Types of generalism

post by Nora_Ammann · 2021-04-20T08:22:49.569Z · LW · GW · 0 comments

Contents

  Directionality of generalism
  Full vs partial generalism
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[Cross-posted from here]

I am interested in the nature of inter- and transdisciplinary research, which often involves some notion of “generalism”. There are different ways to further conceptualize generalism in this context.

First, a bit of terminology that I will rely on throughout this post: I call bodies of knowledge where insights are being drawn from source domains”. The body of knowledge that is being informed by this approach is called the “target domain”. 

 

Directionality of generalism

We can distinguish between SFI-style generalism from FHI-style generalism? (h/t particlemania for first formulating this idea)

In the case of SFI, their source domain is the study of complex systems, which they apply to topics as varied as life and intelligence, cities, economics and institutions, opinion formation, etc.

In the case of FHI, the target domain is fixed, although more vaguely than it might be, via the problem of civilization-scale consequentialism and source domains include philosophy, international relations, machine learning and more.

 

Full vs partial generalism

Partial generalism: Any one actor should focus on one (or a similarly small number of) source domains to draw from. 

Arguments: 

Full generalism: As long as you fix your target domain, an actor can and should venture into many source domains. 

Arguments: 

Note that you can achieve full generalism at an organizational level while having a team of individuals that all engage in partial generalism.

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