A Special Issue on Effective Altruism in the Georgetown Journal of Law and Public Policy

By Artūrs Kaņepājs @ 2024-02-06T07:29 (+13)

This is a linkpost to https://www.law.georgetown.edu/public-policy-journal/in-print/volume-21-special-issue-2023/

A collection of articles on the ethics of EA. 

H/t to @jeffsebo, who has an article with the catchy title "Esoteric Altruism: Does Effective Altruism Require Its Own Destruction?". It draws on the parallels of the difficulties of applying utilitarianism and EA-thinking in practice.


det @ 2024-02-06T16:31 (+4)

Thanks for posting, these look super interesting!

I'm hoping to read (and possibly respond to) more, but I ~randomly started with the final article "Saving the World Starts at Home." 

My thoughts on this one are mostly critical: I think it fundamentally misunderstands what EA is about (due to relying too heavily on a single book for its conception of EA), and will not be persuasive to many EAs. But it raises a few interesting critiques of EA prioritization at the end.

Summary

What I liked best

I think the "status" and "politics" critiques of EA prioritization are useful and probably under-discussed. 

Certain fields (e.g. AI safety research) are often critiqued for being suspiciously interesting / high-status / high-paying, but this makes the case that even donating to GiveWell is a little suspicious in how much status it can buy. (But I think there are likely much more efficient ways to buy status; donating 1% of your income probably buys much more than 1/10 the status you'd get from donating 10%.)

I also think it's reasonably likely that there are some conservative-coded causes that EAs undervalue for purely political reasons (but I don't have any concrete examples at hand).

Critiques

There are a few fundamental issues with the analysis that cause this to fail to connect for me.

(this is a bit scattershot; I tried to narrow it down to a few points to prevent this from being 3x longer)