Noah Chon Lee is a professional fool committed to exploring as wide a spectrum of human experience as possible. He has wandered through 22 countries as a backpacker, lived with a tribe among the Woarani indigenous people in eastern Ecuador, presented as a keynote speaker for fortune 500 companies, and performed as a professional juggler and fire spinner for schools, orphanages, and Hindu temples since the age of ten. He currently studies sociology with a focus on cultural design at UC Berkeley.
My story: Hello, at age sixteen some combination of debating a pastor about universalism, visiting worship centers of various faiths, and Rick and Morty killed my religion. With nothing remaining that seemed worthwhile, I booked a ticket to Singapore and began wandering around odd destinations for the next few years in variable states of despair. I tried to construct a new sense of meaning through pragmatic mythicalism, the idea that untestable ideas can still be believed in based on their utility. I decided it would be useful to believe that the well being of people are worth fighting for, but still felt miserably alone. Then I discovered EA, or rather it discovered me as I was ranting to someone about the fermi paradox and great filters to which someone replied "oh yeah, those are called existential risks in effective altruism," to which I replied "what the HELL is effective altruism?" Then there was no turning back. The concept that a community exists with such a purposeful drive to improve lives gave me a rope to grasp as I clawed my way back to life like it matters. The ideology granted me a beacon to strive towards, but lacking interaction or connection with the community, I did not yet feel the hope or joy of being welcomed into a place that aligns with your values. The bones were there but not the flesh. I found that sense of belonging with hippies in the cacti forests of Chile, an orphanage in the Andes mountains of Ecuador, and in a tribe among the Woarani people in the jungle, and now am establishing that in UC Berkeley as I study sociology in order to understand how to bring that sense of community that was shown to me in South America into modern workspaces and living spaces. I intend to find ways to welcome in those who find hope in this community and wish to be connected with it. Concepts on how to do this include developing Bountied Rationality as a public list of bounties that anyone can hunt (Idea outlined here https://docs.google.com/document/d/17h_PtFoRE-W7mRtVZOAyRinAFv542O-kR22VBXxGC6c/edit?usp=sharing), templates for group houses, and perhaps an EA hostel. Thank you to everyone who has helped build this community, from those who founded international organizations to those who read one post and then told a friend about it (after all the person who told me about EA I think knew little about it but radically altered my life trajectory.) Thank you for showing me that there are people who are strategically kind. If anyone has connections with EAs involved in indigenous rights (which I believe ought to be a cause area, I hope to write a post on this soon) and community building, feel free to reach out :)
EA Berkeley Hostel
Effective Altruism
Every week, EAs pass through Berkeley and someone needs to pay around $200 a night to house them or scramble to find a couch they can crash on. This becomes increasingly complicated when someone finds a trial run offer and needs to stay another week than expected or even find a job offer and suddenly need to rush to find housing. Currently, there exists NO hostel (or even a hotel room that costs less than a couple hundred bucks) even close to Berkeley, much less an EA hostel. A hostel in Berkeley would allow flexibility in stay times, provide a place for EAs to stay when moving between housing situations, and provide a homely space for co-working and networking.
Feel free to comment to ask more details.
Bountied Rationality Website
Effective Altruism
Oftentimes great ideas fail to find funding through a grant because those who come up with a great proposal are not the right people to complete the proposal. An inducement prize platform separates who comes up with ideas (proposers) and those who complete the ideas (bounty hunters), thereby allowing the best ideas to be elevated based on the quality of the idea itself. It also makes it easier to find others working on the same project because there can be a "competitors and collaborators" tab that shows who else is working on the project. Finally, this opens up ways to accomplish useful tasks to people around the world and particular in lower cost of living countries where they can be paid for accomplishing bounties such as coding tasks.
For those familiar with Xprize funded by Elon Musk and Richard Branson and others, the idea is essentially to create a democratized version of Xprize.
I propose a public list of bountied projects and tasks to incentivize public works, streamline networking, and to decentralize funding. Feel free to comment to ask more or see the following outline: https://docs.google.com/document/d/17h_PtFoRE-W7mRtVZOAyRinAFv542O-kR22VBXxGC6c/edit?usp=sharing
Hello, at age sixteen some combination of debating a pastor about universalism, visiting worship centers of various faiths, and Rick and Morty killed my religion. With nothing remaining that seemed worthwhile, I booked a ticket to Singapore and began wandering around odd destinations for the next few years in variable states of despair. I tried to construct a new sense of meaning through pragmatic mythicalism, the idea that untestable ideas can still be believed in based on their utility. I decided it would be useful to believe that the well being of people are worth fighting for, but still felt miserably alone.
Then I discovered EA, or rather it discovered me as I was ranting half-crazed to someone about the fermi paradox and great filters to which someone replied "oh yeah, those are called existential risks in effective altruism," to which I replied "what the HELL is effective altruism?"
Then there was no turning back. The concept that a community exists with such a purposeful drive to improve lives gave me a rope to grasp as I clawed my way back to life like it matters. The ideology granted me a beacon to strive towards, but lacking interaction or connection with the community, I did not yet feel the hope or joy of being welcomed into a place that aligns with your values. The bones were there but not the flesh. I found that sense of belonging with hippies in the cacti forests of Chile, an orphanage in the Andes mountains of Ecuador, and in a tribe among the Woarani people in the jungle, and now am establishing that in UC Berkeley as I study sociology in order to understand how to bring that sense of community that was shown to me in South America into modern workspaces and living spaces.
I intend to find ways to welcome in those who find hope in this community and wish to be connected with it. Concepts on how to do this include developing Bountied Rationality as a public list of bounties that anyone can hunt (Idea outlined here https://docs.google.com/document/d/17h_PtFoRE-W7mRtVZOAyRinAFv542O-kR22VBXxGC6c/edit?usp=sharing), templates for group houses, and perhaps an EA hostel.
Thank you to everyone who has helped build this community, from those who founded international organizations to those who read one post and then told a friend about it (after all the person who told me about EA I think knew little about it but radically altered my life trajectory.) Thank you for showing me that there are people who are strategically kind.
If anyone has connections with EAs involved in indigenous rights (which I believe ought to be a cause area, I hope to write a post on this soon) and community building, feel free to reach out :)
This was spectacular. Compassion being a skill not a gut reaction is a quote I just shared with friends. Please continue writing, I believe many people will benefit from it.