[1. Do you think many major insights from longtermist macrostrategy or global priorities research have been found since 2015?]
I think "major insights" is potentially a somewhat loaded framing; it seems to imply that only highly conceptual considerations that change our minds about previously-accepted big picture claims count as significant progress. I think very early on, EA produced a number of somewhat arguments and considerations which felt like "major insights" in that they caused major swings in the consensus of what cause areas to prioritize at a very high level; I think that probably reflected that the question was relatively new and there was low-hanging fruit. I think we shouldn't expect future progress to take the form of "major insights" that wildly swing views about a basic, high-level question as much (although I still think that's possible).
[2. If so, what would you say are some of the main ones?]
Since 2015, I think we've seen good analysis and discussion of AI timelines and takeoff speeds, discussion of specific AI risks that go beyond the classic scenario presented in Superintellilgence, better characterization of multipolar and distributed AI scenarios, some interesting and more quantitative debates on giving now vs giving later and "hinge of history" vs "patient" long-termism, etc. None of these have provided definitive / authoritative answers, but they all feel useful to me as someone trying to prioritize where Open Phil dollars should go.
[3. Do you think the progress has been at a good pace (however you want to interpret that)?]
I'm not sure how to answer this; I think taking into account the expected low-hanging fruit effect, and the relatively low investment in this research, progress has probably been pretty good, but I'm very uncertain about the degree of progress I "should have expected" on priors.
[4. Do you think that this pushes for or against allocating more resources (labour, money, etc.) towards that type of work?]
I think ideally the world as a whole would be investing much more in this type of work than it is now. A lot of the bottleneck to this is that the work is not very well-scoped or broken into tractable sub-problems, which makes it hard for a large number of people to be quickly on-boarded to it.
[5. Do you think that this suggests we should change how we do this work, or emphasise some types of it more?]
Related to the above, I'd love for the work to become better-scoped over time -- this is one thing we prioritize highly at Open Phil.
My impression is that when most economists talk about AI as a 4th industrial revolution they're talking about impacts much smaller than what longtermists have in mind when they talk about "impacts at least as big as the Industrial Revolution". For example, in a public Google doc on What Open Philanthropy means by "transformative AI", Luke Muehlhauser says:
To explain, I think the common belief is that the (first) Industrial Revolution caused a shift to a new 'growth mode' characterized by much higher growth rates of total economic output as well as other indicators relevant to well-being (e.g. life expectancy). It is said to be comparable to only the agricultural revolution (and perhaps earlier fundamental changes such as the arrival of humans or major transitions in evolution).
By contrast, the so-called second and third industrial revolution (electricity, computers, ...) merely sustained the new trend that was kicked off by the first. Hence the title of Luke Muehlhauser's influential blog post There was only one industrial revolution.
So e.g. in terms of the economic growth rate, I think economists talk about a roughly business-as-usual scenario, while longtermists talk about the economic doubling time falling from a decade to a month.
Regarding timing, I also think that some versions of longtermist concerns about AI predate talk about a 4th industrial revolution by decades. (By this, I mean concerns that are of major relevance for the long-term future and meet the 'transformative AI' impact bar, not concerns by people who explicitly considered themselves longtermists or were explicitly comparing their concerns to the Industrial Revolution.) For example, the idea of an intelligence explosion was stated by I. J. Good in 1965, and people also often see concerns about AI risk expressed in statements by Norbert Wiener in 1960 (e.g. here, p. 4) or Alan Turing in 1951.
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I'm less sure about this, but I think most longtermists wouldn't consider AI to be a competitive cause area if their beliefs about the impacts of AI were similar to those of economists talking about a 4th industrial revolution. Personally, in that case I'd probably put it below all of bio, nuclear, and climate change.