In this thread, I would like to invite people to summarize their attitude to Effective Altruism and to summarise their justification for their attitude while identifying the framework or perspective their using.
Initially I prepared an article for a discussion post (that got rather long) and I realised it was from a starkly utilitarian value system with capitalistic economic assumptions. I'm interested in exploring the possibility that I'm unjustly mindkilling EA.
I've posted my write-up as a comment to this thread so it doesn't get more air time than anyone else's summarise and they can be benefit equally from the contrasting views.
I encourage anyone who participates to write up their summary and identify their perspective BEFORE they read the others, so that the contrast can be most plain.
I'm sorry to say that this all seems rather muddled. I don't know how much of the muddle is actually in my brain.
You say "Effective Altruism isn't utilitarian" and then link to an LW post whose central complaint is that EA is too utilitarian. Then you say "EA is prioritarian" by which I guess you mean it says "pick the most important cause and give only to it" and link to an LW post that doesn't say anything remotely like that (it just says: here is one particular cause, see how much good you can do by giving to it).
You say GiveWell doesn't see market efficiency as inherently valuable. I am not aware of any evidence for that; what there is evidence for is that they don't see market efficiency as something worth throwing money at, and I have to say this seems very obviously correct; am I missing something here?
You say GiveWell's "theory of value relates to health status", by which I think you mean that they assess benefit as increase in QALYs. That seems pretty reasonable to me and I don't understand your objections. (I'm sure there are ways one can help people that don't show up in a QALY measurement, but when evaluating charities that aim to save lives or cure diseases -- which is a large fraction of what charities targeting the world's neediest people are doing -- it seems reasonable; and when they look at e.g. GiveDirectly I don't think they try to translate everything into QALYs.) Would you like to clarify what you're objecting to and why?
You say "Donation is inherently supply driven, so it will inevitably be inefficient" but the whole point of EA is to try and figure out where the demand is and move donations there. (Except that "demand" needs to be reinterpreted slightly. "Need" would be a better term.)
I don't understand your paragraph beginning "Inefficient market for warm fuzzies" at all, but I doubt it matters since EA is supposed to be all about what one does to actually help people; warm fuzzies should be "purchased separately".
You don't have much to say about how you think this could all be done better. You talk about "market based solutions" but (to me -- perhaps others are cleverer) it's far from clear what these might be. Markets, roughly, optimize for utility weighted by wealth, and unsusprisingly enough the worst-off people by most measures tend to be very poor. Accordingly, no demand-driven market-based solution can possibly do much for them because they haven't enough money to generate much demand in the economic sense. (Even if they had access to the relevant markets, which as you mention in passing they may well not.) So ... what do you have in mind, and why is it credible that it comes closer to maximizing utility than present-day EA?
Thanks for your comment.
Read the first comment on that post and the discussion the OP has with them.
No, I'm saying that it 'chooses more important causes and weights them higher'.
... (read more)