More on 'Science Set Free'
Challenge Bill's ideas? He'll reason with you, not mock you

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The 'Science Set Free' thread was wrapped up, when LR came across it and wanted to unwrap.  As y'know, we believe in free idea exchange.  - Jeff

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LR says,

After reading through this entire thread, I feel the imperative to be csiems cut-man.

Just a few simple points that I think he was making but I didn't feel were fully digested by a few in here.

-Scientific consensus doesn't mean you go around and take a poll on which scientists prefer vanilla ice cream over chocolate, and then if 85% prefer vanilla then vanilla is considered better than chocolate.

This whole fervor over "consensus" is missing the point. Scientific consensus refers to the positions reached via research and data collection, testing, retesting, retesting again, etc. If 97-98% of scientifically conducted climate change papers and studies over the last 3 years have yielded a conclusion through research and data collection that AGW is real and is happening, why are people bickering over certain terms like "deniers", and bickering about people not showing all their work and the numbers for the temp in 1880 and so on. For crying out loud, spend an afternoon reading up on the stuff. Why should he have to do your work for you. This is 2014, the information is literally seconds away, and it is everywhere. Take 3 or 4 hours and really acquaint yourself with some of the reasons that climate change is an overwhelmingly accepted theory in the scientific community. Read some of the rebuttals to climate change, then read some of the rebuttals to those rebuttals.

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-The reason people mock climate change deniers isn't because we come from a position of uncertainty, it's because achieving a position of relative certainty is fairly straight forward and doesn't take much time and effort. It's the same reason new earth Creationists get laughed off the stage. Imagine, that, if every time a NEC started rambling about his/her beliefs, a scientist would have to take the time to explain, in detail, exactly why their position is intellectually bankrupt.

Why do you think other scientists thought it was a bad idea when Bill Nye debated Ken Hamm? Were they shaking in their boots because their position stood on shaky ground?

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The reasons for accepting climate change as real and a serious threat to the Earth and humanity are vast and scientifically stated, peer reviewed, retested, and agreed upon by over 95% of climate scientists. It is a 95% certainty, which is funny because that's the same confidence given by science that cigarettes kill people. For real. This isn't a "debate". Unless you think there is a debate to be had over whether cigarettes can kill you.

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Dr. D says,

It is strange that you equate a 97% vote to --- > a repeatable study (p

Supposing you were right about the 97% consensus (and you're almost certainly not).  What about the 3% expert vote?  What about the literate, trained scientists who hold the minority view?  Do you dismiss them with a wave of your hand, LR?

Or do you ask both sides to make their case ... and then base YOUR belief on YOUR evaluation of the issue?  That's whose head you are responsible for.  Your own.  That's all you get.  Your own brain, not mine.  Your beliefs and convictions should not be based on blind faith, but on reasoned faith.

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Surely you are aware that scientific consensuses change over time?   

  • Tectonic theory vs fixed continents
  • Lamarckian evolution (and now Darwinian evolution)
  • N-Rays
  • Einstein's non-expanding universe
  • Cold fusion
  • etc etc -- 1,000s or millions of examples exist

 

I'm not quibbling here.  Ask Dr. Grumpy or Dr. Gaffney how fast consensus can change in their fields?

The doctrine of Global Warming is important to people politically.  There is a surge of support for accepting experts' assurances and then shutting down debate.  Wikipedia's (liberal) page on "scientific consensus" makes a very short statement that consensus is great, and then directly talks about Global Warming.

People TELL us that the consensus for Global Warming is 97%.  Here is a peer-reviewed paper that counts up the papers, and finds actually less than 1% consensus.  

Here is a survey by the peer-reviewed Organization Studies - reported by Forbes - in which only 36% of scientists responding, not 97%, buy the party line.  A strong majority of the 1,077 respondents believe that Global Warming is not human caused AND that it is not a serious problem for the future.  MOST SCIENTISTS IN THIS SURVEY REGARD THE ISSUE AS NOT SETTLED.

How do I know what the consensus really is?  I know one scientist who's studied it -- SABRMatt -- and he's not one of the 97%.  So I'm 0/1.  ;- )

But, again, I wouldn't decide based on Matt's recommendation.  I would decide after evaluating the case for and the case against.  I don't care enough to do so, and so I don't have a position on Global Warming.

(For those interested in a look behind Wikipedia's agenda scene and "guerrilla editors" problem though, see this page, Wikipedia We Have a Problem.  It very concisely demonstrates that Wikipedia is dominated by bigoted editor "teams" with a far-left agenda.  Jimmy Wales explicitly signs off on these tactics, with gusto.

Here's a chilling page in which a neutral Wiki editor looked into the Rupert Sheldrake problem and found that the goal of Wikipedia's NOPV "teams" is to make "fringe" advocates "mockable."  The word that csiems started this discussion with:  "mocking" as a desirable way to deal with unorthodox views.)

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You believe that rich fat (Judeo-Christian) Americans are becoming the death of the "fragile" planet Earth?  Make your case.  Without reference to vote.

Should be easy, right?  

Ask me to make my case that cigarettes cause emphysema, or that Jesus was inspired, and I won't get annoyed that you disagree.  I'll happily make my case, and briefly.  Challenge my position and I'll reason with you, not mock you.

"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough" - Einstein.

Ask me to make my case for animal psi, which I'm convinced is a normal (not paranormal) phenomenon, and I'll post two controlled experiments that the referee will agree are virtually airtight.

