I asked if EA has a rational debate methodology in writing that people sometimes use. The answer seems to be “no”.
I asked if EA has any alternative to rationally resolve disagreements. The answer seems to be “no”.
If the correct answer to either question is actually “yes”, please let me know by responding to that question.
My questions were intended to form a complete pair. Do you use X for rationality, and if not do you use anything other than X?
Does EA have some other way of being rational which wasn’t covered by either question? Or is something else going on?
My understanding is that rationality is crucial to EA’s mission (of basically applying rationality, math, evidence, etc., to charity – which sounds great to me) so I think the issue I’m raising is important and relevant.
Bias and irrationality are huge problems today. Should I make an effort to do better? Yes. Should I trust myself? No – at least as little as possible. It’s better to assume I will fail sometimes and design around that. E.g. what policies would limit the negative impact of the times I am biased? What constraints or rules can I impose on myself so that my irrationalities have less impact?
So when I see an answer like “I think people [at EA] try pretty hard [… to be rational]”, I find it unsatisfactory. Trying is good, but I think planning for failures of rationality is needed. Being above average at rationality, and trying more than most people, can actually, paradoxically, partly make things worse, because it can reduce how much people plan for rationality failures.
Following written debate methods is one way to reduce the impact of bias and irrationality. I might be very biased but not find any loophole in the debate rules that lets my bias win. Similarly, transparency policies help reduce the impact of bias – when I don’t have the option to hide what I’m doing, and I have to explain myself, then I won’t take some biased actions because I don’t see how to get away with them (or I may do them anyway, get caught, and be overruled so the problem is fixed).
We should develop as much rationality and integrity as we can. But I think we should also work to reduce the need for personal rationality and integrity by building some rationality and integrity into rules and policies. We should limit our reliance on personal rationality and integrity. Explicit rules and policies, and other constraints against arbitrary action, help with that.