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by Hermitian909 1025 days ago
Probably not a good idea to judge all of EA but SBF. EA long predates SBF and had some huge wins by seriously asking the question "which charities save the most lives per dollar?" (technically: Quality Adjusted Years of Life, or QUALY). Really helped the world realize that things like mosquito nets in Africa were _grossly_ underfunded[0].

While I'm not an EA myself, accomplishments like Givewell[1] have really helped me keep respect for the movement - walking the walk is always orders of magnitude harder and more complex than talking the talk after all.

[0] https://www.effectivealtruism.org/articles/ea-global-2018-am... [1] https://www.givewell.org/

1 comments

Linking to a grab-bag of random claims by people with their own axes to grind is not terribly convincing or conducive to productive discussion. Do you think EA people haven't saved as many lives as they claim (just in the here and now, disregarding the minority of funding going to speculative future causes), or that this is not as important as they claim?
I linked to a number of critiques of EA and of utilitarianism.

I’m not super interested in debating the specifics of it, I am just highly skeptical of movements that place abstract formulas at the center, especially ones that have extensive funding from ethically dubious characters.

That’s all I have to say about it. Better critiques are listed in the links I shared.

EA is ethically and morally bankrupt. SBF is no accident, he's the ideal poster child for the whole movement.
By modified form i think you mean "implemented" form. Unlike pretty much every other ethical theory they actually practice what they believe in, which is really their defining characteristic. Even Christians don't do that much charitable giving nowadays.

Also, frankly, it's really strange to see people rushing to attack them. Are mosquito nets and 3rd world children really so hated?

No, I mean modified. EA is clearly drawing on a lot of utilitarian ideas, but it’s not exactly the same thing.

The comment on implementation is neither here nor there. Plenty of people implement their ethical theories. I don’t know how implementing something is an argument for the correctness of that thing. Certainly it’s good that a lot of people don’t implement their ethical theories.

Even Christians don't do that much charitable giving nowadays.

Every source I can find says exactly the opposite.

> The comment on implementation is neither here nor there.

About as much here or there as the statement that they are implementing utilitarianism at all.

> Every source I can find says exactly the opposite.

There was a post here recently about this exact thing. Detailing the rise of megachurches, how they are stealing away the majority of Christmas from small churches, and how they don't do any charity.