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.
I was responding mainly to the format. I don’t expect you to get complete answers to your earlier two questions because there’s a lot more rationality methodology in EA than can be expressed in the amount of time I expect someone to spend on an answer
If I had to put my finger on why I don’t feel like the failure to answer those questions is as concerning to me as it seems to be for you I’d say because.
A) Just because it’s hard to answer doesn’t mean EAs aren’t holding themselves and each other to a high epistemic standard
B) Something about perfect not being the enemy of good and about urgency of other work. I want humanity to have some good universal epistemic tools but currently I don’t have them and I don’t really have the option to wait to do good until I have them. So I’ll just focus on the best thing my flawed brain sees to work on at the moment (using what fuzzy technical tools it has but still being subject to bias) because I don’t have any other machinery to use
I could be wrong but my read from your comments on other answers is that we disagree most on B). E.g you think current EA work would be better directed if we were able to have a lot more formally rational discussions. To the point that EA work or priorities should be put on hold (or slowed down) until we can do this.