The institute is called Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies and is based in Heidelberg, Germany. They started in 2021 and initially received 9 million € of funding from the German government for the first four years.
AFAICT, they study sociological aspects of narratives of apocalypses, existential risks, and the end of the world.
They have engaged with EA thinking, and I assume they will have an interesting outside perspective of some prevalent worldviews in EA. For example, here is a recorded talk about longtermism (I have only skipped through it so far), which mentions MIRI, FHI, and What We Owe The Future.
I stumbled upon this today and thought it could interest some people here. Generally, I am very curious to learn more about alternative worldviews to EA that also engage with existential risk in epistemically sound ways. One criticism of EA that became more popular over the last months is that EA organizations engage too little with other disciplines and institutions with relevant expertise. Therefore, I suggest checking out the work of this Centre.
Please comment if you have engaged with them before and know more than I do.
yeah whatever you want to call the academic and cultural memeplexes that are obsessed with demographic identities, I do think "when literally everyone dies in our threatmodels, the nonwhitemales die too" is kinda all you need to say. Based on my simulation of those memeplexes (which I sorta bought into when I first started reading the sequences, so I have a minor inside view), we can probably expect the retort to be "are you introspective enough to be sure you're not doing motivated reasoning about those threatmodels, rather than these other threatmodels over here?" at best, but my more honest money is on something more condescending than that. And to be clear, there's a difference between constant vigilance about "maybe I rolled a nat 1 on introspection this morning" (good) and falsely implying that someone accusing you of not being introspective enough is your peer when they're not (bad).
I think I'd like to highlight an outsider (i.e. someone who isn't working on extinction-level threatmodels) who seems to be doing actually useful labor of reframing for folks of extinction-level threatmodels: I just read the prologue to David Chapman's new book, and I'm optimistic about it being good. I made a claim sorta related to his prologue in a lightning talk at the MA4 unconference just the other day: I claimed that "AI ethics" and "AI alignment" can unite on pessimism, and furthermore that there's a massive umbrella sense of "everyone who redteams software" that I think could be a productive way of figuring out who to include and exclude. I.e. I do think that research communities should have some fairly basic low-bandwidth channels open between everyone who redteams software and high-bandwidth channels open between everyone who shares their particular threatmodels, and only really excluding optimists who think everything's fine.
I have an off topic thing to continue on saying that I'll put in a reply to this comment.