Bryan Caplan is an irrepressible and eclectic economist at George Mason University.
Our first two interviews for the 80,000 Hours Podcast were:
- Bryan Caplan on whether lazy parenting is OK, what really helps workers, and betting on beliefs
- Economist Bryan Caplan thinks education is mostly pointless showing off. We test the strength of his case.
This time I'm thinking of asking him about:
• Why its foolish to read the news • How I'm worried about advances in AI, while Bryan mostly isn't • His new book: Voters as Mad Scientists: Essays on Political Irrationality
What (else) should I ask him (about)?
This is going to sound like an accusation, but that's because it's part of my biggest broad source of skepticism of him as a public intellectual. It seems like on a huge range of issues, from human nature, to free will, to X-risks, to animal rights, to land use, to immigration, to civil rights, Caplan holds the view most convenient to anarcho-capitalism that he can plausibly defend (and occasionally view I think are quite hard to plausibly defend). This doesn't indicate any specific view, again most of his views are at least plausible and I agree with many of them, but as a trend it's hard to ignore. Given this, I was wondering if you could ask for examples of views he holds that are most inconvenient for his politics, especially if there are reasonably plausible, more convenient alternatives that he nonetheless rejects on consideration. If not, or maybe in addition, I was wondering if he could comment on the general trend - for instance if he thinks that there is enough of a common element to all of these views that their combination is independently plausible without invoking bias.
Fair, fair, and fair. I do think there are mitigating responses to all of these points as well, but I’ll concede the point that these are cases on the fringes of convenience for him. I was personally more thinking about IQ if I had to think of an example - he seems to place more importance on it than most people, but as I think he pointed out in a blog post I can’t find now, this leads just an awful lot of people to really statist and quasi or outright fascist views, so even if it doesn’t actually imply fascism, it’s an area where adopting a view closer to the average would be more convenient, provide an additional reason he could give against such people.