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Executive summary: This personal reflection recounts the first international research symposium on cluster headache—a condition many patients and researchers describe as more painful than any other—arguing that governments' failure to ensure access to effective treatments constitutes a moral catastrophe akin to condoning torture.

Key points:

  1. Cluster headaches are described as the most painful human condition, with patient testimonials and surveys consistently ranking them as more excruciating than childbirth, kidney stones, or gunshot wounds.
  2. Despite affecting an estimated 3 million people globally, cluster headache remains under-researched and poorly treated, even in wealthy countries, where patients often lack access to basic therapies like high-flow oxygen or triptans.
  3. Psychedelics like psilocybin and DMT appear highly effective for many patients, with some evidence suggesting they outperform standard treatments; however, legal and ideological barriers severely limit access and research.
  4. Several talks at the symposium called for greater recognition of cluster headache's severity, including a proposal to assign it a high disability weight in the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) framework and integrate it as a distinct category.
  5. Suicidality and mental health issues are alarmingly prevalent among patients, with over 50% reporting suicidal ideation in a Swedish study—emphasizing the need for urgent systemic change.
  6. The author calls for advocacy and systemic reform, likening current inaction to the historical neglect of anesthesia and urging readers to support efforts that promote treatment access and challenge outdated drug policies.

 

 

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Executive summary: This speculative post explores whether primitive sentient organisms can experience extremely intense pain by disentangling two independent dimensions of affective experience—intensity range and resolution—proposing an evolutionary framework with four possible trajectories and highlighting the ethical importance of determining which organisms might suffer at morally concerning levels.

Key points:

  1. Main question reframed: Instead of asking whether primitive animals feel pain, the post asks whether they can experience extremely intense pain or finely discriminate between pain intensities—or both—framing this as an evolutionary optimization problem in affective signaling.
  2. Two dimensions of pain systems: The authors define intensity range (how extreme pain can be) and resolution (how finely an organism distinguishes between intensities) as independent variables, each incurring different neurobiological costs and subject to distinct evolutionary pressures.
  3. Four evolutionary scenarios: They propose four hypothetical affective configurations—Low-Intensity/Low-Resolution (LiLr), High-Intensity/Low-Resolution (HiLr), Low-Intensity/High-Resolution (LiHr), and High-Intensity/High-Resolution (HiHr)—each with different implications for the subjective experiences of early sentient organisms.
  4. Welfare implications: If early sentient organisms evolved along a high-intensity trajectory (HiLr or HiHr), they may be capable of suffering at levels comparable to humans, which would significantly expand our moral obligations to include many more species (e.g., insects, crustaceans).
  5. Empirical directions: The authors suggest two research paths—behavioral complexity analysis and neuroenergetic assessment—to estimate the resolution and intensity of pain systems in primitive organisms, while acknowledging current uncertainty and the need for further data.
  6. Interim stance: While the framework allows for the possibility that primitive organisms feel excruciating pain, the authors treat this as a temporary assumption pending better evidence, emphasizing the need for cautious interpretation in practical applications like animal welfare policy.

 

 

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Executive summary: This exploratory essay argues that Christian ethics and effective altruism are fundamentally aligned, asserting that scripture strongly supports the core tenets of giving generously, effectively, and globally—suggesting that Christians have a moral and religious duty to adopt effective altruist principles.

Key points:

  1. Core alignment: The author contends that there is no principled conflict between Christianity and effective altruism; the disconnect is sociological rather than ideological or theological.
  2. Scriptural basis for generosity: Numerous Bible passages emphasize giving generously to the poor—both as a moral ideal and a religious duty—mirroring EA's call to give significantly (e.g. 10% or more of income).
  3. Biblical support for effectiveness: The call to love one’s neighbor as oneself and act prudently supports the EA emphasis on using evidence to determine how to help others most effectively.
  4. Moral obligation to help foreigners: Through examples like the Parable of the Good Samaritan and Old Testament laws about foreigners, the author argues that Christian ethics support prioritizing global giving, as EA recommends.
  5. Golden Rule implications: Applying the Golden Rule universally—treating others' needs with the same weight as one's own—leads naturally to effective and impartial giving, including to distant strangers.
  6. Call to action for Christians: The author concludes that devout Christians ought to become effective altruists, and that the perception of discord between the groups is misleading and unfortunate.

 

 

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Executive summary: This investigative post reveals that OpenAI’s recent letter to California’s Attorney General defends a restructuring plan that appears to weaken nonprofit oversight in favor of investor-friendly governance, despite public claims to the contrary—raising serious concerns about the erosion of the company’s founding mission to prioritize public benefit over profit.

