#42 - Amanda Askell on moral empathy, the value of information & the ethics of infinity

#42 - Amanda Askell on moral empathy, the value of information & the ethics of infinity

Consider two familiar moments at a family reunion.

Our host, Uncle Bill, takes pride in his barbecuing skills. But his niece Becky says that she now refuses to eat meat. A groan goes round the table; the family mostly think of this as an annoying picky preference. But if seriously considered as a moral position, as they might if instead Becky were avoiding meat on religious grounds, it would usually receive a very different reaction.

An hour later Bill expresses a strong objection to abortion. Again, a groan goes round the table; the family mostly think that he has no business in trying to foist his regressive preference on anyone. But if considered not as a matter of personal taste, but rather as a moral position - that Bill genuinely believes he’s opposing mass-murder - his comment might start a serious conversation.

Amanda Askell, who recently completed a PhD in philosophy at NYU focused on the ethics of infinity, thinks that we often betray a complete lack of moral empathy. All sides of the political spectrum struggle to get inside the mind of people we disagree with and see issues from their point of view.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

This often happens because of confusion between preferences and moral positions.

Assuming good faith on the part of the person you disagree with, and actually engaging with the beliefs they claim to hold, is perhaps the best remedy for our inability to make progress on controversial issues.

One potential path for progress surrounds contraception; a lot of people who are anti-abortion are also anti-contraception. But they’ll usually think that abortion is much worse than contraception, so why can’t we compromise and agree to have much more contraception available?

According to Amanda, a charitable explanation for this is that people who are anti-abortion and anti-contraception engage in moral reasoning and advocacy based on what, in their minds, is the best of all possible worlds: one where people neither use contraception nor get abortions.

So instead of arguing about abortion and contraception, we could discuss the underlying principle that one should advocate for the best possible world, rather than the best probable world.

Successfully break down such ethical beliefs, absent political toxicity, and it might be possible to actually converge on a key point of agreement.

Today’s episode blends such everyday topics with in-depth philosophy, including:

* What is 'moral cluelessness' and how can we work around it?
* Amanda's biggest criticisms of social justice activists, and of critics of social justice activists
* Is there an ethical difference between prison and corporal punishment?
* How to resolve 'infinitarian paralysis' - the inability to make decisions when infinities are involved.
* What’s effective altruism doing wrong?
* How should we think about jargon? Are a lot of people who don’t communicate clearly just scamming us?
* How can people be more successful within the cocoon of school and university?
* How did Amanda find doing a philosophy PhD, and how will she decide what to do now?

Links:
* Career review: Congressional staffer
* Randomised experiment on quitting
* Psychology replication quiz
* Should you focus on your comparative advantage.

Get this episode by subscribing: type 80,000 Hours into your podcasting app.

The 80,000 Hours podcast is produced by Keiran Harris.

Avsnitt(294)

#170 – Santosh Harish on how air pollution is responsible for ~12% of global deaths — and how to get that number down

#170 – Santosh Harish on how air pollution is responsible for ~12% of global deaths — and how to get that number down

"One [outrageous example of air pollution] is municipal waste burning that happens in many cities in the Global South. Basically, this is waste that gets collected from people's homes, and instead of being transported to a waste management facility or a landfill or something, gets burned at some point, because that's the fastest way to dispose of it — which really points to poor delivery of public services. But this is ubiquitous in virtually every small- or even medium-sized city. It happens in larger cities too, in this part of the world. "That's something that truly annoys me, because it feels like the kind of thing that ought to be fairly easily managed, but it happens a lot. It happens because people presumably don't think that it's particularly harmful. I don't think it saves a tonne of money for the municipal corporations and other local government that are meant to manage it. I find it particularly annoying simply because it happens so often; it's something that you're able to smell in so many different parts of these cities." — Santosh HarishIn today’s episode, host Rob Wiblin interviews Santosh Harish — leader of Open Philanthropy’s grantmaking in South Asian air quality — about the scale of the harm caused by air pollution.Links to learn more, summary, and full transcript.They cover:How bad air pollution is for our health and life expectancyThe different kinds of harm that particulate pollution causesThe strength of the evidence that it damages our brain function and reduces our productivityWhether it was a mistake to switch our attention to climate change and away from air pollutionWhether most listeners to this show should have an air purifier running in their house right nowWhere air pollution in India is worst and why, and whether it's going up or downWhere most air pollution comes fromThe policy blunders that led to many sources of air pollution in India being effectively unregulatedWhy indoor air pollution packs an enormous punchThe politics of air pollution in IndiaHow India ended up spending a lot of money on outdoor air purifiersThe challenges faced by foreign philanthropists in IndiaWhy Santosh has made the grants he has so farAnd plenty moreChapters:Cold open (00:00:00)Rob's intro (00:01:07)How bad is air pollution? (00:03:41)Quantifying the scale of the damage (00:15:47)Effects on cognitive performance and mood (00:24:19)How do we really know the harms are as big as is claimed? (00:27:05)Misconceptions about air pollution (00:36:56)Why don’t environmental advocacy groups focus on air pollution? (00:42:22)How listeners should approach air pollution in their own lives (00:46:58)How bad is air pollution in India in particular (00:54:23)The trend in India over the last few decades (01:12:33)Why aren’t people able to fix these problems? (01:24:17)Household waste burning (01:35:06)Vehicle emissions (01:42:10)The role that courts have played in air pollution regulation in India (01:50:09)Industrial emissions (01:57:10)The political economy of air pollution in northern India (02:02:14)Can philanthropists drive policy change? (02:13:42)Santosh’s grants (02:29:45)Examples of other countries that have managed to greatly reduce air pollution (02:45:44)Career advice for listeners in India (02:51:11)Producer and editor: Keiran HarrisAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellTechnical editing: Simon Monsour and Milo McGuireTranscriptions: Katy Moore

