EA Forum Prize: Winners for May 2020

By Aaron Gertler šŸ”ø @ 2020-07-21T07:53 (+38)

Note: As detailed in this post, this may be the last round of Prizes we award under the current system. I'm currently considering what the next version of the program might look like. The next prize round (whatever it looks like) will take into account all posts published after May 2020, so that no one misses their chance at a prize through some accident of timing.

CEA is pleased to announce the winners of the May 2020 EA Forum Prize! 

In first place (for a prize of $750): ā€œSome thoughts on deference and inside-view models,ā€ by Buck Shlegeris.

In second place (for a prize of $500): ā€œEA Survey 2019 Series: How EAs Get Involved in EA,ā€ by David Moss.

In third place (for a prize of $250): ā€œPrioritizing COVID-19 interventions & individual donations,ā€ by Ian David Moss and Catherine Olsson

(David Moss and Ian David Moss are, in fact, two different people.)

 

The following users were each awarded a Comment Prize ($50):

 

See here for a list of all prize announcements and winning posts.

What is the EA Forum Prize?

Certain posts and comments exemplify the kind of content we most want to see on the EA Forum. They are well-researched and well-organized; they care about informing readers, not just persuading them.

The Prize is an incentive to create content like this. But more importantly, we see it as an opportunity to showcase excellent work as an example and inspiration to the Forum's users.

About the winning posts and comments

Note: I write this section in first person based on my own thoughts, rather than by attempting to summarize the views of the other judges.

Some thoughts on deference and inside-view models

Itā€™s very common for people in the EA community to have a set of beliefs they havenā€™t fully thought through, step-by-step. (This is also very common for people in general.)

Is this a bad thing? Should we try to hold beliefs only when we can fully explain why we hold them?

In this post, Buck takes on this question by digging into many different sub-questions, using a huge collection of specific examples and anecdotes along the way (this is a great way to make abstract ideas more memorable and easier to share). I really like that he arrives at a set of moderate conclusions: yes, itā€™s good not to believe an idea just because it was endorsed by someone you trust, but itā€™s also very difficult to have complete models for every one of your beliefs, and we all have to take shortcuts at some points. 

Other things I like about the post: 

EA Survey 2019 Series: How EAs Get Involved in EA

The Rethink Charity team behind the EA Survey spends a huge amount of time collecting and summarizing their data for EA Forum readers. I love being able to flip through all of this information in one place, and I appreciate commentatorsā€™ efforts to help Rethink improve the survey each year.

I donā€™t have much to say about this post in particular. Like its companions, it summarizes everything Iā€™d hoped to see in such a post, with good headline structure and plenty of graphs. I also enjoyed the automated SurveyMonkey coding as an extra source of information on what respondents talked about in freeform answers.

While the EA Survey is supported by CEA and the EA Meta Fund, I can easily imagine a world where Rethink fulfills its reporting obligations without creating so many detailed Forum posts for the public to enjoy. Iā€™m glad we donā€™t live there.

Prioritizing COVID-19 interventions & individual donations 

This is a beautiful post. Itā€™s exactly what Iā€™d hope to see from any brief report on how charities were chosen (by ā€œbrief,ā€ I mean ā€œshorter than a GiveWell pageā€). Specific features that I liked:

The winning comments

I wonā€™t write up an analysis of each comment. Instead, here are my thoughts on selecting comments for the prize.

The voting process

The winning posts were chosen by five people:

All posts published in the titular month qualified for voting, save for those in the following categories: 

Voters recused themselves from voting on posts written by themselves or their colleagues. Otherwise, they used their own individual criteria for choosing posts, though they broadly agree with the goals outlined above.

Judges each had ten votes to distribute between the monthā€™s posts. They also had a number of ā€œextraā€ votes equal to [10 - the number of votes made last month]. For example, a judge who cast 7 votes last month would have 13 this month. No judge could cast more than three votes for any single post.

The winning comments were chosen by Aaron Gertler.

Feedback

If you have thoughts on how the Prize has changed the way you read or write on the Forum, please write a comment or contact me. If you have thoughts on changing the current format, comment on this post (or contact me).