My name is Elias Malisi, though my friends call me Prince.
My mission is mitigating catastrophic risk from transformative AI with special concern for s-risk.
I am currently researching multipolar AI strategy as a Non-Trivial Fellow and co-organising the St Andrews AI Safety Hub.
I write a personal development newsletter for ambitious altruists.
I grew up in Germany where I graduated high school in 2023 with a perfect GPA as the top 1 national student in ethics.
I was introduced to EA through the Atlas Fellowship around May 2023 and have since engaged with EA intensively. In the summer of 2023, I participated in the Introductory EA Virtual Program, the Precipice Reading Group, and the AI Safety Quest Pilot Program. Following this, I became involved with EA St Andrews in September 2023 and have since partaken in the group’s career co-working program. In November 2023, I co-founded the St Andrews AI Safety Hub. I have briefly worked as a research contractor for CLR in early 2024. As of July 2024, I am researching multipolar AI strategy as a Non-Trivial Fellow.
While I agree to the fact that more money is not inherently valuable, I believe that there is a valid case for patient philantropy, which you haven not engaged with in your critism of the concept.
Moreover, I disagree with the statement that unequal distributions of power are conceptually opposed to distributions that maximise welfare impartially in light of the argument that it is likely good to increase the power of agents who are sufficiently benevolent and intelligent.
I assume that you refer to distributions of power which maximise welfare impartially by saying altruistic distributions. If this interpretation is incorrect, my disagreement might no longer apply.
Epistemic status from here: I do not have a degree in economics and my knowledge of market dynamics is fairly limited so I might have missed some implicit fact which validates the argument I am commenting on.
I believe that it may be inappropriate to see accumulating money as determining influence over scarce resources in a zero-sum manner since gaining money does not necessarily reduce the influence of any other involved parties over existing resources.
To understand this, we can look at the following scenario:
Alice and Bob both own $100
There are 5 insecticide-treated bet nets which are also owned by Alice
Bob earns $100. He now has twice as much money as Alice.
However, Alice’s 5 bet nets have retained their full effectiveness and she isn’t forced to sell any of them to Bob.
Therefore, Alice has retained her influence over the scarce resource called bet nets even though the relative value of her financial resources decreased.
In the real world Bob could presumably leverage his financial advantage by hiring mercenaries to steal the bet nets from Alice or using other forms of coercion but he does not necessarily do this.
Thus, Alice has lost potential influence but not influence, which is an important distinction because altruists are highly unlikely to use their money for the purpose of actively taking resources from recipients of charity or their benefactors.
Notably, the evaluation would look different if one believed in strong temporal discounting of money since the altruists would then be diminishing the value they are providing through their donations by delaying them, thereby subtracting from the influence of the charities relative to the counterfactual. But in that case the altruist would not have gained any influence, making the sum negative but not zero.