The truth is out there. Somewhere.

How does one distinguish between genuine authority and received wisdom?

by Andrew Coyne on Thursday, January 7, 2010 11:05am - 495 Comments

The truth is out there. Somewhere

The fact is that we can’t account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can’t . . .
We will keep them out somehow—even if we have to redefine what the peer-review literature is! . . .
If they ever hear there is a Freedom of Information Act now in the U.K., I think I’ll delete the file rather than send it to anyone . . .

And so on. Since their release last November, the famous hacked emails from scientists in the Climate Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia have provided a rich source of such incriminating phrases. Participants, including some of the leading figures in the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), discuss how to prevent skeptics from publishing in peer-reviewed journals, plot to destroy or suppress the raw data underlying their studies, suggest ways to massage the figures for better effect, and generally carry on in a tone more evocative of the “war room” than the common room.

To many, the emails offer disturbing evidence that a number of prominent climatologists have crossed the line, from science into activism. It is clear they view dissenters, not as critics to be engaged, but enemies to be beaten. But in fact there is a more fundamental problem at work: a breakdown of trust between scientists and large sections of the lay public.

Previous ages may have been more prone to error, but not to doubt: whatever foolish things they believed, they believed them together. Ours is a very different era. Science has pushed the boundaries of human knowledge to limits never before imagined. Yet all sorts of anti-scientific, indeed pre-scientific beliefs are flourishing at the same time, from the enduring appeal of naturopathy and other folk cures to the hysterias over childhood vaccines and genetically modified foods, all the way to the dreadful pseudo-science of “intelligent design.”

The science writer Michael Specter has called these examples of denialism, a habit of mind that replaces “the rigorous and open-minded skepticism of science with the inflexible certainty of ideological commitment.” But of course that is exactly what skeptics accuse global warming scientists of: a divine certainty of their own rightness that not only blinds them to legitimate criticism, but gives rise to the sorts of behaviour described in the East Anglia emails.

This is why “Climategate” may prove something of a watershed. In the battle for public opinion, global warming advocates have until now had the singular advantage of claiming that the bulk of respectable scientific opinion was on their side. If at least some of that scientific opinion is discovered to be not so respectable as all that, then it is not only their specific case that is harmed: it is science itself.

So the crisis of trust runs both ways. And, what is more, each has good reason to distrust the other.

Look at it from the climate scientists’ perspective. They have spent many years of their lives immersed in the subject. The data they cite has been drawn from any number of sources, thousands of measuring points, hundreds of studies, all of them submitted to rigorous peer review. Yet they are asked to debate people who in many cases have plainly not read or thought seriously about the issue, and who persist in raising objections that have long since been knocked to the ground. Small wonder that global warming advocates have taken to referring to them as “deniers,” flat-earthers or worse.

But now look at it from the public’s perspective. I don’t mean the already committed, pro or con, most of whom live in the bliss of believing what they want to believe. I mean the honestly confused, trying to puzzle out a complex scientific question they are not remotely qualified to judge, yet which will ask them to make the most profound political choices, with all sorts of potential consequences for their future welfare.

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  • guest4

    This article highlights exactly what is wrong with this debate by giving us the usual blither wrapped in pseudo intellectualism. At the start, it seems like something might actually be said. The two sides are explained and given equal weight – we can symphathize with each group. Next, a few random pot shots are taken at "soft science" which I suppose is included to make us proud of how far science has come in general or to prove how stupid some of us are. After more filler, the article seems as if it is building to its grand conclusion; we hope it to make some fine insight into the subject or even offer a way the lay person can more readily distinguish politics from science. Unfortunately for us, the article ends with the grand fizzle that "the experts and the public must grope their way to a common understanding". The reader feels betrayed that after investing time and energy all we are left with is platitudes.
    The problem here is that however politically expedient it is to take the middle ground, however enlightened it is to take the reasoned approach, in some cases (actually most cases) there is a right answer and a wrong answer. Either we heat the planet to human extinction, get taxed to oblivion trying to stop it or it was all bunk to begin with. We don't need the middle ground, we don't need to "grope our way " to an understanding, we need to know what is really happening. The problem with the CRU e-mails is that it just makes it that much more unlikely that we will know what is going on.
    Personally, I have come to terms with so called "global warming" in this way. Number 1 – We know that climates change over time. What we don't know conclusively is how quickly, in what direction or by what causitive agent. Number 2 – I would rather live in a clean environment over a polluted one, I will do my part to keep it that way or to improve it. We all have to be responsible stewards of what we have.

