Abstract from the paper
Longtermists claim that what we ought to do is mainly determined by how our actions might affect the very long-run future. A natural objection to longtermism is that these effects may be nearly impossible to predict— perhaps so close to impossible that, despite the astronomical importance of the far future, the expected value of our present options is mainly determined by short-term considerations. This paper aims to precisify and evaluate (a version of) this epistemic objection to longtermism. To that end, I develop two simple models for comparing “longtermist” and “short-termist” interventions, incorporating the idea that, as we look further into the future, the effects of any present intervention become progressively harder to predict. These models yield mixed conclusions: If we simply aim to maximize expected value, and don’t mind premising our choices on minuscule probabilities of astronomical payoffs, the case for longtermism looks robust. But on some prima facie plausible empirical worldviews, the expectational superiority of longtermist interventions depends heavily on these “Pascalian” probabilities. So the case for longtermism may depend either on plausible but non-obvious empirical claims or on a tolerance for Pascalian fanaticism.
Why I'm making this linkpost
- I want to draw a bit more attention to this great paper
- I think this is one of the best sources for people interested in arguments for and against longtermism
- For people who are interested in learning about longtermism and are open to reading (sometimes somewhat technical) philosophy papers, I think the main two things I'd recommend they read are The Case for Strong Longtermism and this paper
- Other leading contenders are The Precipice, Existential Risk Prevention as Global Priority, and some of the posts tagged Longtermism
- For people who are interested in learning about longtermism and are open to reading (sometimes somewhat technical) philosophy papers, I think the main two things I'd recommend they read are The Case for Strong Longtermism and this paper
- I think this is one of the best sources for people interested in arguments for and against longtermism
- I want to make it possible to tag the post so that people see it later when it's relevant to what they're looking for via tags (e.g., I'd want people who check out the Longtermism tag to see a pointer to this paper to come up prominently)
- I want to make it easier for people to get a quick sense of whether it's worth their time to engage with this paper, given their goals (because people can check this post's karma, comments, and/or tags)
- I want to give people a space to discuss the paper in a way that other people can see and build on
- I'll share a bunch of my own comments below
- (I'll try to start each one with a tl;dr for that comment)
- I'll share a bunch of my own comments below
tl;dr: Tarsney slightly misrepresents an existential risk estimate.
Tarsney writes:
But what Rees actually writes is:
(Here's one online source quoting Rees. I've seen the same quote elsewhere too.)
Whether "our present civilisation on Earth" survives is very different from whether humanity survives. I haven't read Rees' book, so I don't know what he intended that quote to mean, but I'd guess he'd include things like a major population collapse that lasts a few decades as "our present civilisation on Earth not surviving". Arguably, his forecast could even be seen as capturing the chance that we just very substantially change our political, cultural, and economic systems, in the same way as how Europe in the 1900s was arguably a "different civilisation" to Europe in the year 100CE.
Also, Rees doesn't give a 0.5 probability; he gives a probability no better than 0.5.
Also, Tarsney writes:
I think it'd be better to direct people to the appendix of Beard et al. (2020), since that's more comprehensive and up-to-date. (I also really like the article itself.)
Perhaps unsurprisingly, I also think it'd be even better-er to direct people to my database, since that's even more comprehensive and up-to-date (and people can and do make suggestions to it, which I process, such that it should presumably remain the most comprehensive resource, rather than being ... (read more)