I agree with the concern about the epistemics of the EA community. I touched on these in a talk I gave at EA Global.
However, I’m not sure linking to isolated posts that are concerning is a good way to get a sense of the degree to which this is a problem in the EA community. You’ll want to weight the posts by the actual influence that the poster has over the movement. Of those poster Rob Wiblin is the most influential (he works at CEA). The rest are neither employed at EA orgs nor are large donors.
A community that is both growing and is epistemically strong will probably still have a ton of low-quality posts. This seems normal to me unless we see wider adoption of low-quality ideas. I don’t think this is the case so far.
I agree with the concern about the epistemics of the EA community. I touched on these in a talk I gave at EA Global.
However, I’m not sure linking to isolated posts that are concerning is a good way to get a sense of the degree to which this is a problem in the EA community. You’ll want to weight the posts by the actual influence that the poster has over the movement. Of those poster Rob Wiblin is the most influential (he works at CEA). The rest are neither employed at EA orgs nor are large donors.
A community that is both growing and is epistemically strong will probably still have a ton of low-quality posts. This seems normal to me unless we see wider adoption of low-quality ideas. I don’t think this is the case so far.