Epistemic status: 0%
Much ink has been spilled on this forum investigating what we should do about the world's most pressing problems. However, I've recently come to the realization that doing nothing may be even more promising than the most cost-effective EA interventions!
Below is a shallow writeup of the top reasons why you should stop doing things.
- The Singularity is Near. Soon AI will do all the things, so why bother?
- The Unilateralist's Curse. It was foretold that if you do things unilaterally, you will be cursed.
- Cluelessness. EA thought leaders are still clueless about what to do despite years of research!
- Markets are efficient. The thing you would have done is already priced in.
- Doing things is not your comparative advantage. Someone else would do it better.
- Lack of evidence. Despite years of people doing things, there is still a striking paucity of high-quality RCTs comparing Doing Something with the alternative.
- Worldview diversification. Maximizing impact requires that we commit meaningful resources to a variety of approaches. Zero EA charities do nothing, despite many arguments in favor of it. Doing nothing is neglected within EA.
- The universe is infinite. Nick Bostrom has proven that this undermines utilitarianism, which means everything you do is pointless.
- Eliezer Yudkowsky has disproven free will. This means you actually can't do things, even if you wanted to.
- Doing things causes inequality. If you do something and other people do NOT do that thing, this causes inequality in things-being-done. Inequality is bad. The best distribution is the one where we all equally do nothing.
Announcing Doing Nothing Better
My new nonprofit, Doing Nothing Better, will include both a think tank and a career advisory focused on discouraging agency and problem-solving in promising students and young professionals.
Not convinced this is a promising route to impact? Worried that it could do active harm? Don't worry! We won't actually do anything. :)
As someone who sometimes hesitates way too much, this is unironically helpful x)