.......

There is a lot of value in consensus.  It points our thoughts in certain directions and streamlines our own thinking and research.  Knowledge must accumulate.

The problem comes when you ASK for the data, and they tell you "You're an idiot to ask."

Regards,

Jeff

 

Comments

1

Here are some Hey Bills from Sept. 2014.  Those are behind the paywall (as opposed to the last several Hey Bills), but I doubt he'll mind on this one.
He's more articulate than I am.  Sometimes you just gotta hand over the mike. :- )  .... emphasis added.
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Bill, so should people believe the experts on climate change who say global warming is real?
Asked by: Steve9753
Answered: 9/9/2014
Not because they are experts, no. You should believe them if they produce information or arguments that you find persuasive. But to believe them BECAUSE THEY ARE EXPERTS--absolutely not.
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Hey Bill, I'm glad that Steve9753 brought up climate science experts, as I had the same thought. In a well-watched "Last Night with John Oliver" clip from the other week, the host created a 97 vs 3 scientist "debate" on climate change, to emphasize how many experts agree with the consensus on global warming, and how few are "climate deniers." As a scientist, this made me sad. There are many reasons to believe in climate change, but having experts vote seems like a terrible way to it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjuGCJJUGsg
Asked by: moscow25
Answered: 9/10/2014
It is. The people who keep telling us how many "climate scientists" agree that this is a settled issue just fundamentally do not understand what science is or how it works. Every time they say that, they are revealing massive ignorance.
It isn't "consensus" that settles scientific disputes; it is clear and convincing evidence. An issue is settled in science when evidence is brought forward which is so clear and compelling that everyone who looks at the evidence comes to the same conclusion.
Consensus does not compel agreement in science; rather, evidence compels consensus. The issue is NOT whether scientists agree; it is whether the evidence is compelling.
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Don't you think there's a pretty fine distinction between showing experts "respect" and showing them "deference"? In five months, you won't remember which one you insisted they deserve and which one you said they didn't deserve a bit of. I think this is all about skepticism, and the need for it. You seem to want people to be far more skeptical about "experts," and I agree, but skepticism is taken too far when someone is shown reason after reason, expert after expert, and still refuses to budge off his gut instinct. That isn't skepticism, it's stubbornness and ignorance disguising itself as skepticism.
Asked by: 337
Answered: 9/8/2014
And endless list of experts testifying to falsehood is no more impressive than one.
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Hey, Bill, thanks you for clear answer to your question about experts. To me, the nugget of what you wrote is that people need to recognize what they don't know, and too often, they don't. The best scientific compliment I ever got was at a conference, where somebody stood up in response to my answer that I didn't understand the basis of an observation I'd been talking about, and said "You have the good grace to be puzzled by things you don't understand." It certainly seems that you do, too. It's a good trait.
Asked by: flyingfish
Answered: 9/7/2014
Well, I appreciate that, but I think that I didn't quite finish the answer I should have given you.
Expertise is antithetical to science, because it assumes that unanswered questions should be answered by experts, rather than that gaps in our knowledge should be filled in by research.
No doubt I have a personal prejudice on this issue, because, for the first ten years of my career, I was constantly told that what I had to say was of no value because I was not an expert. I would say, for example, that the won-lost record of a pitcher was unreliable because some pitchers get 6 runs a game to work with and others 3 ... and then the mainstream reporters would say that Bill James doesn't know what he is talking about because he didn't play the game, and the people who have played the game all know that the won-lost record is what counts for a pitcher because the purpose of the game is to win, not to have a low ERA, and the experts all know that the run support evens out over the course of the year.
I would try to respond that "of course I am not an expert, but the facts are the facts." So this is how I think about it, that an expert is a person who believes whatever the community of experts believe, whether that happens to be true or whether it happens to be complete nonsense.
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[Separate Q and A]
But I have a point, too. The evolution of knowledge is greatly impeded by reliance on experts. In crime stories, for example, veteran policemen are allowed to get on the stand and say things that are just absolutely ridiculous, and they're taken seriously because they're experts.
For a hundred years, expert witnesses in psychology would get on the stand in murder trials and just make [slop] up, invent diagnoses that had no standing in legitimate psychology; still happens, to an extent. .
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I don’t think steve161 was being cute (he’s an attractive man in his 70s, but hardly what I’d call cute) in defining “expert” as he did—the shrinks who testify in the shameful ways you note aren’t respected WITHIN their fields.
Asked by: 337
Answered: 9/8/2014
Until the 1980s they were WORSHIPPED within their fields. They were lionized. They were celebrated.
Yes, we have moved past that now in terms of expert testimony in criminal trials; a psychological expert who gave the type of testimony now that was routinely given in criminal trials in the late 1970s would be at risk of prosecution. But this is merely one example among millions, and perhaps a poorly chosen one on my part.
Every field of knowledge is plagued by experts, and the community of experts in every case adopts a set of beliefs which includes a lot of nonsense. The nonsense which is adopted and endorsed by experts becomes a barrier through which the truth cannot pass without great struggle.
