A common criticism of EA/rationalist discussion is that we reinvent the wheel - specifically, that concepts which become part of the community have close analogies that have been better studied in academic literature. Or in some cases, that we fixate on some particular academically sourced notion to the exclusion of many similar or competing theories.
I think we can simultaneously test and address this purported problem by crowd sourcing an open database mapping EA concepts to related academic concepts, and in particular citing papers that investigate the latter. In this thread I propose the following format:
- 'Answers' name an EA or rat concept either that you suspect might or know has mappings to a broader set of academic literature.
- Replies to answers cite at least one academic work (or a good Wikipedia article) describing a related phenomenon or concept. In some cases, an EA/rat concept might be an amalgam of multiple other concepts, so please give as many replies to answers as seem appropriate.
- Feel free but not obliged to add context to replies (as long as they link a good source)
- Feel free to reply to your own answer
I'll add any responses this thread gets to a commentable Google sheet (which I can keep updating), and share that sheet afterwards. Hopefully this will be a valuable resource both for fans of effective altruism to learn more about their areas of interest, and for critics to asserting the reinventing-of-wheelness of EA/rat to prove instances of their case (where an answer gets convincing replies) or refute them (where an answer gets no or only loosely related replies).
I'll seed the discussion with a handful of answers of my own, most of which I have at best tentative mappings.
[ETA I would ask people not to downvote answers to this thread. If the system I proposed is functioning accurately, then every answer is a service to the community, whether it ends up being mapped (and therefore validated as an instance of people re) or not mapped (and therefore refuted). If you think this is a bad system, then please downvote the top level post, rather than disincentivising the people who are trying to make it work.]
The academic fields most relevant to GH&D work are fairly mature. Because of that, it's reasonable for GH&D to focus less on producing stuff that is more like basic research / theory generation (academia is often strong in this and had a big head start) and devote its resources more toward setting up a tractable implementation of something (which is often not academia's comparative advantage for various reasons).
GH&D also has a clearly successful baseline with near-infinite room for more funding, and so more speculative projects need to clear that baseline before they become viable. You haven't identified any specific proposed area to study, but my suspicion is that most of them would require sustained political commitment over many years in the LDC and/or large cash infusions beyond the bankroll of EA GH&D to potentially work.