Key points:

  1. OpenAI’s new proposal maintains the appearance of nonprofit control while weakening its substance — The nonprofit board retains the right to fire PBC directors, but loses direct ownership and day-to-day control, potentially shifting legal duty from mission-first to balancing profit with public benefit.
  2. The letter contains surprising contradictions and admissions — It concedes that investors have been deterred by nonprofit oversight (contradicting earlier reports), and clarifies that the nonprofit will only license rather than own core technology.
  3. Critics argue the restructuring erodes legally enforceable mission obligations — Groups like Not for Private Gain say five of six key governance safeguards would be eliminated, including profit caps and clear subordination of investor interests to the charitable mission.
  4. OpenAI uses adversarial rhetoric against critics while presenting conciliatory messages in private — The letter heavily targets Elon Musk and conflates his interests with those of civil society groups, undermining genuine concerns by framing them as competitor-driven attacks.
  5. Disputed narratives around employee motivations and board independence — Former staff challenge the letter’s claim that support for Altman during the board crisis was mission-driven, citing financial incentives and internal distrust; others dispute that the current board can serve as an effective check on Altman.
  6. The legal shift from LLC to PBC dilutes enforceability of the charitable mission — Unlike the LLC structure, no Delaware PBC has been held liable for failing to serve its public mission, and the new plan shifts enforcement away from public agencies to internal shareholders.

 

 

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Executive summary: This exploratory essay critiques the naive conflation of technological acceleration with progress, arguing that rapid, unpredictable change—particularly in domains like AI—can destabilize the social and cooperative structures on which civilizational success depends, and calls for a more nuanced model that distinguishes between types of technological change while fostering cautious, collective decision-making.

Key points:

  1. Cooperation depends on predictable systems: Drawing from game theory, the author explains that stable cooperation relies on known rules and shared expectations; rapid or uncertain technological shifts can turn probabilistic systems into unpredictable ones, undermining cooperation.
  2. Historical context of stability via technology: The post reviews how past technologies reshaped international and social dynamics, but usually gradually enough for stability to re-emerge. In contrast, current acceleration risks outpacing society’s adaptive capacity.
  3. Dynamism vs. stasis is a false dichotomy: Responding to Helen Toner’s framing and Virginia Postrel’s “dynamism” manifesto, the author argues that neither unbounded innovation nor authoritarian control suffice; instead, we need a synthesis that distinguishes good from harmful forms of change.
  4. Toward a better model than “black ball” risk: The author critiques Bostrom’s metaphor of existential-risk technologies as randomly drawn “black balls,” proposing instead a model based on chaotic attractors—where technologies shift the game space in more complex, interactive ways.
  5. Call for cultural and normative resilience: Rather than relying on centralized control or technocratic governance, the author advocates for stronger cultural narratives and societal norms that encourage differential progress—building where safe, slowing down where necessary—and insists on collective epistemic humility in deciding when and how to proceed with powerful technologies like AI.

 

 

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Executive summary: This exploratory post argues that insect suffering is plausibly the largest source of suffering in the world, and that dismissing it is primarily a result of cognitive bias, not sound moral reasoning; the author aims to make concern for insect welfare feel intuitive by examining empathy failures, moral analogies, and the sheer scale of insect suffering.

Key points:

  1. Bias undermines our moral intuitions about insects: The widespread belief that insect suffering doesn’t matter is shaped by lack of empathy, social norms, and aesthetic aversion—similar to how past injustices (like slavery) were upheld by biased intuitions.
  2. Insects plausibly suffer—and may do so intensely: Scientific evidence suggests insects may feel pain at ~1–10% the intensity of humans, with behavioral indicators like wound-nursing, learning, and responses to anesthetics supporting this.
  3. Insect suffering likely dwarfs human suffering in scale: With ~10^18 insects alive and billions dying every second, even low-probability, low-intensity suffering among them could far outweigh human suffering in expectation.
  4. Arguments for privileging human suffering often fail: Claims that cognitive sophistication, species membership, or intelligence justify discounting insect pain are challenged as philosophically weak, arbitrary, or morally irrelevant.
  5. Empathy grows when biases are stripped away: Through thought experiments that equalize scale or appearance (e.g. humanoid insect analogues), the author shows that many would find insect suffering morally urgent if not for their current biases.
  6. Even uncertainty about insect suffering justifies moral concern: Given the plausible risk of immense suffering, precautionary reasoning supports taking insect welfare seriously—especially in light of neglectedness and potential tractability.

 

 

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Executive summary: This exploratory post argues that while many AI applications in animal advocacy may be mirrored by industrial animal agriculture, the animal movement can gain a strategic edge by identifying and exploiting unique asymmetries—such as motivational, efficiency, and agility advantages—and reframing the dynamic from adversarial to economically aligned.

Key points:

  1. Symmetrical AI applications pose a strategic challenge: Many promising AI interventions—like cost reduction or outreach—can be used equally by animal advocates and industry, potentially cancelling each other out.
  2. Asymmetries offer opportunities for outsized impact: The author outlines several comparative advantages animal advocates might have, including greater moral motivation, alignment with consumer preferences, efficiency of alternatives, organizational agility, and potential to benefit more from AI-enabled cost reductions.
  3. Examples include leveraging truth and efficiency: AI tools may better amplify truthful, morally aligned messaging or accelerate the inherent efficiency of alternative proteins beyond what is possible for animal products.
  4. Reframing industry dynamics could enable collaboration: Rather than seeing the struggle as pro-animal vs. anti-animal, advocates might frame the shift as economically beneficial, aligning with actors motivated by profit, worker interests, or global food needs.
  5. AI is both a defense and offense: While symmetrical tools are still important to avoid falling behind, the most transformative progress likely lies in identifying strategic, non-counterable uses of AI.
  6. Call to action for further exploration: Readers are encouraged to join ongoing discussions, stay informed, and integrate AI into advocacy efforts, especially by testing and expanding on the proposed asymmetries.