Expertise defends itself by moving its failings into the past—all the while adopting new blind spots as egregious as the old. When I was young, scientists almost universally believed that cruelty to animals in the name of science was acceptable. Literally thousands of dogs were killed every year (and dozens or hundreds of chimpanzees) by scientists who were performing experiments on them—often useless and trivial experiments, but the way that scientists thought about it at that time was that it was so important to add to the store of human knowledge that this outweighed the cultural norms that otherwise prohibited these kind of actions. Science was important, and if it killed a few dogs. . . well, there are lots of stray dogs; that’s what the dog pound is for.
Psychologists, when I was young, would quite commonly call a group of us young people into a room and just flat out lie to us, telling us that they were studying A when in reality they were studying R or X; in fact, that was the accepted protocol of psychological studies at that time. ...A certain number of these psychological experiments were actually damaging to the subjects being studied, but the more common and more immediate damage was that college students learned to think of psychologists as creepy people who operated by lies and tricks. .
... But my point is, these were not PHONY experts, who killed dogs for no real reason or who lied to college students as a part of their normal protocol; these were LEGITIMATE experts. These were the standard practices of the time.
What protected those practices? What made them common? Faith in experts.
There are always normal practices, in every field of expertise, that we are dimly aware are not right. In every field of knowledge that I know anything about, there are these.. . .these horrible blind spots, which protect and defend cruelty and ignorance, and when you trace back how these blind spots develop, you will always find that what protects them is faith in the experts; the experts say that it’s OK, so it’s OK.
Faith in expertise causes knowledge to evolve much more slowly than knowledge could evolve or would evolve if people would simply learn to say to themselves that “I am as good as they are. My thoughts on this issue are as valid as the experts are.” Experts deserve respect as experts, but not deference; we are right when we are right, and we are wrong when we are wrong.
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Hey Bill, I have enjoyed reading your views on experts. It reminds me of an old (1978, I see) Saturday Night Live skit with Steve Martin called "Medieval Barber." Martin's titular character is presented with an ailing peasant.
He reacts: "Well, I'll do everything humanly possible. Unfortunately, we barbers aren't gods. You know, medicine is not an exact science, but we are learning all the time. Why, just fifty years ago, they thought a disease like your daughter's was caused by demonic possession or witchcraft. But nowadays we know that Isabelle is suffering from an imbalance of bodily humors, perhaps caused by a toad or a small dwarf living in her stomach."
We forget sometimes we don't know what we don't know.
Asked by: deberly
Answered: 9/12/2014
Thanks. People also forget how good Steve Martin was, when he was good.
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Hey, Bill, your stand on "experts" has bothered me for a long time.  ... To me, an expert is someone who knows a lot about something.
You and baseball, for example. You know a great deal  ... You don't have to go deep into BJOL to see people asking questions of you, the expert, and you, the expert, answering them. Seems to me that's as it should be.
So is your problem with "experts" who think they are infallible, can't be questioned? Who think their expertise is transferable to other topics? Who are just arrogant? What?
Asked by: flyingfish
Answered: 9/6/2014
The problem is with the assumption that expertise creates reliability in knowledge.
An expert speaking about something which is known, established, has been studied. .certainly that expert is vastly more likely to be correct than is a novice, or even a moderately knowledgeable person. If you asked me or an aviation expert, for example, whether a given airplane could fly 1,000 miles on 200 gallons of gas, I would have a 50% chance to be right, and a 50% chance to be wrong. A moderately knowledgeable person might have a 95% chance to be right, but a 5% chance to be wrong. An expert might have a 100% chance to be right, particularly if he consults his charts.
But if the expert projects his expertise beyond the range of what is actually known, his chance of being right is not appreciably different from any other knowledgeable person.
Treating myself as an expert, for example. . . if you ask me whether a given young pitcher could successfully move to the bullpen, I would be no more likely to be correct about that than would the guy who won your fantasy league last year. When it comes to speculation (or the projection of knowledge outside one's field), the expert has no meaningful advantage over any other knowledgeable person, and only a moderate advantage over a novice.
The problem with "experts" is that so many people fail to understand this, and consequently will treat the opinion of the expert with much more deference than is appropriate. This is the process by which fictions, superstitions and intellectual malware becoming embedded in a field.
The doctors become convinced that they "know" something, and they teach whatever it is that they know to young doctors, and the young doctors teach it to their patients until it becomes something that everybody knows, only it was never true. (Paragraph) Our society is rife with these false beliefs, these . . .fictions, or whatever. Every field has them, precisely like the belief that athletes peak at ages 28 to 32, or the belief that good managers win the one-run games, or the belief that the on-deck hitter "protects" the batter at the plate; people know these things because they know them, but they're not true. Expertise is the shell that protects these nuggets of fake wisdom. That is the problem with experts.

