I asked if EA has a rational debate methodology in writing that people sometimes use. The answer seems to be “no”.
I asked if EA has any alternative to rationally resolve disagreements. The answer seems to be “no”.
If the correct answer to either question is actually “yes”, please let me know by responding to that question.
My questions were intended to form a complete pair. Do you use X for rationality, and if not do you use anything other than X?
Does EA have some other way of being rational which wasn’t covered by either question? Or is something else going on?
My understanding is that rationality is crucial to EA’s mission (of basically applying rationality, math, evidence, etc., to charity – which sounds great to me) so I think the issue I’m raising is important and relevant.
No offense, but I'm surprised, because your phrasing doesn't parse for me, since it's not clear to me what it would mean for EA as a movement to be "rational", and most use of "rational" in the way you're using it here reflects a pattern shared among folks with only passing familiarity with Less Wrong.
For example, you ask about "rational debate" and "rationally resolv[ing] disagreements", but the point of the post I linked is sort of that this doesn't make sense to ask for. People might debate using rational arguments, but it would be weird to call that rational debate since the debate itself is not the thing that is rational or not, but rather the thing that could be rational is the thought processes of the debaters.
Maybe this odd phrasing is why you got few responses, since it reads like a signal that you've failed to grasp a fundamental point of Less Wrong style rationality: that rationality is a method applied by agents, not an essential property something can have or not.