"American UBI: for and against"
"A brief history of Rosicrucianism & the Invisible College"
"Were almost all the signers of the Declaration of Independence high-degree Freemasons?"
"Have malaria case rates gone down in areas where AMF did big bednet distributions?"
"What is the relationship between economic development and mental health? Is there a margin at which further development decreases mental health?"
"Literature review: Dunbar's number"
"Why is Rwanda outperforming other African nations?"
"The longtermist case for animal welfare"
"Philosopher-Kings: why wise governance is important for the longterm future"
"Case studies: when has democracy outperform technocracy? (and vice versa)"
"Examining the tradeoff between coordination and coercion"
"Spiritual practice as an EA cause area"
"Tools for thought as an EA cause area"
"Is strong, ubiquitous encryption a net positive?"
"How important are coral reefs to ocean health? How can they be protected?"
"What role does the Amazon rainforest play in regulating the North American biosphere?"
"What can the US do to protect the Amazon from Bolsonaro?"
"Can the Singaporean governance model scale?"
"Is EA complacent?"
"Flow-through effects of widespread addiction"
A post about when we should and should not use "lives saved" language in describing EA work.
I find that telling people they can save a life for $5000 often leads to a lot of confusion: Whose life is being saved? What if they die of something else a few months later?Explaining QALYs isn't too hard if you have a couple of minutes, but you often have a lot less time than that.
Is there some shorthand we can use for "giving 50 healthy years, in expectation, across a population" that makes it sound anywhere nearly as good as simply "saving a life"? How important is it to be accurate in this dimension, vs. simply allowing people to conflate QALY/VSL with "saving a specific person"?