2

I respect the debate, but I have been reluctant to join for primarily two reasons. I have no technical expertise in climate science, unlike SABRMatt and I my opinion roughly splits the difference between csiems and Dr. D. Despite my caveats, here I am weighing in nonetheless.
Csiems made a critical point I fully support; the evidence cannot always be easily summarized and the technical experts are often poorly able to provide the best summaries. They have committed their lives to becoming experts. I can assure you after twenty years in research, I have lost contact with my prior ignorance. Communication is only effective when it starts from a place of shared knowledge and moves to the audience forward. Sometimes the key issues don't have a place of common knowledge and sometimes the expert has lost track of the appropriate starting point for the conversation. Poor and difficult communication should not be confused with intentional obfuscation and unsupported agenda mongering.
None of the prior paragraph should be viewed as acquiescence to authority. Skepticism is the lifeblood of research, but often times the edge of research does not make contact with widely shared knowledge. The technical viability of quantum computers is very much a point of debate, but the layman likely cannot participate in the debate.
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On the topic of climate change, a reasonable skeptic should question our ability to model climate. That is how I see myself a reasonable skeptic. My life experience tells me, we cannot predict weather, just like we could not predict the economic collapse of 2009. The trained scientist in me does not dismiss the obvious upward trend in global temperature. I fully accept that climate is a local phenomena and consequently it is challenging to get a 'global' temperature, but I do not think climate scientists are trying to hide the truth. That plot from NASA that csiems linked is an honest attempt to get it correct. Doesn't make it correct, but my experience tells me we dismiss the date at our own peril.
So in the eyes of a trained novice, I would say the temperature is rising, human contributions likely matter, and we don't have the ability to predict the future with any likelihood of success.
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So does this mean the proponents of strong government driven reductions in carbon dioxide emissions are using spurious science to drive a political agenda? While the answer must be yes for some, I think this general position misses the mark by a lot. In the end this is a policy question, not a science question. If you believe the planet is warming (which it should be noted the majority of scientists polled in the Forbes article claimed to believe), isn't it reasonable to ask whether or not we should do anything in response? Doing nothing could be a reasonable response, but not addressing the question is not a reasonable response. If you believe the planet is warming and ignoring it could lead to significant political and economic strife, it is reasonable to consider government intervention. That is what a progressive would do. I'm not a progressive, so that is not what I would do, but that doesn't make progressives political hacks.
In the end, I think the planet is warming and I think people have made a big contribution. I'd put the odds on that side at 60/40. Frankly, I think the genie is out of the bottle, and we're never getting it back in, so focusing on reduced carbon dioxide emissions is a fools errand. Again, doesn't make me right, just an educated guess. So if I were King of the world I would be investing in agriculture in Canada and Russia and figuring out how to deal with the consequences of global warming rather than trying to deny it or prevent it. Just an educated guess.

3

... and you just did so.  Thanks Dr. K.
To the extent that people (like you) are concerned about caring for the Earth, I'm with them.  To the extent that the agenda is driven by anti-Americanism, I resist them.
I suspect that among SCIENTISTS there is much less agenda, and much more "skepticism in our ability to model climate" and to predict future global weather.  Agreed.
 

4

I realize that you might not have the time or inclination to respond.  It's all good.  For the benefit of the discussion generally, thought ...
Dr. K, you seem to be saying that you detect little anti-Americanism in the global warming reporting done by the media and by the Democratic Party.  Is that what you're saying?  ...
Personally, I don't think that's a worthwhile debate.  Must not have been your implication.
 

5

I agree that it can be tedious or difficult to articulate why (for example) science is questioning Darwinian evolution.  But:
1.  There are things I am expert in.  When others challenge me on those issues -- at a fine-grain detail level -- I don't mock them.  I try to reason with them.  I lay out a (freshman-level) bullet list overview, and then they ask a question, and then I answer.  Lather, rinse, repeat.
2.  "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough."  I believe I could state a bullet-point OVERVIEW as to why I believe ANYTHING I believe.  Perhaps I'm mistaken.
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Here's a Krauthammer article discussing the "Totalitarian" approach by the left wing to shut down non-PC discussion.  If you didn't detect this "mocking" approach even by csiems and LR, I think you scanned too quickly.  ;- )   Dr. D didn't invent the term "political correctness."
The discussion isn't really about global warming (although that is fine).  It is about characterizing other points of view as stupid ("mocking" them to get rid of them).  And then exploiting the fact that only your side can talk.
Regards,
Jeff

6

Naturally, if the planet is warming, we should consider responding.  But what if the cost is $2.2 trillion and 600,000 U.S. jobs over the next 20 years, and unilateral U.S. action will change the situation very little?
You personally don't pay $100,000 per year to insure your house against meteor strikes.   There has to be some effort to put costs in proportion.  But!  When *I* have discussed this with global warming 97-percenters :- ) they resent this suggestion.  They want to shut down such discourse.
I haven't seen any calm debate on how much we should spend, and where, and why.  I just perceive people as trying to shout me down when I bring up the question.  CS and LR seemed to begin to do so also, although we didn't get far into it at all.  Maybe that's just me?
 

7

Of how presenting evidence and facts effectively and in understandable ways can change the world, as it changed his little corner of it. Like James and baseball, there is a small but very significant and worthy opposition to climate orthodoxy. I want to hear what they have to say and I want them engaged in the debate. I don't want them dismissed and mocked, like the ID movement is unfairly tarred as a creationist movement, and worthy scientists are denied a seat at the table for wandering off the reservation.

8

Once we move from the question of whether the planet is warming and if yes why to the question of what to do with the information at a policy level, the discussion becomes a political one. I believe in democracy, so I don't think the educated elite should be allowed to dictate policy.
Scientist, like many that participate in politics, make claims of authority to control the debate and better enhance the chances of getting what they want. Scientists are more inclined to do this because we tend to think we know better and get frustrated and dismissive when people don't follow.