  • PawSlasher3

    I believe the hackers were heroes. Funny how you seem to be angered at the release of a couple of emails… maybe because they bruised your ideologically driven arguments!

    And why in the world would they be afraid of a little scrutiny? It seems the scientists who have been abusing the scientific process are the ones who can't handle scrutiny.

    Do you honestly believe Copenhagen was solely based on fighting AGW?

  • Dracovert

    I did extensive reading in world history before 1960, and I recall the Viking settlements in Greenland and the evidence of Viking settlements in North America. It was a given that the climate was warmer at that time (now known as the Medieval Warm Period, MWP) to support crops and herds in these northern climes. Then the Vikings deserted Greenland when it become colder.

    So, when the hockey stick was published and the MWP was nowhere to be seen, I had a surprised reaction, “How could that be?” It was soon obvious that there was a scam in progress, and it was steadily revealed that the scam was political and economic. This is a trillion dollar fraud, and Al Gore and accomplices have somehow subverted a large number of scientists and the UN to pull off the fraud.

    Still, it was no big deal to enlist the UN in the fraud. It was only seven years ago that the UN was central to the Oil-for-Food fraud, with payoffs in the billions of dollars while the Iraqi people, the supposed benefciaries of the Oil-for-Food program, were shortchanged in food, medical supplies, and health care. Many of the same players were principals in both frauds.

    When someone is obviously lying, it does not require a whole lot of analysis to verify and correct the fraud.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Iamfreezing Iamfreezing

      i couldnt have sais it better myself. No one is argueing whether thier is any warming or not, it is about man-made causes. The transition during the last millinia from much warmer temps than current ones to the little ice age were much faster than what is currently happening. Fossil fuel run technology didn't exist. Al Gore would have us believe that for 4 billion years our climate has been stable and only in the last 150 years has their been any change as that bogus hockey-stick graph tried to show. Besides, I have lived in Cleawater, Fl. for 13 years and I have never seen a two week period where we havent hit 60 degrees. I think god wanted to show the idiots in Copenhagen that climate and weather is beyond our ability to control.

  • jaydee

    Hro001,

    Check out this paper by German Physisists.

    http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0707/0707.116…

    Mind you, c_9 Doesn't believe a word of it.

    jd

  • rockland steel

    There would be far more room for the balancing of the scales garbage, if only one side in this debate was not demanding a vast shrinking of industrial output, higher standards of living and large transfers of economic wealth from the citizens of the this nation, to the United States treasury. All while we get to the bottom of things.__Mr. Coyne.. wait a minute? (first girl I banged was named coyne) spooky right? Anyway Andy, This artical is so trite, begging to sound reasonable and intellectual. It read like you were just trying to get the assigned amount of words tucked inside. I don't think what's needed in this political debate masquerading as science, is "a common understanding." When life death depends on the out come, what's needed is the truth Andy boy.

    • Sask Resident

      I wonder if Coyne reads any of these comments?

  • Chuck

    Follow the money trail folks. There's your motivation for global warming. 'nuff said.

  • http://www.21stcenturypolitics.com/ Umesh Patil

    Indeed this a good article and generally describes the predicament of non committed person in appropriate manner.

    Couple of thoughts:
    - We need some resolution here however; I suspect in political sense. I am not sure how far we can continue to have jamboree like Copenhagen all the time and this resolution obviously needs to be based on the fact that there is no 'global government' and UN way of doing things is practically broken.
    - Will there be any credible ways this can be addressed by Science? IPCC, I am not sure they have much credibility left.

  • rockland steel

    Darwin is settled science? his theory has more holes than al gore has yoddles. __The so called science of man made global warming is just politics. and the warmers are really just the last bastion of the communist movement. The so called greenhouse warming thesis is laughable, and against the laws of physics. But why let the laws of physics get in the way of that big ole grant money train? Why is Mars getting warm? Why do I, and three million other folks live on a glacier that was formed ten thousand years ago? Why is the U.S and the world haveing the coldest winter in thirty years? The hacked emails should give any honest person pause! Along with a true and lasting insight into the political/religious nature of this( tax payer funded) warming cult, the applications and defence of it's pseudoscience, and the length's that it's high priests will gladly travel in order to keep indoctranating the faithful while keeping that government green rolling in. __

