I’m only vaguely connected to EA in the sense of donating more-than-usual amounts of money in effective ways (❤️ GiveDirectly), but this feels like a strawman. I don’t think the average EA would recommend charities that hurt other people as side effects, work actively-harmful jobs to make money[1], or generally Utilitarian-maxxing.
The EA trolley problem is that there are thousands (or millions) of trolleys that have varying difficult of stopping, barreling toward varying groups of people. The problem isn’t that stopping them hurts other people (it doesn’t), it’s just that you can’t stop them all. You don’t need to be a utilitarian to think that if it’s raining planes, Superman should start by catching the 747′s.
I think trying to be Superman is the problem, but I’m ok if that line of thinking doesn’t work for you.
Do you mean in the sense that people who aren’t Superman should stop beating themselves up about it (a real problem in EA), or that even if you are (financial) Superman, born in the red-white-and-blue light of a distant star, you shouldn’t save people in other countries because that’s bad somehow?
The latter. Superman’s powers are magical, but our powers are intimately connected to the state of life for the less fortunate. We know that our economic prosperity is based on a mix of innovation and domination, and the more we reduce our involvement in the domination side of it, the more we address the real root of the problem.
I’m only vaguely connected to EA in the sense of donating more-than-usual amounts of money in effective ways (❤️ GiveDirectly), but this feels like a strawman. I don’t think the average EA would recommend charities that hurt other people as side effects, work actively-harmful jobs to make money[1], or generally Utilitarian-maxxing.
The EA trolley problem is that there are thousands (or millions) of trolleys that have varying difficult of stopping, barreling toward varying groups of people. The problem isn’t that stopping them hurts other people (it doesn’t), it’s just that you can’t stop them all. You don’t need to be a utilitarian to think that if it’s raining planes, Superman should start by catching the 747′s.
For example, high-paying finance jobs are high-stress and many people don’t like working them, but they’re not actually bad for the world.
❤️ thanks!
That is debatable.
I think trying to be Superman is the problem, but I’m ok if that line of thinking doesn’t work for you.
Do you mean in the sense that people who aren’t Superman should stop beating themselves up about it (a real problem in EA), or that even if you are (financial) Superman, born in the red-white-and-blue light of a distant star, you shouldn’t save people in other countries because that’s bad somehow?
The latter. Superman’s powers are magical, but our powers are intimately connected to the state of life for the less fortunate. We know that our economic prosperity is based on a mix of innovation and domination, and the more we reduce our involvement in the domination side of it, the more we address the real root of the problem.