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Sam Chapman

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This links, in my mind, to the thesis of Iain McGilchrist's "The Master and his Emissary". That is, that left-brain-hemisphere skills are relatively over-valued, and that right-brain-hemisphere skills are relatively undervalued/negelected. I (personally) think the same is at least somewhat true in EA. This isn't to criticise left-hemisphere skills - I think they're a huge part of what make people effective and my own relative lack of them can be a bit debilitating. 

Right-brain (neglected?) skills:

  • Emotive/inspirational communication, storytelling, humour, public speaking, creativity. Envisaging how a piece of communication will make people feel.
  • Building strong relationships, supporting others.
  • Big picture thinking, systems thinking (as opposed to thinking 'on the margin')
  • Intuition and 'common sense'
  • Creativity
  • Dispersed attention generating "outside of the box" thinking
  • Emotional intelligence
  • Ability to visualise, and internalise the real experience of others, even hypothetical others. Having this ability/characteristic ramped up to 100 shapes my reaction to thought experiments like the repugnant conclusion/the very repugnant conclusion, and hence my ethical views. I'm not confident in how neglected this attribute is in EA, but I think it varies and isn't heavily correlated with IQ - I know very clever people who just don't empathise with the suffering of others, I know EAs who went vegan after hearing strong arguments but not because of initial empathy, I know myself who went vegetarian as soon as I learned where meat came from, and cried viciously when I snapped the head off of a chocolate polar bear.

Left brain (over-valued?) skills:

  • Efficiency when 'doing' and 'manipulating information'
  • Logical, linear thinking
  • Detail-oriented
  • Language - (i.e. being able to read write and talk well and quickly)
  • Analytical use of facts and evidence
  • Abstracting away from real experience (I'm looking at you, repugnant conclusion)

Maybe I'm just biased and bitter because I'm predisposed to the former over the latter, and again, there's massive value to the latter :)