A motivating scenario could be: imagine you are trying to provide examples to help convince a skeptical friend that it is in fact possible to positively change the long-run future by actively seeking and pursuing opportunities to reduce existential risk.
Examples of things that are kind of close but miss the mark
- There are probably decent historical examples where people reduced existential risk but where thoes people didn't really have longtermist-EA-type motivations (maybe more "generally wanting to do good" plus "in the right place at the right time")
- There are probably meta-level things that longtermist EA community members can take credit for (e.g. "get lots of people to think seriously about reducing x risk"), but these aren't very object-level or concrete
Can you say more about which longtermist efforts you're referring to?
I think a case can be made, but I don't think it's an easy (or clear) case.
My current impression is that Yudkowsky & Bostrom's writings about AGI inspired the creation of OpenAI/DeepMind. And I believe FTX invested a lot in Anthropic and OP invested a little bit (in relative terms) into OpenAI. Since then, there have been capabilities advances and safety advances made by EAs, and I don't think it's particularly clear which outweighs.
It seems unclear to me what the sign of these effects are. Like, maybe no one thinks about AGI for decades. Or maybe 3-5 years after Yudkowsky starts thinking about AGI, someone else much less safety-concerned starts thinking about AGI, and we get a world with AGI labs that are much less concerned about safety than status-quo.
I'm not advocating for this position, but I'm using it to illustrate how the case seems far-from-easy.