I think there’d be value in just listing graduate programs in philosophy, economics, etc., by how relevant the research already being done there is to x-risk, AI safety, or rationality. Or by whether or not they contain faculty interested in those topics.
For example, if I were looking to enter a philosophy graduate program it might take me quite some time to realize that Carnegie Melon probably has the best program for people interested in LW-style reasoning about something like epistemology.
I think it depends more on specific advisors than on the university. If you’re interested in doing AI safety research in grad school, getting in touch with professors who got FLI grants might be a good idea.
Do you have direct experience with the Carnegie Mellon program? At one point I was seriously considering going there because of the logic & computation degree, and I might still consider it at some point in the future.
I mentioned CMU for the reasons you’ve stated and because Lukeprog endorsed their program once (no idea what evidence he had that I don’t).
I have also spoken to Katja Grace about it, and there is evidently a bit of interest in LW themes among the students there.
I’m unaware of other programs of a similar caliber, though there are bound to be some. If anyone knows of any, by all means list them, that was the point of my original comment.
I think there’d be value in just listing graduate programs in philosophy, economics, etc., by how relevant the research already being done there is to x-risk, AI safety, or rationality. Or by whether or not they contain faculty interested in those topics.
For example, if I were looking to enter a philosophy graduate program it might take me quite some time to realize that Carnegie Melon probably has the best program for people interested in LW-style reasoning about something like epistemology.
I think it depends more on specific advisors than on the university. If you’re interested in doing AI safety research in grad school, getting in touch with professors who got FLI grants might be a good idea.
Why do you say Carnegie Mellon? I’m assuming it’s because they have the Center for Formal Epistemology and a very nice-looking degree program in Logic, Computation and Methodology. But don’t some other universities have comparable programs?
Do you have direct experience with the Carnegie Mellon program? At one point I was seriously considering going there because of the logic & computation degree, and I might still consider it at some point in the future.
Confirmed, re: CMU phil. Email me for details (ilyas at cs.jhu.edu), I know a few people there. I think Katja Grace went there at one point (?)
I mentioned CMU for the reasons you’ve stated and because Lukeprog endorsed their program once (no idea what evidence he had that I don’t).
I have also spoken to Katja Grace about it, and there is evidently a bit of interest in LW themes among the students there.
I’m unaware of other programs of a similar caliber, though there are bound to be some. If anyone knows of any, by all means list them, that was the point of my original comment.