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.
The sections "Biggest challenges with writing big reports" and "What it’s like working at Open Phil" were interesting and relatable
A lot of what was said in these sections aligned quite a bit with my own experiences from researching/writing about EA topics, both as part of EA orgs and independently.
For example, Ajeya said:
I think most of the EA-related things I've started looking into and writing up, except those that I deprioritised very early on, ending up growing and spawning spinoff tangent docs/posts. And then those spinoffs often ended up spawning their own spinoffs, and so on. And I think this was usually actually productive, and sometimes the spinoffs were more valuable than the original thing, but it definitely meant a lot of missed deadlines, changed plans, and uncertainties about when to just declare something finished and move on.
I don't have a lot of experience with research/writing on non EA-related topics, so maybe this is just a matter of my own (perhaps flawed) approach, or maybe it's just fairly normal. (One thing that comes to mind here is that - if I recall correctly - Joe Henrich says in his newest book, The WEIRDest People in the World, that his previous book - Secret of Our Success - was all basically just meant to be introductory chapters to WEIRDest People. And the prior book is itself quite long and quite fascinating!)
But I did do ~0.5FTE years of academic psychology research during my Honours year. There I came up with the question and basic design before even starting, and the final product really had stuck pretty closely to that, and on schedule, with no tangents. So there's at least weak evidence that my more recent tangent-heavy approach (which I think I actually endorse) isn't just an approach I'd adopt even in more established fields.
A few other things Ajeya said in those sections that resonated with me:
It was interesting - and sort of nice, in a weird way! - to hear that even someone with a relatively senior role at one of the most prominent and well-resourced EA orgs has those experiences and perceptions.
(To be clear, I've overall been very happy with the EA-related roles I've worked in! Ajeya also talked about a bunch of stuff about her job that's really positive and that also resonated with me.)
One other part of those sections that feels worth highlighting:
... (read more)