Two other important points (perhaps for a different article) are 1) your intuition about charitable projects is very bad 2) many people do not realize how hard it is to evaluate charitable projects in these terms. GiveWell talks about these issues a fair amount, but I am not sure if they have an essay I can point to. The reasons are related. 2 is because the charity givers are not usually on the receiving end of charity so they don't get feedback on which to evaluate what improves people's lives and what doesn't without explicitly trying to measure this. 1 follows from 2 because you don't get good feedback for similar decisions to help calibrate your intuition. It is also exacerbated by the fact that the people you are trying to help have very different circumstances from you (in many ways wealth level, culture, economic opportunities etc.).
Great points Jsalvatier. I will include these in the original post!
I have a friend who is currently in a lucrative management consultancy career, but is considering getting a job in eco-tourism because he "wants to make the world a better place" and we got into a debate about Efficient Charity, Roles vs. Goals, and Optimizing versus Acquiring Warm Fuzzies.
I thought that there would be a good article here that I could send him to, but there isn't. So I've decided to ask people to write such an article. What I am looking for is an article that is less than 1800 words long, and explains the following ideas:
but without using any unexplained LW Jargon. (Utilons, Warm Fuzzies, optimizing). Linking to posts explaining jargon is NOT OK. I will judge the winner based upon these criteria and the score that the article gets on LW. I may present a small prize to the winner, if (s)he desires it!
Happy Writing
Roko
EDIT: As well as saying that he will pay $100 to the winner, Jsalvatier makes two additional points that I feel should be included in the specification of the article:
6. Your intuition about what counts as a cause worth giving money to is extremely bad. This is completely natural: everyone's intuition about this is bad. Why? Because your brain was not optimized by evolution to be good at thinking clearly about large problems involving millions of people and how to allocate resources.
7. Not only is your intuition about this naturally very bad (as well as cultural memes surrounding how to donate to charity being utterly awful), you don't realize that your intuition is bad. This is a deceptively hard problem.
And I would also like to add:
8. Explicitly make the point that our current norm of ranking charities based upon how much (or little) they spend on overheads is utterly insane. Yes, the entire world of charities is stupid with respect to the problem of how to prioritize their own efforts.
9. Mention the point that other groups are slowly edging their way towards the same conclusion, e.g. Giving What We Can (GWWC), Copenhagen Consensus, GiveWell.