This is an episode of Spencer Greenberg's Clearer Thinking podcast. The episode was cross-posted to the feed of The 80,000 Hours Podcast.
What are the best strategies for improving ourselves? How are line managers useful? Why does Rob prefer long-form content for the 80,000 Hours podcast? What are the sorts of things humans value and why? In what ways do research ethics considerations fail to achieve their stated objectives? Why are prediction markets useful?
I found this interview enjoyable and useful, and would recommend it. See the comments section of this post for some points from the interview which I found particularly interesting. (I'm putting those points in comments because I think that might be better for encouraging discussion and keeping it organised.)
Currently, I think it'd be a good idea for all future episodes that appear in the 80k podcast feed to be linkposted to the Forum, and I might make such linkposts in future myself unless someone else starts doing so or suggests reasons why it shouldn't be done. If you have thoughts on that, please comment to say so here.
Some reasons why Rob thinks long (e.g., 2-6 hour) interviews are an unusually good medium for sharing ideas
(This is from memory and there's no transcript, so I'm probably missing some things and distorting other things. Also, I think Rob has written about this elsewhere, but I can't remember where.)
I agree with all of these points.
And I found the final point particularly interesting. In my limited experience as a researcher so far, I have indeed been struck by how many interesting and potentially important ideas, framings, elaborations, counterpoints, etc. seem to be floating around in discussions, work-in-progress talks, internal drafts, etc., but haven't been fleshed out fully in any widely accessible content. Often there'll be some mention of these things in widely accessible content, but missing lots of details, or framed in a way the researchers not feel isn't quite right. And I think unfortunately this is a totally understandable and hard-to-fix problem, and applies to some of my own work and ideas as well.
I think more long interviews with specialists in various areas - not just researchers but also practitioners, grantmakers, etc. - seems like a great, low-cost way to address that issue. And I'm glad various people are already creating such interviews.