“Perhaps this is difficult for utilitarians, who despite perhaps academically understanding the importance of game theory and rules, in practice often act like the stereotype of act utilitarians.”
I’m curious what you think the “stereotype of act utilitarians” is, unless it’s “hypocrite.” I literally know exactly zero people who “in practice often act” in a manner that is most conducive to the greater good in the short term (you can probably argue about burnout and self-care, complicated game theory and signaling, etc...but then you’re closer in practice to rule or Two-Level/Hare’s utilitarianism, certainly not the stereotype of act utilitarians!) Some trivially obvious examples:
-People generally think nothing of taking the bus to work instead of walking/biking, even when the time cost is about the same, or if their time outside work isn’t going to be used productively anyway.
-On the flip side, bikers often refuse rides, even if it’ll save them time and the added costs to their friends are either a)nonexistent or b)irrelevant from the perspective of the universe (since their friends either don’t donate effectively or have a separate donation budget that won’t be affected)
-Most people, even claimed “act utilitarians”, happen to have two kidneys.
-People’s dietary choices seem mostly to be about personal comfort, rather than careful calculations about cost vs. time savings.
-People don’t “marry-to-give” (This is probably a good thing!)
-EAs spend substantially less time on strategic cause selection than a naive calculation of the value of information would suggest -etc, etc
Speaking as someone who has two kidneys, etc, I think it’s fine that people, even people who in principle agree with act utilitarianism, in practice act like Two-Level or rule utilitarians or virtue ethicists, etc., and in the long run probably optimal (burnout and signaling are very important considerations!) I’m just suggesting that you’re attacking a caricature that’s entirely nonexistent.
http://sinesalvatorem.tumblr.com/post/135287926951/making-a-difference
I think this post is incredibly powerful, and a strong reminder for why we must fight on.
“I’ve talked a lot about my bad luck. I have a ’tragic backstory’ tag, after all. I was born in the third world, in a place with incredibly low incomes which fail to be mirrored in particularly low cost of living. As such, people make do with malnutrition, lack of medication, and ever present mosquitoes. There’s just no other way. You live cheap or die – living free was never an option.
I also happen to be transgender. If living in squalor wasn’t enough, try living in squalor while surrounded by hatred. I am queer in a place where politicians talk about the importance of getting rid of people like me, due to the threat we pose to “public morals”. Where, as a member of my school’s debate team, I was forced to argue for why people like me should be barred entry to the country. The head of the team wanted to know why I found the topic upsetting. Of course, I didn’t tell him. I didn’t want to be expelled.
However, despite all that and more, I have a lot of good luck[...] I don’t deserve my luck. I don’t deserve the bad that’s happened to me, but I don’t deserve the good either...”