9

If I were to try and synthesize your argument to a sentence -- a long winded, but singular sentence -- it would be, "I don't want to trust, I want to understand and make-up my own mind, and when people effectively tell me I am too dumb to understand by making claims to authority, rather than reasoned arguments, I suspect they are hiding something." To the extent this is your point, I agree with you except for the part that hints at conspiracy. For climate policy at least, the agenda is clear on all sides and having an agenda and fighting for it is not suspect in and of itself for me. Exxon has a climate policy agenda too, they are advocates for their agenda, but it doesn't mean their agenda is suspect or wrong.
I believe Americans spying on the US are anti-American. I don't think any side of the climate policy debate is anti-American. I don't think neo-conservatives are anti-American. I don't think Barbara Lee was anti-American for opposing the war in Afghanistan. I don't think social security is anti-American. I don't think military contractors are anti-American. I think we are all Americans trying to shape America's future. When we disagree about what the future should be, we should avoid mocking and dismissing one another. And we should avoid name calling. I often see questioning people's patriotism as a form of name calling.

10

It implies a vast hush-hush communication network that is implausible.  
However, as to whether there is an 'unwritten rules' code that is understood at most universities, whether they are going to let 'cranks' like Sheldrake have the microphone ... :- )  that's different.  This code exists because university profs and media elites are a pretty strong political demographic.
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Spying on the U.S. anti-American?  Sure, in the abstract.  ... For all I know, the Bushes are part of the Illuminati.  It wouldn't surprise me an iota to discover that Republican President X was the most evil man who ever walked the earth.
However, the concept of "Patriotism" is a lot more appreciated in the flyover states.  Correct?   On the left, a "New World Order" paradigm is much more pervasive.  That's what I'm talking about when I'm talking about the New York Times' "anti-American" sentiment.  During the Gulf War, they were perceptibly rooting for Saddam Hussein.
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Thanks for your reasoned replies Dr. K.

11

I feel smarter after having gone through his site and his ways of thinking.  :- )
As to the tolerance, much appreciated.  As to the ID position (shared by Einstein in the abstract and many Nobel winners explicitly), well said Rick.  And great last sentence!

