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As 2024 draws to a close, I’m reflecting on the work and stories that inspired me this year: those from the effective altruism community, those I found out about through EA-related channels, and those otherwise related to EA.

I’ve appreciated the celebration of wins and successes over the past few years from @Shakeel Hashim's posts in 2022 and 2023. As @Lizka and @MaxDalton put very well in a post in 2022:

We often have high standards in effective altruism. This seems absolutely right: our work matters, so we must constantly strive to do better.

But we think that it's really important that the effective altruism community celebrate successes:

  • If we focus too much on failures, we incentivize others/ourselves to minimize the risk of failure, and we will probably be too risk averse.
  • We're humans: we're more motivated if we celebrate things that have gone well.

Rather than attempting to write a comprehensive review of this year's successes and wins related to EA, I want to share what has personally moved me this year—progress that gave me hope, individual stories and acts of altruism, and work that I found thought-provoking or valuable. I’ve structured the sections below as prompts to invite your own reflection on the year, as I’d love to hear your responses in the comments. We all have different relationships with EA ideas and the community surrounding them, and I find it valuable that we can bring different perspectives and responses to questions like these.

What progress in the world did you find exciting?

What individual stories inspired you?

What writing from this year did you appreciate or find compelling?

  • “On Owning Our EA Affiliation” by @Alix Pham resonated a lot with me, as the question of how people claim their affiliation with EA or distance themselves from it comes up a lot in my work on EA communications. I appreciate the reflections and responses the post prompted in the comments, and Alix’s discussion of EA as a public good, in a sense.
  • I found “How I want to live my life” by @Peter Wildeford powerful in how he laid out his ideological commitments and values with clarity—it pushed me to think about what my version of a post like this would look like.
  • Giving What We Can celebrated its 15th anniversary this year, and founders Will MacAskill and Toby Ord posted some lovely threads on X about it. I find it wild and inspiring to consider that the actions of a small group of people 15 years ago could blossom into thousands of individuals living out their values all around the world, and I’m proud to be a part of that community through my 10% pledge.
  • I feel lucky to work with my colleagues at CEA—they inspire me in many ways, from their dedication to their work and their intellectual curiosity and seriousness to their Forum posts and sense of humor.

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