This seems defensive lol. My entire thing here is, I’m asking if there is support for this because I don’t know because I’m not in the community. It seems like you’re saying “it’s been mentioned but is not necessarily true.” If that’s the case, it would be helpful to say that. If it’s something else, it would be helpful to say that thing!
Pat Andriola
Thank you so much for this!
I’m really curious about the “nothing I haven’t heard before” in relation to the Social Capital Concern. Have people raised this before? If so, what’s being done about it? As I said, I think it’s the most serious of the four I mentioned, so if it’s empirically supported, what’s the action plan against it?
Fair question! I should’ve been more clear that the implicit premise of the concern is that there has been an overcorrection toward longtermism.
The value-add of EA is distributing utility efficiently (not longtermism). If there’s been an overcorrection, then there’s an inefficiency and a recalibration is needed. So this concern is: how hard will it be to snap back toward the right calibration? The longer longtermism dominates, and the degree to which it does, will make it harder for the muscle memory.
If the EA movement has perfectly calibrated the amount of longtermism needed in the movement (or if there’s currently not enough longtermism), then this concern can be put aside.
Thanks for the reply . Let me just address the things I think are worth responding to.
Ouch. My humble suggestion: maybe be more friendly to outsiders, especially ones supportive and warm, when your movement has a reputation for being robotic/insular? Or just say “I don’t want anyone who is not part of the movement to comment.” Because that is the very obvious implication of your statement (I have no idea how much more rigorous an outsider can be than my post, which I think was thoughtful and well-researched for an outsider!).
I totally think the movement does not get the commensurate societal goodwill in return for its investment in helping people right now. As I wrote: “I know [shotermism work] happens in the movement, and my point isn’t to take away from those gains made to help people in the present.” My concern was that, given that relative disconnect, longtermism projects will only exacerbate the issue.
As I said in my post, if I am wrong about this premise, then the point fails. Am I wrong though? You should all discuss. I gave my two cents. Other people seemed to agree/upvote. As a non-member, I can’t say. But if there is disagreement, then I think I raised a good point!
Now we are getting into a meta debate about the red teaming contest. I don’t care, tbh, because I’m not a part of this community. I contributed this, as I said, because I thought it might be helpful and I support you all. Let’s follow the logic:
An outsider offers insights that only an outsider can offer
The outsider cannot offer concrete solutions to those insights because he, by definition, is an outsider and doesn’t know enough about insider dynamics to offer solutions
An insider criticizes the outsider for not offering solutions
Hmm. My value-add was #1 above in the hopes that it could spark a discussion. I can’t give you answers. But I think giving worthwhile discussion topics is pretty good!
This all seems fair to me. If the skills are transferrable then the concern isn’t great.
That’s good.