This doesn’t look to me like an argument that there is so much funging between EA Funds and GiveWell recommended charities that it’s odd to spend attention distinguishing between them? For people with some common sets of values (e.g. long-termist, placing lots of weight on the well-being of animals) it doesn’t seem like there’s a decision-relevant amount of funging between GiveWell recommendations and the EA Fund they would choose. Do we disagree about that?
I guess I interpreted Rob’s statement that “the EA Funds are usually a better fallback option than GiveWell” as shorthand for “the EA Fund relevant to your values is in expectation a better fallback option than GiveWell.” “The EA Fund relevant to your values” does seem like a useful abstraction to me.
This doesn’t look to me like an argument that there is so much funging between EA Funds and GiveWell recommended charities that it’s odd to spend attention distinguishing between them? For people with some common sets of values (e.g. long-termist, placing lots of weight on the well-being of animals) it doesn’t seem like there’s a decision-relevant amount of funging between GiveWell recommendations and the EA Fund they would choose. Do we disagree about that?
I guess I interpreted Rob’s statement that “the EA Funds are usually a better fallback option than GiveWell” as shorthand for “the EA Fund relevant to your values is in expectation a better fallback option than GiveWell.” “The EA Fund relevant to your values” does seem like a useful abstraction to me.