12
jellison's picture

Good discussion. Full disclosure: I have a Ph.D. in Chemistry. I am not a climate scientist, but I have followed the topic with great interest for the last 25 years.
As an undergrad, I was lectured in thermodynamics by Sherwood Rowland. Dr. Rowland won a Nobel prize for his discovery that chlorofluorocarbons were destroying the ozone. By the time I took his class, he was spending much of his time in DC working on a political solution to a grave environmental threat. Dr. Rowland's discovery was based upon gas phase kinetics studies of the reaction (in his lab) intended to model the chemistry occurring in the earth's ozone layer. When he presented his work to the world he was mocked. Industry had shown that CFCs were inert (much safer than ammonia as a refrigerant) and there was no data to support Rowland's theory that CFCs had any impact at all on the upper atmosphere. It just so happened that NASA already had a satellite collecting ozone data over one of the poles. NASA scientist were flummoxed by their observations showing dramatic reductions in ozone. The NASA scientists held the data for two years believing it flawed until Rowland gave them their explanation. That combination of data incited debate and further studies. Science quickly reached a consensus that CFCs were a threat to the ozone layer, and so a threat to the environment/ecosystems that humans have evolved to survive within. Dr. Rowland died 2 years ago. In his life time, he made a major scientific discovery, convinced the scientific community he was right, convinced politicians and industry the world over to change their behavior, and lived to see the ozone hole begin to shrink. Brilliant. Problem solved. We all should be so lucky to live such a satisfying and productive life.
In grad school I worked one lab over from an electrochemist who was editor of the journal that published the cold fusion paper by Ponds and Fleischmann. I remember the day that they submitted their paper for publication. Scientists are a skeptical bunch. In short order everyone reviewed the paper, set up their own apparatuses, collected their own data, debated the results, and a consensus developed. This work was no good and the paper would need to be retracted. This was not a failure of the process. In this case the scientific process worked - convincingly and in short order. Are there scientists who believe in cold fusion today? Yes. Are they right? Very likely not. Can science say that they are wrong? No, but that is not the point. As scientists they are obligated to show that they are most likely right. Put up or shut up. And if they continue to commit time and resources to this problem, it's on them if they die broke, lonely, and forgotten.
Ditto for the N-ray story. The process worked and a consensus developed in short order.
In the 90s Judah Folkmann discovered VEGF, a protein that induces angiogenesis and is associated with diseases such as hemangiomas (a killer of babies), macular degeneration, and certain cancers. He published his important discovery, but others could not replicate the results. Other scientist began to doubt him. Dr. Folkmann went to their labs and reproduced, in front of the doubtful scientists, his results. A consensus developed. Industry started generating VEGF antagonists to reduce unwanted angiogenesis in those who need to. The scientific process worked, and Folkmann's discovery is now saving lives.
So what's the deal with climate change? Svante August Arrhenius was the first to suggest that changes in CO2 levels could lead to a green house effect (back in 1896). Over the last 20 years we've seen the investment in climate science produce valuable and tangible results (the effect of aerosols on radiant energy striking the earth, the effect of jet trails, quantification of carbon taken up into plants, quantification of carbon taken up into soils, quantification of carbon taken up into oceans, the effect of sun spots, the impact of plate tectonics on carbon cycling, etc.). To my thinking, the most important of these is our improved understanding of earth's climate history (CO2 levels and temperatures), for which we now have numerous sources of self consistent data stretching back millions of years.
Each of these studies has contributed to improving climate models (in silico). We only have one earth, so making informed conclusions at the macro level about what is really going on is all about the quality of these models. That said, I don't believe that there is any dispute among scientists regarding the following observations: (i) levels of CO2 in the atmosphere are higher today than at any time during the existence of homo sapiens; (ii) as a result of increasing concentrations of dissolved CO2, oceans are more acidic today than they have been in the last 15 million+ years; and (iii) animal and plant populations are shifting their range in response to recent changes in climate. Keep in mind that these are data points, not data interpretation. Are these CO2 levels driving climate change? Most scientist would say it is more likely than not that the current CO2 levels are driving climate change (i.e., we are at the leading edge of some rather significant change). Is the climate change a threat to humans? If humans evolved to survive in an ecosystem adapted for a particular climate, and that climate is now becoming something different from anything experienced previously by homo sapiens - yeah, that is a fairly serious threat (i.e., a threat that goes far beyond the loss of a few islands and polar bears, unfortunate symptoms of a larger pathology).
Should I care that if climate scientists have reached a general consensus on this issue? Yes, you should. As I said before, scientists are a skeptical bunch. The suggestion that CO2 levels were driving climate change was hotly contested and challenged in the scientific community for a long long time. It should be worrying to us non-climate scientists that increasing amounts of data are pushing the scientific community to the conclusion that this is a real problem.
But didn't Einstein say that "if you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough"? Yes, he did, but I believe that what he meant was the basic concept should be simple, even if the details and implications are not. The simple explanation/observation was put forth by Arrhenius back in 1896. The details behind the simple explanation are the real science. Those details involve in silico modelling and math, and (as we all know) math is hard. And the modelling is complex enough that scientists have been hamstrung by shortages in computing power. So, no - the details of these models will never be a "simple" explanation to me, you, are any one else watching from the sidelines.
But isn't it true that "you personally don't pay $100,000 per year to insure your house against meteor strikes... There has to be some effort to put costs in proportion"? Generally speaking, this isn't a question of science, this is a question of economics and politics. That said, your statistics are way way off here. Most scientists (if not all) would agree that the risk of your house being struck by a meteor is infinitesimally small, so much so that your insurer would gladly add it to the policy free of charge. The scientific consensus on climate change is telling me something very very different about the likelihood of climate change. Industry is now building this risk into their business models. They are doing this not to appease left wing granola munching earth biscuit fools. But rather because this is serious business and serious people are taking it seriously. And the serious people with lots of money are refusing to ignore the potential cost of climate change and the risk society might fail to act.
Science is the search for immutable truths. None of us get to escape the truths, whether we accept them or not. The better approach is to weigh the risks and try to prepare yourself for what is likely to come.
From my perspective, this is no longer a debate about science or scientific method, it's about economics, politics, and (in some cases) religion. That is to say, the scientists have done their part in identifying and evaluating the risk and society now needs to decide what, if anything, needs to be done to manage the risk. Can science do more? Yes, and left to its own devices it will do more. The models will improve, more data will be collected, and the value of various interventions evaluated. Science has been working this problem for quite some time. There will never be 100% certainty. Science does not work that way. The question for scientists should never be whether climate change is proven and beyond reproach. Rather, we should ask climate scientists whether it is more likely than not that CO2 levels are driving climate change. Then, go ask an economist how society should manage that risk.
WARNING: THE FOLLOWING MAY CAUSE OFFENSE - IT IS NOT INTENDED TO DO SO.
My impression is that the "deniers" contest the science as a straw man for the position that nothing should be done. I believe that this position is intellectually indefensible (absent some really surprising new data - but there hasn't been any), and absolutely critical to any argument that no action should be taken.
The next rung on the ladder is untenable: "well, yes, the climate is changing, but changing human behavior will likely provide no meaningful benefit." This position may have merit, but is fatalistic and without hope. I have known people dying of cancer who refused to stop smoking as it was too late to provide any health benefit and they did not wish to experience the burden of withdrawal in their final days. Notably, this next rung on the ladder dramatically shifts the evaluation of the risk. That is, if one were to concede we are all on a path to hell in a hand basket, should we not take drastic action, even if that action only gave us a 20% chance of avoiding hell?
I do not believe that those who challenge the underlying science are being intellectually sincere. I believe that they are being wishful, and have adopted the only position that permits them to defend taking no action at this time.
BRIGHT SPOTS IN CLOSING:
(I) The pain associated with reorganizing the energy sector appear to be over blown. For example, Germany's investment in solar has created an economy of scale that has made solar an economically viable alternative in the US (http://www.economist.com/debate/days/view/1036). Also, power companies are increasingly switching to natural gas to fuel their electricity plants, driven by low prices and forecasts of vast supplies for years to come (http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB2000142405274870357980457544168391...). This shift from coal to natural gas will reduce carbon emissions in the US significantly in the near term.
(II) The data for and against climate change will just keep coming. We are now the experiment, and we will experience any changes first hand. So like all questions of science, this one will finally be put to rest. My guess is sooner rather than later, and not without some serious pain and suffering.
(III) I predict that items I and II will soften political opposition to workable solutions. We recently read an article on SSI about the economic of the tragedy of the common. It's that kind of problem - economically speaking.
My two cents on this issue.
Regards,
Jeff Ellison