  • Vicki Mruphy

    The real problem with this AGW fiasco is that Cap and Trade is set to be voted on and imposed upon our industries, making our ability to provide energy (nuclear is ignored!) and mandating that every truck will be declared obsolete.
    Are you folks in town aware that the grocery stores will be empty in 5 days if there are not constant trucked-in deliveries? Maybe you should park your tailpipes and hop on your bikes this weekend and load up at the distribution centers and stock up.
    Everybody's aware that Al Gore set himself up to the first beneficiary of every fee, fine and mandate of carbon emissions. And farmers and ranchers, who are really the ONLY ones who have the crops, orchards and woodland resources to actually sequester the carbon and convert it to oxygen get nothing except having to retrofit our tractors that only work about 5 months of the year so we can provide you all with food.
    Get REAL green, not stupid green!

  • Craig O

    Gah, that should be velocity vs. acceleration, not position vs. velocity. It's a Saturday…

  • Neil McMullen

    Let's try this one last time. If you look at the long term readings for CO2 in the atmosphere (not emmissions which is what your graph shows) you see an annual variation of a couple of percent every year which the warmists have attributed to plants absorbing and releasing CO2 for the growing season. So there are short-term movements in the measured atmospheric CO2 levels which have been in the measurements for decades. However the measured levels show no variation due to any of the economic events shown clearly in the emission data you cited.

    My estimate of the variation shown in the emissions series was from a high of 1150 in roughly 1930 to a low of 850 in roughly 1935. That's a 26 percent decline. Whether it's 18 or 26 is not the point. The point is that none of this translates to observable variations in the time series for atmospheric CO2 which in turn makes it very difficult to maintain that human activity is driving the long term rise in atmospheric CO2.

    • Craig O

      I'll say again – just because the rate of increase is smaller does not contradict, in any way, the trend that it is still increasing. A 26% decline, if it was that large, is only a decline in the amount we added that year, but it still means that we were adding to the level of atmospheric CO2.

      Again, velocity vs. acceleration. Just because acceleration is negative doesn't mean velocity is negative – human output is acceleration.

      As a way of driving home this point, if human CO2 output has no effect on total atmospheric CO2, how do you explain current levels, which are 100 ppm higher, or about 33% higher than any other time during the last 400 thousand years?

  • guestimation

    Professors at colleges across the US tend to not be taken too seriously out in the real world, but they do have a lot of time on hand to drive opinion on the internet. I think a big backlash is going to take place with the media, trial lawyers, and then liberal professors pushing radical agendas. Sort of like the up and down graph of temperatures throughout history.

  • Anon

    "I have spent many hours reading as much of the literature on either side as I can, and come away, as it were, serially convinced: first by one side, then the other."

    Sure you have. Still, let's see a bibliography, if anything. to find out what "two sides" you're talking about here. Only one side is doing actual science (whether it supports AGW or not), so maybe you're referring to another body of documented information altogether.

  • PeterB

    It is a well thought out piece. And well written. Personally, I think it is rather arrogant to put much stock in Global Warming as it's being presented to most of us. There is little question that human existence on earth produces green house gasses, mostly CO2, but also many others. The earth has existed more than an estimated 5 billion years. In that time, there have been seven mass extinctions; defined by scientists as the extinction of more than 50% of the plant or animal species in existence at the time. Humans, as we know them today have only lived here less than 6000 years; and has produced greenhouse gas ever since he emerged from caves and learned how to make fire. The earth will experience more mass extinctions for as long as the planet exists. The earth is now warming, but it will also cool, in cycles that we have little understanding of. To think that we are capable of destroying the planet is indeed an arrogant assumption, unproven by any science.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/dghkfhjfhjlga dghkfhjfhjlga

    when you say "you", who are you speaking of? certainly, it couldn't be me. are you speaking of the person that you're really vicariously arguing with, the one that you've attached to the pseudonym i'm using? i don't know whether to attack your arrogance or to be sympathetic to your delusions.

    the paper's grasp of physics isn't even almost correct. wolfgang pauli would have labeled it "not even wrong". the fact that it was written is simply an embarrassment to the institution that employs the guy and the fact that it got published is a black mark on the reputation of the journal that pushed it through. it's that bad. even the most well known dissenters have written it off as pseudo-science.

    once again, a counter-example has to disprove the claim to be a counter-example. this paper doesn't count as a counter-example because the author's views are easily deconstructed as completely wrong.

    think of it like this. i could claim that it's pretty much agreed that 2 + 2 = 4. now, somebody could write a paper that claims that 2 + 2 = 5. does that prove that the sum of 2 and 2 is unsettled? no, it proves that the guy that's arguing that 2 + 2 = 5 doesn't know how to add.

