I am not a card carrying member of EA. I am not particularly A, much less E in that context. However the past few months have been exhausting in seeing not just the community, one I like, in turmoil repeatedly, while clearly fumbling basic aspects of how they're seen in the wider world. I like having EA in the world, I think it does a lot of good. And I think you guys are literally throwing it away based on aesthetics of misguided epistemic virtue signaling. But it's late, and I read more than a few articles, and this post is me begging you to please just stop.
The specific push here is of course the Bostrom incident, when he clearly and highly legibly wrote black people have lower intelligence than other races. And his apology, was, to put it mildly, mealy mouthed and without much substance. If anything, in the intervening 25 years since the offending email, all he seems to have learnt to do is forget the one thing he said he wanted to do - to speak plainly.
I'm not here to litigate race science. There's plenty of well reviewed science in the field that demonstrates that, varyingly, there are issues with measurements of both race and intelligence, much less how they evolve over time, catch up speeds, and a truly dizzying array of confounders. I can easily imagine if you're young and not particularly interested in this space you'd have a variety of views, what is silly is seeing someone who is so clearly in a position of authority, with a reputation for careful consideration and truth seeking, maintaining this kind of view.
And not only is this just wrong, it's counterproductive.
If EA wants to work on the most important problems in the world and make progress on them, it would be useful to have the world look upon you with trust. For anything more than turning money into malaria nets, you need people to trust you. And that includes trusting your intentions and your character.
If you believe there are racial differences in intelligence, and your work forces you to work on the hard problems of resource allocation or longtermist societal evolution, nobody will trust you to do the right tradeoffs. History is filled with optimisation experiments gone horribly wrong when these beliefs existed at the bottom. The base rate of horrible outcomes is uncomfortably large.
This is human values misalignment. Unless you have overwhelming evidence (or any real evidence), this is just a dumb prior to hold and publicise if you're working on actively changing people's lives. I don't care what you think about ethics about sentient digital life in the future if you can't figure this out today.
Again, all of which individually is fine. I'm an advocate of people holding crazy opinions should they want to. But when like a third of the community seems to support him, and the defenses require contortions that agree, dismiss and generally be whiny about drama, that's ridiculous. While I appreciate posts like this, which speak about the importance of epistemic integrity, it seems to miss the fact that applauding someone for not lying is great but not if the belief they're holding is bad. And even if this blows over, it will remain a drag on EA unless it's addressed unequivocally.
Or this type of comment which uses a lot of words but effectively seems to support the same thought. That no, our job is to differentiate QALYs and therefore differences are part of life.

But guess what, epistemic integrity on something like this (I believe something pretty reprehensible and am not cowing to people telling me so) isn't going to help with shrimp welfare or AI risk prevention. Or even malaria net provision. Do not mistake "sticking with your beliefs" to be an overriding good, above believing what's true, or acting kindly towards the world, or acting like serious members of a civilisation where we all need to work together. EA writes regularly about burnout from the sheer sense of feeling burdened with a duty to do good - guess what, here's a good chance.
In fact, if you can't see why sticking with the theory that "race X is inferior in Y" and "we unequivocally are in favour of QALY differentiation" together constitute a clear and dangerous problem, I don't know what to say. If you want to be a successful organisation that does good in the world, you have to stop confusing sophomoric philosophical arguments with actual lived concerns in the real world.
You can't sweep this under the rug as "drama of the day". I'm sorry, but if you want to be anything more than yet another NGO who take themselves a tad too seriously, this is actively harmful.
This isn't a PR problem, it's an actual problem. If one of the most influential philosophers and leaders of your movement is saying these things that are just wrong, it hurts credibility for any other sort of framework you might create. Not to mention the actual flesh and blood people who live in the year 2023.
It's one thing to play with esoteric thought experiments about the wellbeing of people in the year 20000. It's quite another to live in the year 2023. Everyone is free to analyse and experiment to explore any question they so choose, including this. However this is not that. It is starting from professing a belief, and saying you are okay doing so because there isn't any contrary evidence. That's not how science works, and that's not how a public facing organisation should work.