13

Everyone has an agenda. Believing that there is no agenda in any movement of people is the same as believing that humans are inherently perfectible by government fiat. If you really believe that there is no agenda at all when a scientists hammers on about the worst possible consequences of human-induced global warming, then you also believe utopia is possible. And I cannot talk to you, because our beliefs are not reconcilable.
All humans have an agenda. Most of them, the AGW-proponents in climate science included, have a simple agenda, not a conspiratorial one. They want to MAKE MONEY. They want power in their university - security - long term stability for their families. And they'll do whatever research the government is willing to pay for to get that power and security. That. Is. A. Fact. That's not my opinion. That is just straight up common sense drawn from my experience watching them in the halls of Stony Brook...watching the AGW movement draw them all up in the hot pursuit of money.
They may also earnestly believe, thanks to studying the problem, that humans have created a significant global warming (most of them probably do), but there's a reason they don't spend any real time asking skeptical questions and pursuing other lines of research that might challenge the status quo arguments. They all know...and it was dramatically revealed in the climategate email exchanges and in my personal communications with climate scientists I deeply respected, despite our disagreement on the issue of climate change, that global climate models are *******TERRIBLE******** science. I cannot emphasize that word enough. The climate models we are using to form economic policies that prevent America from becoming energy independent and more secure against terrorism and recession are absolute GARBAGE. And everyone in climate science is at least dimly aware of it. I attended a talk each week for five years...and I still remember one such talk given by a scientist from NASA Goddard's climate modeling unit. She was trying to show the possible feedback impact of black carbon dust accumulating on Arctic ice. She developed the usual tuning methods and ran a series of 100 year climate simulations that were half reconstruction of known climate from the last several decades and half a projection. She got the usual warming trend and semi-accurate trend replication from the known data. Then she added black carbon feedbacks. The forecast PLUMMETED by 15 degrees in the space of three years (!) of the simulation. As though adding black carbon to the arctic ice were the same as Yellowstone blowing up. LOL These climate models we're all relying on...they...know...NOTHING...about climate. Not one gosh darned thing that can help us make a climate projection accurately.
We can't even agree as to whether the models are right that increasing CO2 will lead to increasing water vapor in the atmosphere. The models say this feedback should already have been happening but the satellite data says it has not been...not for 40 years of global warming. And if increasing C)2 does not increase water vapor...human induced global warming cannot be worth more than a degree C per doubling of CO2 and is therefore not a problem worth worrying about! Thisw is fundamental, foundational stuff that climate scientists, despite their blustering publicly about the consensus and the certainty and the need for action, all dimly know has not been settled
I'll close this rant by stating one more time - everyone has an agenda, and it's usually money. Willie Soon gets paid millions by Exxon and friends...(he's a prominent skeptic)...but what skeptics get paid is absolutely DWARFD by what alarmists get paid by governments. I don't believe the scientists are conspiring for a political outcome...but I believe GOVERNMENTS are...by handing out money to scientists desperately seeking it (and power and influence) to research only those lines that empower government to further regulate our lives in the name of saving the planet. And if you don't see the possible danger of government funded science drifting into policy-making...you have too much faith in your government.

14

And the 'Climategate' reference is a good reminder to me that explicit "collaboration" is more plausible than I usually give it credit for.
I vaguely remember an interesting discovery by mainstream researchers that would pertain to Intelligent Design ....  in biology or physics, forget which, and a professor's hacked email saying, "Keep this out of your text because the creationists will get ahold of it."  The point isn't that a million emails then circulate, informing everybody of The Plan -- the point is that the university profs tend to be "in" on this unwritten rule.  
Textbook EDITORS, like Wikipedia editors, tend to be monolithic in their POV also.
.........
I went to college.  I personally remember the anthropologist profs arguing like lawyers that fossil evidence should persuade any reasonable person that hominids moved in the classic direction.  Virtually every word they said was in an attempt to persuade, not inform.  I was on their side at the time, and was thinking, "Who is on the other side of this argument?!" that the whole class should be a defense-attorney presentation.
.........
Very provocative, your idea that scientists don't pursue skeptical inquiry - because "all" of them "know" that climate modeling is dubious science.  That has the ring of truth to me, though I'm not in a position to verify it.  Thanks for the cogent and specific detail points in support.
Just an outstanding post.  :: golfclap ::

15

Thrilled you are posting Dr. Ellison!  :- )  Thanks for that.  As with Matt, you provide fascinating detail-level support for your position.  Perhaps you and he will exchange ideas for our benefit.
.......
You use the examples of cold fusion and N-rays to assert that "the process worked and a consensus developed in short order."  You then say that those on the other side of climate change are intellectually dishonest.
The thrust of your argument seems to be that cold fusion and N-Rays, and by implication all other such examples of consensus reversal, were never really consensuses.
Are you saying that scientific consensus does not change after it has been widely agreed upon?  That for a scientist to challenge the consensus is inappropriate?
........
Was it inappropriate for Einstein to challenge Newton's Laws?  Would it be inappropriate to challenge relativity now?
Of COURSE the 'process will work' and truth will win out EVENTUALLY.  From Matt's point of view this IS the process:  the current debate on climate change.

16

The Earth used to be much warmer. North America was divided into Laramidia and Appalachia with places like Texas and Nevada were entirely underwater. There used to be iguanas in Alaska. At that time, the late Cretaceous Period, there was no such thing as polar ice caps.

In 2011, we saw the main island in Japan, Honshu, move 8 feet in one day. For comparison, Honshu is about 15 percent larger than Washington State.

The point is that extreme changes to the Earth can happen quite suddenly. The theory that the Earth is warming and the ice might melt is not farfetched.

