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.
Thanks for making this linkpost, Evelyn! I did have some thoughts on this episode, which I'll split into separate comments so it's easier to keep discussion organised. (A basic point is that the episode was really interesting, and I'd recommend others listen as well.)
A bundle of connected quibbles:
An illustrative quote from Ajeya:
But "existential risks" includes not just extinction risk but also includes risks of unrecoverable collapse, unrecoverable dystopia, and some (but not all) s-risks/suffering catastrophes. (See here.)
And my understanding is that, if we condition on rejecting the totalism:
(See here for some discussion relevant to those points.)
So one can reasonably be a non-totalist yet still prioritise reducing existential risk - especially risk of unrecoverable dystopias.
Relatedly, a fair number of longtermists are suffering-focused and/or prioritise s-risk reduction, sometimes precisely because they reject the idea that making more happy beings is good but do think making more suffering beings is bad.
Finally, one can be a longtermist without prioritising reducing either reduction of extinction risk or reducing of other existential risks. In particular, one could prioritise work on what I'm inclined to call "non-existential trajectory changes". From a prior post of mine:
(Relatedly, my impression from a couple videos or podcasts is that Will MacAskill is currently interested in thinking more about a broad set of trajectory changes longtermists could try to cause/prevent, including but not limited to existential catastrophes.)
I expect Ajeya knows all these things. And I think it's reasonable for a person to think that extinction risks are far more important than other existential risks, that the strongest argument for longtermism rests on totalism, and that longtermists should only/almost only prioritise existential/extinction risk reduction. (My own views are probably more moderate versions of those stances.) But it seems to me that it's valuable to not imply that those things are necessarily true or true by definition.
(Though it's of course easy to state things in ways that are less than perfectly accurate or nuanced when speaking in an interview rather than producing edited, written content. And I did find a lot of the rest of that section of the interview quite interesting and useful.)
Update: I sort-of adapted this comment into a question for Ajeya's AMA, and her answer clarifies her views. (It seems like her and I do in fact basically agree on all of these points.)