We are discussing the debate statement: "On the margin[1], it is better to work on reducing the chance of our[2] extinction than increasing the value of futures where we survive[3]". You can find more information in this post.
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‘on the margin’ = think about where we would get the most value out of directing the next indifferent talented person, or indifferent funder.
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‘our’ and 'we' = earth-originating intelligent life (i.e. we aren’t just talking about humans because most of the value in expected futures is probably in worlds where digital minds matter morally and are flourishing)
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Through means other than extinction risk reduction.
Edit: I misinterpreted the prompt initially (I think you did too); "value of futures where we survive" is meant specifically as "long-run futures, past transformative AI", not just all future including the short term. So digital minds, suffering risk, etc. Pretty confusing!
This argument seems pretty representative here; so I'll just note that it is only sensible under two assumptions:Transformative AI isn't coming soon - say, not within ~20 years.&If we are assuming a substantial amount of short-term value is in in-direct preparation for TAI, this excludes many interventions which primarily have immediate returns, with possible long-term returns accruing past the time window. So malaria nets? No. Most animal welfare interventions? No. YIMBYism in Silicon Valley? Maybe yes. High skilled immigration? Maybe yes. Political campaigns? Yes.Of course, we could just say either that we actually aren't all that confident about TAI, or that we are, but immediate welfare concerns simply outweigh marginal preparation or risk reduction.So either reject something above; or simply go all in on principle toward portfolio diversification. But both give me some pause.