OLIVIA BENOIT
My name is Olivia Benoit.
I direct the Cambridge Existential Risk Initiative (CERI), an organization dedicated to supporting students and researchers in securing the future of humanity and preventing human extinction.
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I completed my Master's degree at Cambridge University in Economic & Social History. My research interests include historical ideas about the future.
ABOUT ME
An image and description of Bartolomeu de Gusmão's airship, Passarola, demonstrated to a public audience in August of 1709. This is one of several early-modern flying machines.
My academic journey has provided me with a unique perspective on the intersection of history, science, and the future. I also have degrees in philosophy and business, and I'm an evolutionary biology neophyte. My research focuses on conceptualizations of progress and innovation in early modern Europe. I'm currently researching ideas about extraterrestrial life and space travel in seventeenth-century England.
Parallel to my academic background, I am passionate about effective altruism, longtermism, existential risk, and forecasting. My appreciation for the long history of humankind ignites a profound interest in shaping the future and preserving humanity for generations to come. Delving into the annals of the past reveals the remarkable progress and transformative moments that have shaped our species.
My approach to EA and X-risk has been informed by history in six ways:
1. Understanding systemic causes of poverty, inequality, disease, conflict, environmental degradation, and other challenges.
2. Identifying successful interventions and the efficacy of mitigation strategies.
3. Promoting resilience and adaptive strategies.
4. Informing policy and decision-making.
5. Ethical reflection and moral progress, especially relating to justice, equality, and well-being.
6. Fostering longtermist thinking, such as understanding the interconnectedness of events and longterm implications of present decisions on future humans.
I believe the past illuminates possible challenges and opportunities, especially when considering immutable aspects of human desires. Past events -- from the Toba Eruption, to the Black Death, to the Cuban Missile Crisis -- provide case studies that can be used to anticipate an unknown future.
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My work
I direct the Cambridge Existential Risk Initiative (CERI) in Cambridge, UK. CERI is a network of students, researchers, and professors at the University of Cambridge working to mitigate existential risks and secure the future of humanity.
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Existential Risks (or x-risks) are threats capable of causing human extinction or irrevocably diminishing our potential to thrive in the future. These encompass phenomena that have the capacity to critically compromise the enduring survival, prosperity, or evolution of humanity.
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Why I care about X-Risk
I consider securing humanity’s future to be a crucial undertaking.
Many experts estimate there’s a 1 to 20% chance of human extinction in the next 100 years: Will MacAskill assesses the risk at about 1%. Meanwhile, Toby Ord’s The Precipice argues there’s about a 17% chance, considering extinction and irreversible global catastrophes. Consequently, the contemplation of risks and their potential impacts posits stakes of monumental proportions, capable of yielding either profound advancements or catastrophic regressions. The prospect of human civilization flourishing for millions of years underscores the imperative of mitigating existential risks.
I believe that ensuring a secure future for humanity is the world’s top priority. I aim to assist students and individuals in making a meaningful difference through high-impact research and careers, specifically in areas like pandemic prevention, nuclear security, AI safety, and climate change.
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If you're interested in existential risk studies, please reach out through the Contact Me page. If you are located in or near Cambridge, UK, visit CERI's website to learn how you can get involved.
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CV
Education
2022 - Present
MPhil Economic & Social History
University of Cambridge
2018-2021
B.A. Interdisciplinary Studies – History & Philosophy; Business Administration
University of Southern California (USC)
Research foci:
History of astronomy and the plurality of worlds theory; history of probability and gaming; economic growth and development measurements; Keynesian economic theory; early scientific classification.
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Magna cum laude
Thesis: “Automata and the Man-Machine: Physiological Transformation and Societal Progress in Julien Offray de La Mettrie and Jacques Vaucanson’s Enlightenment Philosophy”
Grants, Honors, & Awards
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Fulbright U.S. Award Scholar 2022-2023 (Declined)
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Selected to attend Master’s Degree Programme in Futures Studies, University of Turku, Finland
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USC Presidential Scholarship, 2018-2021
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$132,000 tuition scholarship
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Stone Family Research Fellowship, 2020-2022
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$2,000 stipend for Digital Vatican Project
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Roberta Persinger Foulke Endowment Fellowship 2019-2021
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For exceptional accomplishments and aspirations in the field of history
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$6,000 tuition scholarship
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Bitzer Family Scholarship Award, 2019-2021
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​For outstanding research contribution to the humanities
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$3,000 tuition scholarship
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​Wynne Family Student Fellowship, USC Office of Overseas Studies, Awarded 2020
• Funded work abroad in Dublin, Ireland
Societies & Volunteering
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Cambridge Existential Risks Initiative (CERI)​
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Member of the Executive Committee with a focus on outreach strategy and event organization.​
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Long-term focus on engaging a wider range of disciplines in X-risk, particularly from humanities and social sciences.
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Ethical Society of Saint Louis
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Participate in bi-weekly meetings to discuss life questions, promote individual dignity and respect without scripture or religion.
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Advocate for eco-sustainability in St. Louis region, corresponding with Climate Action Now! to expand effective action in the local community.
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Humanist Student Fellowship, USC Branch
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Led student community focused on science, compassion, and creativity by engaging with perennial human questions, hosting speakers, and supporting university-based events.
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Arranged and hosted 2019 Secular Student Alliance National Conference for hundreds of humanist student leaders.
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Research
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National Endowment for the Humanities
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Researcher on interdisciplinary project with USC Dept. of Art History to digitally reconstruct Pope Julius II’s papal library, the Stanza della Segnatura, in the Vatican.
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Created virtual “room” to annotate and tag connections between library books, images, and themes, allowing visitors from museums and classrooms to open window shutters, move furnishings, and select books.
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Provided historiographical context to philosophical and theological literary works for use within the software program.
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Department of Art History
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Assist research on personal and professional networks of Renaissance artist Raphael. Research included developing familial pedigree charts, charting collaborations and influences in primary literature, organizing presentations and conferences, and corresponding with other researchers on behalf of department.
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Specializations & Certificates (because learning is pretty fun)
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Harvard Business School CORe​
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10-Week course in business analytics, economics, and financial accounting
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Pass With High Honors (top 10%)
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Institute for the Future (IFTF)
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Specialization in Futures Thinking
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Coursework: Introduction to Future’s Thinking; Forecasting Skills; Simulation Skills: The Brain on the Future; Collaborative Foresight; Urgent Optimism: Turning Foresight into Action
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IE Business School
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Specialization in Globalization, Economic Growth, and Stability
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Coursework: Economic Policymaking; Trade Immigration and Exchange Rates; Business Opportunities and Risks in a Globalized Economy
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Duke University
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​Coursework: Models of consumer choice; Biases and probabilities in decision-making; Optimal and sub-optimal financial decision-making
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A section of Raphael's "School of Athens" (1509-11) in the Stanza della Segnatura. The fresco depicts the Renaissance interest in music, art, optics, physics, geometry, mathematics, astronomy, and architecture.
Research Papers
If there be inhabitants there: Interplanetary trade, Space Colonies, and Political Economy in the Cosmos, 1610-1784
In Progress
The Mythology of A Keynesian Economic Revolution
2023
The Dark Legacy of Eighteenth-Century Science: Taxonomy, Craniology, and Racial Classification in Enlightenment Political Philosophy
2022
Beyond GDP: A Framework for Measuring Economic Growth and Development with the Human Development Index (HDI)
2022
Automata and the Man-Machine: Physiological Transformation and Societal Progress in Julien Offray de La Mettrie and Jacques Vaucanson’s Enlightenment Philosophy
2021