Welcome all,
Here's a place to discuss projects, ideas, events and miscellanea relevant to the world of effective altruism!
There have been plenty of these in the last month, including the shipping of Peter Singer's book, Nick Bostrom's TED Talk and Will MacAskill's upcoming book! And also my own EA Handbook! :)
Thanks very much to Marcus Davis for moderating the EA Forum over the past month! He will be wrapping up over the coming weeks, but if anyone else if interested in taking up the reins and using it as a way to promote thoughtful effective altruism, then I would like to hear from you. (You can contact me at contact@effective-altruism.com).
Two questions: (i) do you agree with my hypothesis; and (ii) if so, does it matter?
Non-directed kidney donation seems to be a part of the EA culture, for obvious reasons. Separately, a cornerstone of the EA perspective is that emotional empathy is not enough: cognitive empathy (i.e., reason) should play a critical, even dominant, role in our moral decision-making.
A recent, highly publicized study found that non-directed kidney donors have greater-than-average emotional empathy: "The results of brain scans and behavioral testing suggests that these donors have some structural and functional brain differences that may make them more sensitive, on average, to other people's distress." http://www.georgetown.edu/news/abigail-marsh-brain-altruism-study.html
Hypothesis: That doesn't hold for EA types that have donated kidneys.
Relevant: Kidney donation is a reasonable choice for effective altruists and more should consider it.
Do you think EAs are in general not unusually empathetic? I discussed a similar issue elsewhere in this open thread.