1 Nov 20232h 57min

#169 – Paul Niehaus on whether cash transfers cause economic growth, and keeping theft to acceptable levels

#169 – Paul Niehaus on whether cash transfers cause economic growth, and keeping theft to acceptable levels

"One of our earliest supporters and a dear friend of mine, Mark Lampert, once said to me, “The way I think about it is, imagine that this money were already in the hands of people living in poverty. If I could, would I want to tax it and then use it to finance other projects that I think would benefit them?” I think that's an interesting thought experiment -- and a good one -- to say, “Are there cases in which I think that's justifiable?” — Paul NiehausIn today’s episode, host Luisa Rodriguez interviews Paul Niehaus — co-founder of GiveDirectly — on the case for giving unconditional cash to the world's poorest households.Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.They cover:The empirical evidence on whether giving cash directly can drive meaningful economic growthHow the impacts of GiveDirectly compare to USAID employment programmesGiveDirectly vs GiveWell’s top-recommended charitiesHow long-term guaranteed income affects people's risk-taking and investmentsWhether recipients prefer getting lump sums or monthly instalmentsHow GiveDirectly tackles cases of fraud and theftThe case for universal basic income, and GiveDirectly’s UBI studies in Kenya, Malawi, and LiberiaThe political viability of UBIPlenty moreChapters:Cold open (00:00:00)Luisa’s intro (00:00:58)The basic case for giving cash directly to the poor (00:03:28)Comparing GiveDirectly to USAID programmes (00:15:42)GiveDirectly vs GiveWell’s top-recommended charities (00:35:16)Cash might be able to drive economic growth (00:41:59)Fraud and theft of GiveDirectly funds (01:09:48)Universal basic income studies (01:22:33)Skyjo (01:44:43)Producer and editor: Keiran HarrisAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellTechnical editing: Dominic Armstrong and Milo McGuireAdditional content editing: Luisa Rodriguez and Katy MooreTranscriptions: Katy Moore

26 Okt 20231h 47min

#168 – Ian Morris on whether deep history says we're heading for an intelligence explosion

#168 – Ian Morris on whether deep history says we're heading for an intelligence explosion

"If we carry on looking at these industrialised economies, not thinking about what it is they're actually doing and what the potential of this is, you can make an argument that, yes, rates of growth are slowing, the rate of innovation is slowing. But it isn't. What we're doing is creating wildly new technologies: basically producing what is nothing less than an evolutionary change in what it means to be a human being. But this has not yet spilled over into the kind of growth that we have accustomed ourselves to in the fossil-fuel industrial era. That is about to hit us in a big way." — Ian MorrisIn today’s episode, host Rob Wiblin speaks with repeat guest Ian Morris about what big-picture history says about the likely impact of machine intelligence. Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.They cover:Some crazy anomalies in the historical record of civilisational progressWhether we should think about technology from an evolutionary perspectiveWhether we ought to expect war to make a resurgence or continue dying outWhy we can't end up living like The JetsonsWhether stagnation or cyclical recurring futures seem very plausibleWhat it means that the rate of increase in the economy has been increasingWhether violence is likely between humans and powerful AI systemsThe most likely reasons for Rob and Ian to be really wrong about all of thisHow professional historians react to this sort of talkThe future of Ian’s workPlenty moreChapters:Cold open (00:00:00)Rob’s intro (00:01:27)Why we should expect the future to be wild (00:04:08)How historians have reacted to the idea of radically different futures (00:21:20)Why we won’t end up in The Jetsons (00:26:20)The rise of machine intelligence (00:31:28)AI from an evolutionary point of view (00:46:32)Is violence likely between humans and powerful AI systems? (00:59:53)Most troubling objections to this approach in Ian’s view (01:28:20)Confronting anomalies in the historical record (01:33:10)The cyclical view of history (01:56:11)Is stagnation plausible? (02:01:38)The limit on how long this growth trend can continue (02:20:57)The future of Ian’s work (02:37:17)Producer and editor: Keiran HarrisAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellTechnical editing: Milo McGuireTranscriptions: Katy Moore

