There are two questions here that deserve separate consideration: donating to existential risk reduction vs. other (nearer-term, lower-uncertainty) philanthropy, and donating to SI vs. other x-risk reduction efforts. It seems to me that you should never be weighing SI against malaria nets directly; if you would donate to (SI / malaria nets) conditional on their effectiveness, you’ve already decided (for / against) x-risk reduction and should only be considering alternatives like (FHI / vaccination programs).
Thanks. You’re right I’ve been thinking about it wrong, I’ll have to reconsider how I approach philanthropy. It’s valuable to donate to research anyway, since research is what comes up with things like “malaria nets”.
It’s valuable to donate to research anyway, since research is what comes up with things like “malaria nets”.
Good point; under uncertainty about x-risk vs. near-term philanthropy you might donate to organizations that could help answer that question, like GiveWell or SI/FHI.
There are two questions here that deserve separate consideration: donating to existential risk reduction vs. other (nearer-term, lower-uncertainty) philanthropy, and donating to SI vs. other x-risk reduction efforts. It seems to me that you should never be weighing SI against malaria nets directly; if you would donate to (SI / malaria nets) conditional on their effectiveness, you’ve already decided (for / against) x-risk reduction and should only be considering alternatives like (FHI / vaccination programs).
Thanks. You’re right I’ve been thinking about it wrong, I’ll have to reconsider how I approach philanthropy. It’s valuable to donate to research anyway, since research is what comes up with things like “malaria nets”.
Glad I could help. Thanks for letting me know.
Good point; under uncertainty about x-risk vs. near-term philanthropy you might donate to organizations that could help answer that question, like GiveWell or SI/FHI.