There has lately been conflict between different EAs over the relative priority of something like "truth-seeking" and something like "influence-seeking".
This has mostly been discussed in connection with controversy over Manifest's guest list, in the comments to these two posts. Here I'd like for us to discuss the question in general, and for it to be a better discussion than we sometimes have. To try a format that might help, I'll give us a selection of highly upvoted comments from those posts, and a set of prompts for discussion.
Highly upvoted comments about conflicts between truth-seeking and influencing:
From My experience at the controversial Manifest 2024:
Anna Salamon: 44 karma, 20 agree, 6 disagree.
“I want to be in a movement or community where people hold their heads up, say what they think is true, speak and listen freely, and bother to act on principles worth defending / to attend to aspects of reputation they actually care about, but not to worry about PR as such.”
huw: 102 karma, 41 agree, 16 disagree.
“EA needs to recognise that even associating with scientific racists and eugenicists turns away many of the kinds of bright, kind, ambitious people the movement needs. I am exhausted at having to tell people I am an EA ‘but not one of those ones’.”
David Mathers: 33 karma, 16 agree, 12 disagree
“I don't think we should play down what we believe to be popular, but I do think we should reject/eject people for believing stuff that is both wrong and bigoted and reputationally toxic.”
ThomasAquinus: 26 karma, 9 agree, 10 disagree
“The wisest among us know to reserve judgment [sic] and engage intellectually even with ideas we don't believe in. Have some humility -- you might not be right about everything! I think EA is getting worse precisely because it is more normie and not accepting of true intellectual diversity.”
In Why so many “racists” at Manifest?
Richard Ngo 116 karma, 42 upvotes, 22 downvotes
“I've also updated over the last few years that having a truth-seeking community is more important than I previously thought - basically because the power dynamics around AI will become very complicated and messy, in a way that requires more skill to navigate successfully than the EA community has. Therefore our comparative advantage will need to be truth-seeking.”
Peter Wildeford 32 karma, 21 upvotes, 10 downvotes
“Platforming racist / sexist / antisemetic / transphobic / etc. views -- what you call "bad" or "kooky" with scare quotes -- doesn't do anything to help other out-there ideas, like RCTs. It does the exact opposite! It associates good ideas with terrible ones.”
And this from and older post, [Linkpost] An update from Good Ventures :
Dustin Moskovitz 52 Karma, 15 upvotes, 2 downvotes
“ Over time, it seemed to become a kind of purity test to me, inviting the most fringe of opinion holders into the fold so long as they had at least one true+contrarian view; I am not pure enough to follow where you want to go, and prefer to focus on the true+contrarian views that I believe are most important.”
Likewise in the polls I ran, whether you trust that or not (112 respondents) (results here):
How this discussion should go:
The aim is to focus this discussion on the interaction between some notion of "truth- seeking" and some notion of "influence-seeking" and avoid many other things. That way we can have a narrow, more-productive discussion.
I have put some discussion prompts but you can use your own.
Please lets avoid points that are centrally about whether Manifest invited bad guests, Richard Hanania or other conflicts between EAs and rationalists. Though these can be used as examples.
It might be what you say for some people, but that doesn't ring true for my case (at all). (But also, compared to all the people who complained about stuff at Manifest or voiced negative opinions from the sidelines as forum users, I'm pretty sure I'm in the 33% that felt the least strongly and had fewer items to pick at.)
I don't like this framing/way of thinking about it.
For one thing, I'm not sure if I want to concede the point that it is the "maximally truth-seeking" thing to risk that a community evaporatively cools itself along the lines we're discussing.
Secondly, I think the issues around Manifest I objected to weren't directly about "what topics are people allowed to talk about?."
If some person with a history of considerateness and thoughtfulness wanted to do a presentation on HBD at Manifest, or (to give an absurd example) if Sam Harris (who I think is better than average at handling delicate conversations like that) wanted to interview Douglas Murray again in the context of Manifest, I'd be like "ehh, not sure that's a good idea, but okay..." And maybe also "Well, if you're going to do this, at least think very carefully about how to communicate about why you're talking about this/what the goal of the session is." (It makes a big difference whether the framing of the session is "We know this isn't a topic most people are interested in, but we've had some people who are worried that if we cannot discuss every topic there is, we might lose what's valuable about this community, so this year, we decided to host a session on this; we took steps x, y, and z to make sure this won't become a recruiting ground for racists;" or whether the framing is "this is just like every other session.") [But maybe this example is beside the point, I'm not actually sure whether the objectionable issue was sessions on HBD/intelligence differences among groups, or whether it was more just people talking about it during group conversations.]
By contrast, if people with a history of racism or with close ties to racists attend the conference and it's them who want to talk about HBD, I'm against it. Not directly because of what's being discussed, but because of how and by whom. (But again, it's not my call to make and I'm just stating what I would do/what I think would lead to better outcomes.)
(I also thought people who aren't gay using the word "fag" sounded pretty problematic. Of course, this stuff can be moderated case-by-case and maybe a warning makes more sense than an immediate ban. Also, in fairness, it seems like the conference organizers would've agreed with that and they simply didn't hear the alleged incident when it allegedly happened.)