In the most recent episode of the 80,000 Hours podcast, Rob Wiblin and Ajeya Cotra from Open Phil discuss "the challenge Open Phil faces striking a balance between taking big ideas seriously, and not going all in on philosophical arguments that may turn out to be barking up the wrong tree entirely.
"They also discuss:
- Which worldviews Open Phil finds most plausible, and how it balances them
- Which worldviews Ajeya doesn’t embrace but almost does
- How hard it is to get to other solar systems
- The famous ‘simulation argument’
- When transformative AI might actually arrive
- The biggest challenges involved in working on big research reports
- What it’s like working at Open Phil
- And much more"
I'm creating this thread so that anyone who wants to share their thoughts on any of the topics covered in this episode can do so. This is in the spirit of MichaelA's suggestion of posting all EA-relevant content here.
One other thing on this section of the interview: Ajeya and Rob both say that the way the SSA leads to the doomsday argument seems sort-of "suspicious". Ajeya then says that, on the other hand, the way the SIA causes an opposing update also seems suspicious.
But I think all of her illustrations of how updates based on the SIA can seem suspicious involved infinities. And we already know that loads of things involving infinities can seem counterintuitive or suspicious. So it seems to me like this isn't much reason to feel that SIA in particular can cause suspicious updates. In other words, it seems like maybe the "active ingredient" causing the suspiciousness in the examples she gives is infinity, not SIA. Whereas the way the SSA leads to the doomsday argument doesn't have to involve infinity, so there it seems like SSA is itself suspicious.
I'm not sure whether this is a valid or important point, but maybe it is? (I obviously don't think we should necessarily dismiss things just because they feel "suspicious", but it could make sense to update a bit away from them for that reason, and, to the extent that that's true, a difference in the suspiciousness of SSA vs SIA could matter.)