Edited to add a definition:
VO2max is the maximum amount of oxygen your body is capable of consuming. VO2max is commonly used as a measure of aerobic fitness.
Ok, it sounds like we agree on pretty much everything except what it means for something to "be an existential risk". I think 0.01% still counts as a risk worth worrying about (or it would, if AI x-risk weren't multiple orders of magnitude higher).
Are you saying 99.9 to 99.99 per year, or total?
I directionally agree but I don't think that's the sort of reasoning in which you can be >99.9% confident.
I'm also concerned about runaway warming making earth uninhabitable. Climate models suggest that won't happen but Halstead (implicitly) expects a <0.001% chance of runaway warming which seems hard to justify to me.
Do you think you can learn something useful about existential risk from reading the IPCC report?
FWIW I only briefly looked at the latest report but from what I saw, it seemed hard to learn anything about existential risk from it, except for some obvious things like "humans will not go extinct in the median outcome". I didn't see any direct references to human extinction in the report, nor any references to runaway warming.
"Climate change is not an x-risk" is the kind of thing you can easily (and correctly) prove to yourself in a matter of hours
How do you do that? I've spent several hours researching the topic and I'm still not convinced, but I think there's a lot I'm still missing, too.
My current thinking is
Bees are more social than salmon. I haven't put serious thought into it, but I can see an argument that sociality is an important factor in determining intensity-of-consciousness. (Perhaps because sociality requires complex neuron interactions that give rise to certain conscious experiences?)
I've spoken to grantmakers about this in the past and I got the impression that they see it as a largely unavoidable problem:
Thanks for the kind words!
I didn't discuss this in my review because I didn't really have anything to say about it, but Outlive talks about some "technologically advanced" longevity interventions (IIRC rapamycin got the most attention), and it concluded that none of them were that well-supported, and the best longevity interventions are still the obvious things (exercise; avoiding harmful activities like smoking; healthy diet; maybe sleep*).
But I will say that I'd guess that a lifetime of exercise does buy you >1 year of life expectancy, see footnote 59 in OP. Almost nobody meets the recommended dose of exercise (>150 minutes/week cardio + twice a week resistance training) so this intervention is still accessible to most people.
*As I discussed in my review, I think Outlive overstates the importance of sleep, but I still find it plausible that bad sleep is a big contributor to poor health. (I haven't looked into it enough to have a strong opinion.)