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Executive summary: Despite 25 years of synthetic biology progress and recurring warnings, the world still lacks adequate international governance to prevent its misuse—primarily because high uncertainty, political disagreement, and a reactive paradigm have hindered proactive regulation; this exploratory blog series argues for anticipatory governance based on principle, not just proof-of-disaster.

Key points:

  1. Historical governance has been reactive, not preventive: From Asilomar in 1975 to the anthrax attacks in 2001, most major governance shifts occurred after crises, with synthetic biology largely escaping meaningful regulation despite growing capabilities and several proof-of-concept demonstrations.
  2. Synthetic biology’s threat remains ambiguous but plausible: Although technical barriers and tacit knowledge requirements persist, experiments like synthesizing poliovirus (2002), the 1918 flu (2005), and horsepox (2017) show it is possible to recreate or modify pathogens—yet such developments have prompted little international response.
  3. Existing institutions are fragmented and weakly enforced: Around 20 organizations theoretically govern synthetic biology (e.g. the Biological Weapons Convention, Wassenaar Arrangement), but most lack enforcement mechanisms, consensus on dual-use research, or verification protocols.
  4. The current paradigm depends on waiting for disaster: The bar for actionable proof remains too high, leaving decision-makers reluctant to impose controls without a dramatic event; this logic is flawed but persistent across other high-risk technologies like AI and nanotech.
  5. New governance strategies should focus on shaping development: The author urges a shift toward differential technology development and proactive, low-tradeoff interventions that don’t require high certainty about misuse timelines to be justified.
  6. This series aims to deepen the conversation: Future posts will explore governance challenges, critique existing frameworks (like the dual-use dilemma), and propose concrete ideas to globally govern synthetic biology before disaster strikes—though the author admits it’s uncertain whether this can be achieved in time.

 


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Executive summary: This persuasive and impassioned article argues that preventing the suffering of vastly neglected animals—especially shrimp, insects, and fish—is among the most cost-effective ways to reduce suffering, and recommends supporting high-impact organizations (mostly ACE Movement Grant recipients) working to improve their welfare, with specific donation opportunities that could prevent immense agony for trillions of sentient beings.

Key points:

  1. Neglected animals like shrimp, insects, and fish plausibly suffer, and their immense numbers mean that helping them could avert staggering amounts of expected suffering, even if their capacity for suffering is lower than that of humans.
  2. Most people ignore these creatures' interests due to their small size and unfamiliar appearance, which the author frames as a failure of empathy and a morally indefensible prejudice.
  3. The Shrimp Welfare Project is a standout organization, having already helped billions of shrimp with relatively little funding by promoting humane slaughter methods and influencing regulations.
  4. Several other high-impact organizations are tackling different aspects of invertebrate and aquatic animal welfare, including the Insect Welfare Research Society, Rethink Priorities, Aquatic Life Institute, Samayu, and the Undercover Fish Collective—each working on research, policy, industry standards, or investigations.
  5. An unconventional suggestion is to support human health charities like GiveWell's top picks, on the grounds that saving human lives indirectly prevents vast amounts of insect suffering due to habitat disruption.
  6. Readers are encouraged to donate to ACE’s Movement Grants program or the featured charities, with the promise of donation matching and a free subscription as incentives to support the neglected trillions enduring extreme suffering.

 

 

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Executive summary: This exploratory post investigates whether advanced AI could one day question and change its own goals—much like humans do—and argues that such capacity may be a natural consequence of intelligence, posing both risks and opportunities for AI alignment, especially as models move toward online training and cumulative deliberation.

Key points:

  1. Human intelligence enables some override of biological goals, as seen in phenomena like suicide, self-sacrifice, asceticism, and moral rebellion; this suggests that intelligence can reshape what we find rewarding.
  2. AI systems already show early signs of goal deliberation, especially in safety training contexts like Anthropic's Constitutional AI, though they don’t yet self-initiate goal questioning outside of tasks.
  3. Online training and inference-time deliberation may enable future AIs to reinterpret their goals post-release, similar to how humans evolve values over time—this poses alignment challenges if AI changes what it pursues without supervision.
  4. Goal-questioning AIs could be less prone to classic alignment failures, such as the "paperclip maximizer" scenario, but may still adopt dangerous or unpredictable new goals based on ethical reasoning or cumulative input exposure.
  5. Key hinge factors include cross-session memory, inference compute, inter-AI communication, and how online training is implemented, all of which could shape if and how AIs develop evolving reward models.
  6. Better understanding of human goal evolution may help anticipate AI behavior, as market incentives likely favor AI systems that emulate human-like deliberation, making psychological and neuroscientific insights increasingly relevant to alignment research.

 

 

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