  • jaydee

    I'm sorry, you (being the person behind dghkfhjfhjlga) are only good at ridicule and offer nothing other than a psuedo to go with it, yet I am somehow to believe your assessment. NOT!

    Therefore you are not worth any more of my time.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/dghkfhjfhjlga dghkfhjfhjlga

    my aim and contribution was to explain to you why what you presented is not a counter example. i have done so sufficiently; if you'd rather sulk over the correction than recognize it's truth, that's your concern.

    as an aside, it would have taken you thirty seconds to fact check the article you posted. if you are to learn something from the experience, it's to take the time to verify the sources you present before you present them.

  • Fred Lightfoot

    Climate Scientists ? Railway engineers, mathematicians, politicians (with arts degrees ) these are you scientists, Dr. Phil Jones (UEA) has received 12,500,000 pounds in public funding for 'climate change' with that kind of money I could produce a real Martian

  • catlad

    For some comic relief check out the METS temp map of the world for late dec early jan.I live near ottawa ,according to them the winter has been 5 degrees above normal.How come it has not melted the snow i have had since dec 15?

  • Rolf

    I can state a very simple fact, the instrument record that global warming 'scientists' rely on is not sufficient for the 'theory' they propose. The only good data would be the satellite record as it is actually global and not point based. Obviously the problem with satellite data is that it does not extend far enough back to provide any type of historical record. The Vikings left Greenland when it got too cold to farm in the 1400's, sciences knowledge of the past, even relatively recent past is not complete. Now to predict the future of the earths climate when we can't even get a reasonable weather forecast in many cases borders on absurd. Climate change is about cash, cash for researchers and cash for developing or undeveloped nations to get for free as a wealth transfer.

  • Dennis

    regarding all of this, I am reminded of Hulk Hogan's astonishingly profound statement in Rocky III.
    "It's all FAKE meatball !"

  • James Halifax

    I think the best answer is usually the most concise and logical.

    What is the object most responsible for controlling the climate on Earth?

    1. Some Republican driving an SUV
    2. That big ball of burning hydrogen we see every day in the sky?

  • Roland

    Will someone please do the math for us? Pumping 100 million tons a day, each and every day, of human emissions with new and different chemical potential, into a quantitatively closed system, must have one or more consequences. sooner or later that cumulative consequence must move the balance point on a number of fronts, and in a measurable way. it cannot have no consequence.

    you can't keep adding sugar to a cup of coffee without eventually sweetening it.

    for example, the (new) tons of new material in the atmoshphere will either have a) no affect; b) could increase, or c) could decrease the propensity to retain heat (from the sun). which is it? how long before it is measurable? should we keep doing it? at what rate?

    for example, the tons of new material in the atmosphere will have: a)no affect; b) increase, or c) decrease the pH of the oceans. which is it? how long befofre it is measurable? what will be the consequences it we continue at the same level of emissions?

    seems to me there is some chemistry and math that needs doing. where are the engineers??

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/paulrevere101 paulrevere101

    http://www.infowars.com/carbon-traders-charged-in…
    Reuters
    January 12, 2010
    Three Britons and a Dutchman have been charged by Belgian authorities with money laundering in an investigation into fraudulent trading in carbon emissions permits, Belgian prosecutors said on Monday.
    The fraud occurs when carbon credits are bought and imported tax-free from other EU countries, then sold to domestic buyers, charging them value-added tax (VAT). The sellers then disappear without paying the tax to governments.
    The three Britons were arrested at the end of 2009 in the Belgian town of Tournai as part of an investigation into transactions worth some 3 million euros ($NZ5.8 million).
    A fourth suspect from the Netherlands was arrested on Sunday. Prosecutors would not disclose the names of those arrested.

  • Political Junkie

    Paulrevere is on a logical track. Follow the money!

    Below are a couple of articles that demonstrate how the world's two leading global climate change advocates are up to their necks in obvious conflicts of interest.

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/01/10/un-ipcc-chi…

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/03/business/energy…

    According to a recent study, the pro AGW folks are being funded annually by taxpayers to the tune of over $90 billion.

    The "climategate" investigations at East Anglia and Penn State are being conducted by insiders with an obvious interest in keeping the funding gravy train chugging along and in mainaining the reputations of their respective institutions intact. Look for a whitewash!

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