already?