I'm pleased to announce the first annual survey of effective altruists. This is a short survey of around 40 questions (generally multiple choice), which several collaborators and I have put a great deal of work into and would be very grateful if you took. I'll offer $250 of my own money to one participant.
Take the survey at http://survey.effectivealtruismhub.com/
The survey should yield some interesting results such as EAs' political and religious views, what actions they take, and the causes they favour and donate to. It will also enable useful applications which will be launched immediately afterwards, such as a map of EAs with contact details and a cause-neutral register of planned donations or pledges which can be verified each year. I'll also provide an open platform for followup surveys and other actions people can take. If you'd like to suggest questions, email me or comment.
Anonymised results will be shared publicly and not belong to any individual or organisation. The most robust privacy practices will be followed, with clear opt-ins and opt-outs.
I'd like to thank Jacy Anthis, Ben Landau-Taylor, David Moss and Peter Hurford for their help.
Other surveys' results, and predictions for this one
Other surveys have had intriguing results. For example, Joey Savoie and Xio Kikauka's interviewed 42 often highly active EAs over Skype, and found that they generally had left-leaning parents, donated on average 10%, and were altruistic before becoming EAs. The time they spent on EA activities was correlated with the percentage they donated (0.4), the time their parents spend volunteering (0.3), and the percentage of their friends who were EAs (0.3).
80,000 Hours also released a questionnaire and, while this was mainly focused on their impact, it yielded a list of which careers people plan to pursue: 16% for academia, 9% for both finance and software engineering, and 8% for both medicine and non-profits.
I'd be curious to hear people's predictions as to what the results of this survey will be. You might enjoy reading or sharing them here. For my part, I'd imagine we have few conservatives or even libertarians, are over 70% male, and have directed most of our donations to poverty charities.
Here is the promised other issue I see with the conflation of the general[1] and specific[2] forms of effective altruism.
You do not actually ever argue for the ideas making up that specific form.
It seems to go like this:
"We all think being altruistic is good, right? Of course we do. And we think it's important to be effective in our altruism, don't we? Of course. Good! Now, onwards to the fight for animal rights, the saving of children in Africa, the application of utilitarian principles to our charity work, and all the rest."
Now, as I say in my other comments, one issue is that potential newcomers to the movement might assent to those first two questions, but to the "Now, onwards ..." say — "whoa, whoa, where did that suddenly come from?". But the other issue is that it seems like you yourselves haven't given much thought to those positions. How do you know they're right, those philosophical and moral ideas? A lot of EA writing seems not to even consider the question! It's not like these are obvious principles you're assuming — many intelligent people, on LessWrong and elsewhere, do not agree with them!
Of course I don't actually think you've simply accepted these ideas out of some sort of blind go-alonging with some liberal crowd. This is LessWrong; I think better of you folks than that. (Although some EA-ers without an LW-or-similar background may well have given the matter just as little thought as that.) Presumably, you were, at some point, convinced of these ideas, in some way, by some arguments or evidence or considerations.
But I have no idea what those considerations are. I have no idea what convinced you; I don't know why you believe what you believe, because you hardly even acknowledge that you believe these things. In most EA writings I've seen, they are breezily assumed. That is not good for the epistemic health of the movement, I think.
I think it would be good to have some effort to clearly delineate the ideas that are held by, and commonly taken as background assumptions by, the majority of people in the EA movement; to acknowledge that these are nontrivial philosophical and moral positions, which are not shared by all people or even all who identify as rationalists; to explain how it was that you[3] became convinced of these ideas; and to lay out some arguments for said ideas, for potential disagreers to debate, if desired.
[1] "Being altruistic is good, and we should be effective in our altruistic actions."
[2] The specific cluster of ideas held by a specific community of people who describe themselves as the EA community.
[3] By "you" I don't necessarily mean you, personally, but: as many prominent figures in the EA movement as possible, and more generally, anyone who undertakes to write things intended to build the EA movement, recruit, etc.
Global poverty don't generally state or imply utilitarianism or similar views, though x-riskers do (at least those who value non-existent people). I personally favour global poverty charities, and am quite tentative in my attitudes to many mainstream ethical theories, and don't think being more so would affect my donations (though being less so might).
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