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Say you come along and are like, “Well, I did this estimate and I found that there’s this amazing global priority that no one else is working on and it’s like 100 times better than what everyone else is doing.” So then the question is, should you just trust that, or should you figure that you’ve probably made a mistake somewhere? And because your calculation has said there’s this thing that’s amazing compared to what everyone else is doing, most likely you’ve made an error in the direction of it being better than it actually is.

Ben Todd

Today’s episode is the latest conversation between Arden Koehler, and our CEO, Ben Todd.

Ben’s been thinking a lot about effective altruism recently, including what it really is, how it’s framed, and how people misunderstand it.

We recently released an article on misconceptions about effective altruism – based on Will MacAskill’s recent paper The Definition of Effective Altruism – and this episode can act as a companion piece.

Arden and Ben cover a bunch of topics related to effective altruism:

  • How it isn’t just about donating money to fight poverty
  • Whether it includes a moral obligation to give
  • The rigorous argument for its importance
  • Objections to that argument
  • How to talk about effective altruism for people who aren’t already familiar with it

Given that we’re in the same office, it’s relatively easy to record conversations between two 80k team members — so if you enjoy these types of bonus episodes, let us know at [email protected], and we might make them a more regular feature.

Get this episode by subscribing to our podcast on the world’s most pressing problems and how to solve them: type 80,000 Hours into your podcasting app. Or read the transcript below.

Producer: Keiran Harris.
Audio mastering: Ben Cordell.
Transcriptions: Zakee Ulhaq.

Highlights

Misconceptions about effective altruism

An interesting recent example was Sam Harris when interviewed Toby Ord on his podcast, and when he defined effective altruism, he defined it as, “Taking the actions that most help the people who are most in need alive today.” And so his definition explicitly ruled out helping future generations and then for that reason, maybe ruling out working on existential risks, even though Toby Ord is on his podcast, who’s one of the creators of effective altruism and has also just written a book about existential risks.

I think Sam Harris is quite a representative example and it’s not so much that people within the community misunderstand it, but even very adjacent people often misunderstand it, and of which Sam Harris is an example, but there’s many others. And yeah, as to where they get the idea, well I’m not sure to some degree, but a couple of thoughts. One is that effective altruism is a very abstract idea. So the way I see it is, I see effective altruism as trying to seek the very best ways to have a positive impact or to contribute to the common good is how I like to frame it. And a lot of people it’s like… Yeah, that’s quite hard to grasp in abstract what exactly that’s saying.

So instead people end up focusing on particular things that people discuss in effective altruism. Particular ways of doing good, I mean. And, in particular, the ones that are most grabbing and memorable. And so much of effective altruism, in the past, it really focused a lot on donating to global health charities and how it’s surprisingly easy to save a life and those kinds of things. And if I had to sum up the misunderstandings with effective altruism in one line, it’s that people think that effective altruism is just about the claim that we should donate money to evidence-backed interventions that help the world’s poorest people.

Ben's definition of effective altruism

So, there’s maybe two different questions. One is, what are the best ways to explain it in practice? Which is kind of more of a marketing question. And then the other question is just, what actually is it? If we just want to be really clear about the claims. For what actually it is, just a very high level definition I would use is effective altruism is about seeking the best ways to contribute to the common good. And so then you can roughly divide that into two projects.

First is the intellectual project, which is trying to figure out what are the best ways of contributing to the common good. And so that’s more like a field of research either in academia or in nonprofits where people are trying to have this debate.

And then the second part is the practical project which is like, given our current answers about what are the best ways of helping others who want to contribute to the common good, let’s see if we can actually put those into practice and actually tackle some of the world’s most pressing problems. And that’s more than the social movement around effective altruism of people who sometimes work together who are trying to tackle these big issues.

Objections to effective altruism

I think one is epistemic humility. This is the idea that, what should we believe about a difficult question like how much of a pressing priority is AI safety? One answer to that is to just try and figure it out for yourself. Another answer to that is just go with what other sensible people think and take an average across them. And some evidence that that kind of approach works is like in forecasting. So people have tried to measure, what’s the best way to predict geopolitical events, which are super hard to predict. And it turns out that getting like 100 people who are really good at forecasting, seeing what they think will happen, and then averaging that together is a really good way of doing it. And it’s usually better than any individual person.

And you can think of it as like, if someone else has a radically different view of what the biggest priorities are from you, and you’re in a similar position epistemically, why would you think you’re right and they’re wrong? Unless you have some really clear explanation of like, they’re making this mistake and you haven’t made some other mistakes that they’ve figured out and you haven’t figured out. So there’s a kind of symmetry argument for going with what other people think.

And yeah, it seems like if you put a lot of weight on that kind of argument, then you should be focusing on the priorities that a sensible coalition of other people would think are the biggest priorities. And that almost brings you back to the most common sense priorities by definition.

How to talk about effective altruism

I think most of our existing introductions tend to emphasize the community bit more than the intellectual bit, but actually both are really important and the nice thing about emphasizing the intellectual bit is it gets kind of more to the heart of effective altruism.

And so an example of the kind of community approach is, “Okay, effective altruism is a group of people who give 10% of their money to charities such as those supported by GiveWell”. And that’s, again, a very practical, ‘here’s what we do’ kind of explanation. Whereas the more intellectual project explanation would be, effective altruism is about the question of which ways to benefit others are most effective? And effective altruists like to do research into these questions and they try and tackle questions like, which global problems are most pressing? And what even is the common good? And what implications might different definitions have? And which interventions are most effective? And should we help people now? Or try and invest and help people later?

And so I like introducing effective altruism as a question and then giving examples of the types of questions that we think are really interesting and important. And then you can see if someone’s interested in one of those questions, then you can go more into, “Okay, well what do people say”? Some people say, “No, we should focus on the most evidence-based thing, because at least we can measure it.” Other people are like, “No, we should take a hits based approach so that we get the tail, the thing that’s most effective.” And that’s a debate within the community. And I think that type of approach is really good to appealing to someone who’s really interested in intellectual debate.

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About the show

The 80,000 Hours Podcast features unusually in-depth conversations about the world's most pressing problems and how you can use your career to solve them. We invite guests pursuing a wide range of career paths — from academics and activists to entrepreneurs and policymakers — to analyse the case for and against working on different issues and which approaches are best for solving them.

The 80,000 Hours Podcast is produced and edited by Keiran Harris. Get in touch with feedback or guest suggestions by emailing [email protected].

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