Hi all!
I have just published an article on EA called 'Charity vs Revolution: Effective Altruism and the Systemic Change Objection'.
I re-state the systemic change objection in more charitable terms than one often sees and offer an epistemic critique of EA as well as somewhat more speculative critique of charity in general.
Some of you might find it interesting!
A pre-print is here: https://goo.gl/51AUDe
And the final, pay-walled version is here: https://link.springer.com/arti…/10.1007%2Fs10677-019-09979-5
Comments, critiques and complaints very welcome!
This was very interesting food for thought, thanks!
This is definitely correct, but I'd guess that where I (and many EAs) part ways with you is not in being in principle unwilling to make commitments to other methods/forms of evidence, but rather, not finding any other existing paradigms compelling or not agreeing on which ones we find compelling.
You can't separate the question of "should I take systemic change seriously" from the question of "how compelling is the most compelling paradigm for thinking about systemic change", so I think you would have a stronger chance of convincing EAs to take systemic change convincingly by arguing why EAs should find a specific paradigm compelling.
Here are some features that might make a paradigm compelling to me. I think the current EA paradigm for addressing global poverty exhibits all of them, but it seems to me that one or more is lacking from (my stereotype of) any current paradigm for addressing systemic change:
Hi thanks for your comment! Sorry for delayed response.
As it happens I think that radical social movements, broadly understood, do have the capacity to course-correct, learning from what has worked or failed before and are compatible with our understanding of human behavior. And certainly they are tolerant of uncertainty - there is little choice but to be!
I'm not sure what it means to be grounded in consequentialism - to invoke it explicitly? Not sure why this would be so important - everyone cares about consequences and radicals have often not been r... (read more)