23 Okt 20232h 43min

#167 – Seren Kell on the research gaps holding back alternative proteins from mass adoption

#167 – Seren Kell on the research gaps holding back alternative proteins from mass adoption

"There have been literally thousands of years of breeding and living with animals to optimise these kinds of problems. But because we're just so early on with alternative proteins and there's so much white space, it's actually just really exciting to know that we can keep on innovating and being far more efficient than this existing technology — which, fundamentally, is just quite inefficient. You're feeding animals a bunch of food to then extract a small fraction of their biomass to then eat that.Animal agriculture takes up 83% of farmland, but produces just 18% of food calories. So the current system just is so wasteful. And the limiting factor is that you're just growing a bunch of food to then feed a third of the world's crops directly to animals, where the vast majority of those calories going in are lost to animals existing." — Seren KellLinks to learn more, summary and full transcript.In today’s episode, host Luisa Rodriguez interviews Seren Kell — Senior Science and Technology Manager at the Good Food Institute Europe — about making alternative proteins as tasty, cheap, and convenient as traditional meat, dairy, and egg products.They cover:The basic case for alternative proteins, and why they’re so hard to makeWhy fermentation is a surprisingly promising technology for creating delicious alternative proteins The main scientific challenges that need to be solved to make fermentation even more usefulThe progress that’s been made on the cultivated meat front, and what it will take to make cultivated meat affordableHow GFI Europe is helping with some of these challengesHow people can use their careers to contribute to replacing factory farming with alternative proteinsThe best part of Seren’s jobPlenty moreChapters:Cold open (00:00:00)Luisa’s intro (00:01:08)The interview begins (00:02:22)Why alternative proteins? (00:02:36)What makes alternative proteins so hard to make? (00:11:30)Why fermentation is so exciting (00:24:23)The technical challenges involved in scaling fermentation (00:44:38)Progress in cultivated meat (01:06:04)GFI Europe’s work (01:32:47)Careers (01:45:10)The best part of Seren’s job (01:50:07)Producer and editor: Keiran HarrisAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellTechnical editing: Dominic Armstrong and Milo McGuireAdditional content editing: Luisa Rodriguez and Katy MooreTranscriptions: Katy Moore

18 Okt 20231h 54min

#166 – Tantum Collins on what he’s learned as an AI policy insider at the White House, DeepMind and elsewhere

#166 – Tantum Collins on what he’s learned as an AI policy insider at the White House, DeepMind and elsewhere

"If you and I and 100 other people were on the first ship that was going to go settle Mars, and were going to build a human civilisation, and we have to decide what that government looks like, and we have all of the technology available today, how do we think about choosing a subset of that design space? That space is huge and it includes absolutely awful things, and mixed-bag things, and maybe some things that almost everyone would agree are really wonderful, or at least an improvement on the way that things work today. But that raises all kinds of tricky questions. My concern is that if we don't approach the evolution of collective decision making and government in a deliberate way, we may end up inadvertently backing ourselves into a corner, where we have ended up on some slippery slope -- and all of a sudden we have, let's say, autocracies on the global stage are strengthened relative to democracies." — Tantum CollinsIn today’s episode, host Rob Wiblin gets the rare chance to interview someone with insider AI policy experience at the White House and DeepMind who’s willing to speak openly — Tantum Collins.Links to learn more, highlights, and full transcript.They cover:How AI could strengthen government capacity, and how that's a double-edged swordHow new technologies force us to confront tradeoffs in political philosophy that we were previously able to pretend weren't thereTo what extent policymakers take different threats from AI seriouslyWhether the US and China are in an AI arms race or notWhether it's OK to transform the world without much of the world agreeing to itThe tyranny of small differences in AI policyDisagreements between different schools of thought in AI policy, and proposals that could unite themHow the US AI Bill of Rights could be improvedWhether AI will transform the labour market, and whether it will become a partisan political issueThe tensions between the cultures of San Francisco and DC, and how to bridge the divide between themWhat listeners might be able to do to help with this whole messPanpsychismPlenty moreChapters:Cold open (00:00:00)Rob's intro (00:01:00)The interview begins (00:04:01)The risk of autocratic lock-in due to AI (00:10:02)The state of play in AI policymaking (00:13:40)China and AI (00:32:12)The most promising regulatory approaches (00:57:51)Transforming the world without the world agreeing (01:04:44)AI Bill of Rights (01:17:32)Who’s ultimately responsible for the consequences of AI? (01:20:39)Policy ideas that could appeal to many different groups (01:29:08)Tension between those focused on x-risk and those focused on AI ethics (01:38:56)Communicating with policymakers (01:54:22)Is AI going to transform the labour market in the next few years? (01:58:51)Is AI policy going to become a partisan political issue? (02:08:10)The value of political philosophy (02:10:53)Tantum’s work at DeepMind (02:21:20)CSET (02:32:48)Career advice (02:35:21)Panpsychism (02:55:24)Producer and editor: Keiran HarrisAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellTechnical editing: Simon Monsour and Milo McGuireTranscriptions: Katy Moore

