Applications for our next round are open!
Apply by 11.59pm, Friday 18th October.
What the EA fellowship involves
What is the fellowship?
How can we find the best ways to improve the world? The effective altruism fellowship is a free 6-week programme combining reading, small group discussions and personal mentoring which explores the most pressing challenges of our time and how we can act on them.
Fellowship discussions will happen in small groups of 3-7 fellows, with an experienced facilitator. Cohorts will meet weekly for 1.5 hours in a central Cambridge location.
The programme draws upon knowledge from economics, philosophy, statistics, psychology, social activism, emerging technology and more. You can check our curriculum at the bottom of this page.
Who is it aimed at?
The fellowship is open to students at all stages of university education as well as non-students based in Cambridge. It’s designed for people who are not already familiar with effective altruism but who are interested in having a greater positive impact on the world, and we would love to see people from a wide range of backgrounds apply!
What are the requirements?
The fellowship runs for 6 weeks. To take part, you should be
Willing to spend 2-3 hours each week preparing for the meeting
Committed to attending all 6 sessions (unless unforeseen circumstances arise)
Excited about making a positive impact
Open to changing your mind
If you have any more questions, please contact harrison@meridiancambridge.org.
The curriculum.
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Week 1: The Effectiveness Mindset
If you want to use your time or money to help others, you probably want to help as many people as you can. But you only have so much time to help, so you can have a much bigger impact if you focus on the interventions that help more people rather than fewer.
But finding such interventions is incredibly difficult: it requires a "scout mindset" - seeking the truth, rather than to defend our current ideas.
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Week 2: Differences in Impact
Around 700 million people still live in poverty, mostly in low-income countries. Efforts to help them - by policy reform, cash transfers, or provision of health services - can be incredibly effective.
Alongside investigating this issue, we also discuss how much more effective some interventions are than others, and we introduce a simple tool for estimating important figures.
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Week 3: Radical Empathy
Should we care about non-human animals? We'll show how it can be important to care impartially, rather than ignoring weird topics or unusual beneficiaries.
We'll also cover expected value theory (which helps when we're uncertain about the impact of an intervention), and give some ideas for how we could improve the lives of animals that suffer in factory farms.
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Week 4: What could the future hold? And why care?
"Longtermism" is the view that improving the long term future is a key moral priority of our time. This can bolster arguments for working on reducing some of the extinction risks that we covered in the last section.
We’ll also explore some views on what our future could look like, and why it might be pretty different from the present. And we'll introduce forecasting: a set of methods for improving and learning from our attempts to predict the future.
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Week 5: Smarter than Us
Transformative artificial intelligence may well be developed this century. If it is, it may begin to make many significant decisions for us, and rapidly accelerate changes like economic growth. Are we set up to deal with this new technology safely?
As we try to think about these and other difficult questions, how should we update our views? Bayes' rule is a theory designed just for this: it can help us to think more clearly about how to think clearly.
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Week 6: What do you think?
It's really important to think for yourself and reflect on the arguments you've heard in previous weeks: you might uncover places where you disagree, or mistakes in the reasoning. And even if you don't you'll probably understand the ideas more deeply if you've thought about their weakest points.
So in this week, we encourage you to take some time to reflect on your confusions and concerns about the ideas so far, and to read up on some of the strongest counterarguments.
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