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80,000 Hours
80,000 Hours
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80k After Hours
73.
Highlights: #188 – Matt Clancy on whether science is good
72.
Off the Clock #4 (fka Actually After Hours): One Boxing with Julian Hazell
71.
Highlights: #187 – Zach Weinersmith on how researching his book turned him from a space optimist into a “space bastard”
70.
Highlights: #186 – Dean Spears on why babies are born small in Uttar Pradesh, and how to save their lives
69.
Highlights: #185 – Lewis Bollard on the 7 most promising ways to end factory farming, and whether AI is going to be good or bad for animals
68.
Highlights: #184 – Zvi Mowshowitz on sleeping on sleeper agents, and the biggest AI updates since ChatGPT
67.
Actually After Hours #3: Finding the Tail with Dwarkesh Patel
66.
Robert Wright & Rob Wiblin on the truth about effective Altruism
65.
Highlights: #183 – Spencer Greenberg on causation without correlation, money and happiness, lightgassing, hype vs value, and more
64.
Highlights: #182 – Bob Fischer on comparing the welfare of humans, chickens, pigs, octopuses, bees, and more
63.
Christian Ruhl on why we're entering a new nuclear age — and how to reduce the risks
62.
Highlights: #181 – Laura Deming on the science that could keep us healthy in our 80s and beyond
61.
Actually After Hours #2: Coming to America with Joel Becker
60.
Highlights: #180 – Hugo Mercier on why gullibility and misinformation are overrated
59.
Highlights: #179 – Randy Nesse on why evolution left us so vulnerable to depression and anxiety
58.
Actually After Hours #1: Bean Counting with Chana Messinger
57.
Highlights: #178 – Emily Oster on what the evidence actually says about pregnancy and parenting
56.
Highlights: #177 – Nathan Labenz on recent AI breakthroughs and navigating the growing rift between AI safety and accelerationist camps
55.
Highlights: #146 – Robert Long on why large language models like GPT (probably) aren’t conscious
54.
Highlights: #176 – Nathan Labenz on the final push for AGI, understanding OpenAI’s leadership drama, and red-teaming frontier models
53.
Highlights: #175 – Lucia Coulter on preventing lead poisoning for $1.66 per child
52.
Highlights: #174 – Nita Farahany on the neurotechnology already being used to convict criminals and manipulate workers
51.
Highlights: #173 – Jeff Sebo on digital minds, and how to avoid sleepwalking into a major moral catastrophe
50.
Career review: AI safety technical research
49.
Highlights: #147 – Spencer Greenberg on stopping valueless papers from getting into top journals
48.
Benjamin Todd on the history of 80,000 Hours
47.
Highlights: #172 – Bryan Caplan on why you should stop reading the news
46.
Highlights: #148 – Johannes Ackva on unfashionable climate interventions that work, and fashionable ones that don’t
45.
Highlights: #171 – Alison Young on how top labs have jeopardised public health with repeated biosafety failures
44.
Highlights: #170 – Santosh Harish on how air pollution is responsible for ~12% of global deaths — and how to get that number down
43.
Highlights: #169 – Paul Niehaus on whether cash transfers cause economic growth, and keeping theft to acceptable levels
42.
Highlights: #168 – Ian Morris on whether deep history says we’re heading for an intelligence explosion
41.
Highlights: #167 – Seren Kell on the research gaps holding back alternative proteins from mass adoption
40.
Highlights: #166 – Tantum Collins on what he’s learned as an AI policy insider at the White House, DeepMind and elsewhere
39.
Highlights: #165 – Anders Sandberg on war in space, whether civilisations age, and the best things possible in our universe
38.
Highlights: #164 – Kevin Esvelt on cults that want to kill everyone, stealth vs wildfire pandemics, and how he felt inventing gene drives
37.
Highlights: #163 – Toby Ord on the perils of maximising the good that you do
36.
Highlights: #162 – Mustafa Suleyman on getting Washington and Silicon Valley to tame AI
34.
Highlights: #160 – Hannah Ritchie on why it makes sense to be optimistic about the environment
33.
Highlights: #159 – Jan Leike on OpenAI’s massive push to make superintelligence safe in 4 years or less
32.
Highlights: #158 – Holden Karnofsky on how AIs might take over even if they’re no smarter than humans, and his four-part playbook for AI risk
31.
Highlights: #157 – Ezra Klein on existential risk from AI and what DC could do about it
30.
Highlights: #156 – Markus Anderljung on how to regulate cutting-edge AI models
29.
Highlights: #155 – Lennart Heim on the compute governance era and what has to come after
28.
Highlights: #154 – Rohin Shah on DeepMind and trying to fairly hear out both AI doomers and doubters
27.
Alex Lawsen on avoiding 10 mistakes people make when pursuing a high-impact career
26.
Highlights: #153 – Elie Hassenfeld on two big picture critiques of GiveWell’s approach, and six lessons from their recent work
25.
Highlights: #152 – Joe Carlsmith on navigating serious philosophical confusion
24.
Highlights: #151 – Ajeya Cotra on accidentally teaching AI models to deceive us
23.
Highlights: #150 – Tom Davidson on how quickly AI could transform the world
22.
Hannah Boettcher on the mental health challenges that come with trying to have a big impact
21.
Highlights: #149 – Tim LeBon on how altruistic perfectionism is self-defeating
20.
Operations management in high-impact organisations (Article)
19.
What is social impact? A definition (Article)
18.
How to make tough career decisions (Article)
17.
Luisa and Keiran on free will, and the consequences of never feeling enduring guilt or shame
16.
Career review: Journalism (Article)
15.
Luisa and Robert Long on how to make independent research more fun
14.
China-related AI safety and governance paths (Article)
13.
Anonymous advice: If you want to reduce AI risk, should you take roles that advance AI capabilities? (Article)
12.
Is climate change the greatest threat facing humanity today? (Article)
11.
Marcus Davis on Rethink Priorities
10.
Preventing catastrophic pandemics (Article)
9.
Kuhan Jeyapragasan on effective altruism university groups
8.
Career review: Founder of new projects tackling top problems (Article)
7.
Andrés Jiménez Zorrilla on the Shrimp Welfare Project
6.
Space governance (Article)
5.
Clay Graubard and Robert de Neufville on forecasting the war in Ukraine
4.
Michelle and Habiba on what they’d tell their younger selves, and the impact of the 1-1 team
3.
Alex Lawsen on his advice for students
2.
Rob and Keiran on the philosophy of The 80,000 Hours Podcast
1.
Introducing 80k After Hours
Effective Altruism: An Introduction – 80,000 Hours
12.
Effective altruism in a nutshell
11.
One: Holden Karnofsky on times philanthropy transformed the world & Open Phil's plan to do the same
10.
Two: Dr Toby Ord on why the long-term future matters more than anything else & what to do about it
9.
Three: Alexander Berger on improving global health and wellbeing in clear and direct ways
8.
Four: Spencer Greenberg on the scientific approach to solving difficult everyday questions
6.
Six: Ajeya Cotra on worldview diversification and how big the future could be
5.
Seven: Prof Tetlock on why accurate forecasting matters for everything, and how you can do it better
4.
Eight: Prof Hilary Greaves on moral cluelessness, population ethics, & harnessing the brainpower of academia to tackle the most important research questions
3.
Nine: Benjamin Todd on the key ideas of 80,000 Hours
2.
Ten: Benjamin Todd on the core of effective altruism and how to argue for it
1.
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