12 Okt 20233h 8min

#165 – Anders Sandberg on war in space, whether civilisations age, and the best things possible in our universe

#165 – Anders Sandberg on war in space, whether civilisations age, and the best things possible in our universe

"Now, the really interesting question is: How much is there an attacker-versus-defender advantage in this kind of advanced future? Right now, if somebody's sitting on Mars and you're going to war against them, it's very hard to hit them. You don't have a weapon that can hit them very well. But in theory, if you fire a missile, after a few months, it's going to arrive and maybe hit them, but they have a few months to move away. Distance actually makes you safer: if you spread out in space, it's actually very hard to hit you. So it seems like you get a defence-dominant situation if you spread out sufficiently far. But if you're in Earth orbit, everything is close, and the lasers and missiles and the debris are a terrible danger, and everything is moving very fast. So my general conclusion has been that war looks unlikely on some size scales but not on others." — Anders SandbergIn today’s episode, host Rob Wiblin speaks with repeat guest and audience favourite Anders Sandberg about the most impressive things that could be achieved in our universe given the laws of physics.Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.They cover:The epic new book Anders is working on, and whether he’ll ever finish itWhether there's a best possible world or we can just keep improving foreverWhat wars might look like if the galaxy is mostly settledThe impediments to AI or humans making it to other starsHow the universe will end a million trillion years in the futureWhether it’s useful to wonder about whether we’re living in a simulationThe grabby aliens theoryWhether civilizations get more likely to fail the older they getThe best way to generate energy that could ever existBlack hole bombsWhether superintelligence is necessary to get a lot of valueThe likelihood that life from elsewhere has already visited EarthAnd plenty more.Producer and editor: Keiran HarrisAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellTechnical editing: Simon Monsour and Milo McGuireTranscriptions: Katy Moore

6 Okt 20232h 48min

#164 – Kevin Esvelt on cults that want to kill everyone, stealth vs wildfire pandemics, and how he felt inventing gene drives

#164 – Kevin Esvelt on cults that want to kill everyone, stealth vs wildfire pandemics, and how he felt inventing gene drives

"Imagine a fast-spreading respiratory HIV. It sweeps around the world. Almost nobody has symptoms. Nobody notices until years later, when the first people who are infected begin to succumb. They might die, something else debilitating might happen to them, but by that point, just about everyone on the planet would have been infected already. And then it would be a race. Can we come up with some way of defusing the thing? Can we come up with the equivalent of HIV antiretrovirals before it's too late?" — Kevin EsveltIn today’s episode, host Luisa Rodriguez interviews Kevin Esvelt — a biologist at the MIT Media Lab and the inventor of CRISPR-based gene drive — about the threat posed by engineered bioweapons.Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.They cover:Why it makes sense to focus on deliberately released pandemicsCase studies of people who actually wanted to kill billions of humansHow many people have the technical ability to produce dangerous virusesThe different threats of stealth and wildfire pandemics that could crash civilisationThe potential for AI models to increase access to dangerous pathogensWhy scientists try to identify new pandemic-capable pathogens, and the case against that researchTechnological solutions, including UV lights and advanced PPEUsing CRISPR-based gene drive to fight diseases and reduce animal sufferingAnd plenty more.Producer and editor: Keiran HarrisAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellTechnical editing: Simon MonsourAdditional content editing: Katy Moore and Luisa RodriguezTranscriptions: Katy Moore

2 Okt 20233h 3min

Great power conflict (Article)

Great power conflict (Article)

Today’s release is a reading of our Great power conflict problem profile, written and narrated by Stephen Clare.If you want to check out the links, footnotes and figures in today’s article, you can find those here.And if you like this article, you might enjoy a couple of related episodes of this podcast:#128 – Chris Blattman on the five reasons wars happen#140 – Bear Braumoeller on the case that war isn’t in declineAudio mastering and editing for this episode: Dominic ArmstrongAudio Engineering Lead: Ben CordellProducer: Keiran Harris

22 Sep 20231h 19min

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