It is helpful to distinguish between each set of ideas in theory and in practice. I don’t think EA and socialism claim a lot of common territory; the former is a set of individualist ideas on how wealthy people should donate their money, while the latter operates much more in the political and economic spheres. While I wouldn’t encourage someone to try and come up with a totalising socialist theory of EA as you’ve tried, I also wouldn’t discourage EAs from being curious about socialist and anti-capitalist ideas.
EA is increasingly moving toward policy and advocacy, but I don’t regularly see conflicts here. In fact, a lot of global health policy feels very internationalist in a way that socialists would encourage; and animal welfare and GCRs are both essentially identifying the failures of market-based systems to account for large negative externalities, and using statist or social means to oppose that economic power.
The remaining fundamental difference, for now, is the wealthy donors on the EA side, which seems to have large downstream effects on the ways EAs tend to think about and approach problems (“the master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house” etc.). But I think it would be possible for most of EA to be funded by governments raising higher taxes, or by a larger number of smaller, distributed donations; where this happens in EA today, I see those organisations start to think more optimistically about state and social power.
(Also, the comments on your post are unusually good, and I’d encourage people to go read more there. There’s a good reply from @Bob Jacobs, who has some good critiques of EA-in-practice that I agree with)
At risk of further psychoanalyzing the author, it seems like they're naturally more convinced by forms of evidence that EAs use, and had just not encountered them until this project. Many people find different arguments more compelling, either because they genuinely have moral or empirical assumptions incompatible with EA, or because they're innumerate. So I don't think EA has won some kind of objective contest of ideas here.
Nevertheless this was an interesting read and the author seems very thoughtful.
Yes, nothing in this post seems less likely than an EA trying to convince socialists to become EAs and subsequently being convinced of socialism.
Yeah, because I believe in EA and not in the socialist revolution, I must believe that EA could win some objective contest of ideas over socialism. In the particular contest of EA -> socialist vs socialist -> EA conversions I do think EA would win since it's had a higher growth rate in the period both existed, though someone would have to check how many EA deconverts from the FTX scandal became socialists. This would be from both signal and noise factors; here's my wild guess at the most important factors:
But I think someone would actually need to do that experiment or at least gather the data
even that's overselling it, if an EA got convinced of socialism they'd just continue being EAs while also having a different theory of political organization from whatever they had before, because neither of these ideologies involve commitments that preclude the other.
This was my thoughts on it as well, along with some more general pondering of the extent to which methodological bias (on the level of selecting methods with built-in directional bias) affects our ability to understand the truth, even when we try very hard.