If he'd said, for instance, "hey I was an idiot for thinking and saying that. We still have IQ gaps between races, which doesn't make sense. It's closing, but not fast enough. We should work harder on fixing this." That would be more sensible. Same for the community itself disavowing the explicit racism.
By the way, it's insane that the Forum seems to hide this whole thread as if it is a minor annoyance instead of a death knell. The SBF issue I can understand, you were fooled like everyone else and its a black eye for the organisation, but this isn't that. And the level of condemnation that brought was a good way to react. This is much more serious.

I should say, I don't have a particular agenda here. This stream of consciousness is already quite long. A little annoyed perhaps that this is flooding the timeline and the responses from folks whom I'd considered thoughtful are tending towards debating weird theoretical corner cases, doing mental jiu-jitsu just to keep holding that faith a little longer. But mostly it's just frustration bubbling out as cope.
I just wish y'all could regain the moral high ground here. There are important causes that could use the energy. It's not even that hard.
Okay, first of all, you, like other people complaining about the apology, haven't actually said what it is you object to. So let's see...
Is it that part you don't like?
Is it that part you don't like?
Is it that part you don't like?
Is it that part you don't like?
And so on. You get the idea. Edit: you said it was "to put it mildly, mealy mouthed" which Bing tells me is "avoiding the use of direct and plain language". So what leads you to think Bostrom avoided plain language "to put it mildly"? You also say it was "without much substance". So, how would you have said it in such a way that it does have substance and plain language, if you were Nick? I suspect that there is nothing he could have reasonably said to pacify you, but if in fact there was an apology that would have suited you, you can prove it by writing it. (Edit 3: I apologize for not having noticed that the post suggested that Bostrom should have said "hey I was an idiot for thinking and saying that. We still have IQ gaps between races, which doesn't make sense. It's closing, but not fast enough. We should work harder on fixing this." But why is this statement better than what Bostrom said? Is it because this new version vaguely suggests that it is not possible for IQ differences to be genetic? But of course, Bostrom decided he could not make that judgement without expertise or data. It is this humility that bothers you? Do you believe it's not "real" humility? Also, do you not see how confusing it is that you imply it's okay to acknowledge an IQ gap after making it clear that it's unacceptable to do that?)
I can't imagine what reasoning process you are using here. If I do a survey and ask people whether people in poverty could possibly grow up with a lower IQ than people in wealth, what result do you think it will have? Do you really think environment and upbringing can't affect intelligence?
And now, what if the poor people happen to have a different skin color?
Do you not admit, then, ________? (not even going to ask because the question itself angers people)
I think the main issues with Bostrom's original posting (the one he apologized for) were (1) that he said something extremely easy to misinterpret, (2) said a word he shouldn't say and (3) didn't qualify his words.
But did he even so much as say, 26 years ago, that there are genetic differences in IQ? No, he didn't.
Not only did he not "stick with that". He didn't even say it in the first place.
And I saw at least one person on Twitter saying ze was disappointed with EAs (especially leadership) for how they're roasting Bostrom for this, and that it makes zim want to affiliate less with EA in the future.
There's only so much SJWing people can take.
Edit 2: and by the way, have you noticed that the above is full of questions? Immediately after I posted this, I got two strong downvotes or high-karma downvotes as well as disagreement votes. But an hour later, my questions have not been answered. I literally don't know why people do this, but in my opinion it is mean-spirited to downvote as one's sole response, just as I think OP is mean-spirited toward Bostrom. Okay, so you think I'm wrong, fine. Reasonable people can disagree. But tell me why.
That's a fair point. But Rohit's complaint goes way beyond the statement being harmful or badly constructed. Ze is beating around the bush of a much stronger and unsubstantiated claim that is left unstated for some reason: "Bostrom was and is a racist who thinks that race directly affects intelligence level (and also, his epistemics are shit)".
What ze does say: "his apology, was, to put it mildly, mealy mouthed and without much substance" "I'm not here to litigate race science.;" "someone who is so clearly in a position of authority...maintaining this kind... (read more)