Recent events seem to have revealed a central divide within Effective Altruism.
On one side, you have the people[1] who want EA to prioritise epistemics on the basis that if we let this slip, we'll eventually end up in a situation where our decisions will end up being what's popular rather than what's effective.
On the other side, you have the people who are worried that if we are unwilling to trade-off [2] epistemics at all, we'll simply sideline ourselves and then we won't be able to have any significant impact at all.
- How should we navigate this divide?
- Do you disagree with this framing? For example, do you think that the core divide is something else?
- How should cause area play into this divide? For example, it appears to me, that those who prioritise AI Safety tend to fall into the first camp more often and those who prioritise global poverty tend to fall into the second camp. Is this a natural consequence of these prioritisation decisions or is this a mistake?
Update: A lot of people disliked the framing which seems to suggest that I haven't found the right framing here. Apologies, I should have spent more time figuring out what framing would have been most conducive to moving the discussion forwards. I'd like to suggest that someone else should post a similar question with framing that they think is better (although it might be a good idea to wait a few days or even a week).
In terms of my current thoughts on framing, I wish I had more explicitly worded this as "saving us from losing our ability to navigate" vs. "saving us from losing our ability to navigate". After reading the comments, I'm tempted to add a third possible highest priority: "preventing us from directly causing harm".
" Some people are good at noticing when the authorities around them and their social community and the people on their side are making bad arguments. These people are valuable. They notice important things. They point out when the emperor has no clothes. And they literally built the EA movement."
Just so I understand,
1. Part of your suspicion of the "racism is both bad and a pseudoscience" is that there is a consensus around this that includes "authorities";
2. Yes there were bad actors but we shouldn't throw the baby out with the bath water;
3. Those arguing for using race to measure people are comparable to early EAers developing the INT criteria for measuring the impact of health and wellbeing interventions?
Also, could you further develop, "Opinions that are stupid are going to be clearly stupid." and criteria for this?