Scientists are worried CO2 concentration in the atmosphere can rise from the current 300 something ppm to 500 ppm.

The Cretaceous Period is believed to have CO2 at 1000 ppm. The Earth record for CO2 concentrations is 7000 ppm in the Precambrian era.

During the Cretaceous, era, the Earth appears to have been a very habitable place.

It would be very disruptive if all the ice melted but fears about this causing human extinction seem unwarranted.

Just noodling.

17

This next piece may cause offense, but I don't mean it to...but anyone who disagrees with me is clearly a liar pursuing wishful thinking.
Yep. Sums up my view of the AGW alarmist crowd rather well.
I'd exchange ideas with you as Dr. D suggests, but when your starting assumption about me is that I'm a liar or willfully ignoring facts, I don't really see the point.

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jellison's picture

It's never inappropriate to challenge the prevailing view. In fact, I believe that most major discoveries are made by looking at an old problem from a non-traditional perspective. However, it's worth asking who has the burden of proof in this process.
The touch stone for scientists is Occam's Razor - a preference for simplicity in the scientific method based on falsifiability criterion. For each accepted explanation of a phenomenon, there is always an infinite number of possible and more complex alternatives, because one can always burden failing explanations with ad hoc hypothesis to prevent them from being falsified; therefore, simpler theories are preferable to more complex ones because they are (generally) better testable and falsifiable.
So - the simplest model tends to be the right one. CO2 is a heat trapping gas. If you put a heat trapping gas in the atmosphere you expect it to trap heat. Arrhenius put this together back in 1896.
The data collected over the last 25 years generally supports this initial hypothesis. I am not aware of any scientist asserting that CO2 levels are irrelevant because process X decouples CO2 levels from average global temperatures.
Rather, the story I hear most often is that (i) we cannot say for certain that CO2 has anything to do with recent changes in climate; and (ii) it is possible that something more mysterious is afoot, such as some sort of recent and sudden natural fluctuation in the global climate system without any anthropogenic origin.
The science is telling us that CO2 is very likely the problem. And this is the simplest theory.
Are there other possibilities? Yes, there are many. Should we ignore them? No, we should not. Is it sufficient to say "I am unconvinced because I can still imagine more complicated scenarios in which CO2 is not the cause"? No, not without some data and an explanation of how your more complex theory is a better description of the empirical observations made to date.
This is what I mean by who has the burden of proof.
Einstein's theory of relativity didn't displace Newton's theory of gravity because it was simpler. It displaced it because Einstein's theory could explain observations that Newton's theory could not (it was clearly superior). If Einstein's theory only provided an alternate description but no more predictive power, then Newton's simpler theory would have prevailed. And rightly so, lest we be reduced to debating how many angels can fit on the head of a pin.
My view is that the "deniers" have a rather significant burden to meet before they can reasonably expect other scientists to take them seriously. I am not saying it's never going to happen. I am just saying that if it does, it will be because the new theory is convincing and clearly superior - probably in ways that are readily apparent. I just don't see anything like that in the current debate.
Regards,
Jeff

19

Appreciate very much your willingness to concede points fairly made.  That's all the difference between a productive discussion, and not.
......
These are philosophical issues :
Who we think has the burden of proof
What a general consensus is worth 
Who is dishonest in their heart, and
Whether we think Occam's Razor will get us better hypotheses. 
Those things are not components of the Scientific Method.  A layman can speak to these things as well as a scientist.
A hypothesis is testable.  My position that "you have the burden of proof" is not testable.  :- )  It's an unscientific assertion, by definition.
.......
The scientific method is a how of inquiry.  As you know, but others may not.  It tells us how to test, how to falsify, how to investigate.  Indeed, you can typically define an issue as scientific vs philosophical, depending on whether an assertion is falsifiable.
This is why we should not discourage a serious attempt to falsify.
........
The position that "Occam's Razor hypotheses will get us to the truth faster" is virtually untestable.  Even if it were always true, whereas we both think it is often true ..... still, a good hypothesis / model is the STARTING POINT for the scientific method.  
That's when you start testing, not when you say "My hypothesis / model is simpler, so your position should be abandoned."  
To decide what's True and False, we compare data.  We do not use Occam's Razor to reach scientific conclusions.   Occam's Razor can never be an arbiter at the finish line.  It's a coach at the starting blocks.
........
That's what this thread is about:  encouraging inquiry, as opposed to locking down debate.  To the extent we agree on that, we definitely have middle ground.
Let's consider the example of cigarette smoking that LR brought up.  If a scientist or layman wants to argue that smoking cigarettes is perfectly safe, I think she is running a fool's errand, BUT!  I will respond to her by clearly laying out the opposite position and inviting her response.
.........
Global warming?  Like I said, I dunno.  I don't know anybody who recommends doing "nothing" about it - no $ for research, no $ for investigation, no nothing.  
As you point out, the CO2 logic is quite compelling (though not conclusive) and the hypothesis demanded an American response, which it has certainly received.  On a grand scale.
Respectfully,
Jeff C.

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lr's picture

Loved this response. Very well reasoned. This is a much better version of what I was trying to communicate.

22

I wish I could argue that it is a different kind of patriotism, but I think you are correct that the fly over states and the South are more committed to Country. Me, I think it is odd that we sing the national anthem before sporting events. I think it trivializes commitment to country, but it also makes it approachable and habitual.
Academics make a career on doing one thing, one narrow thing, really well. The process rewards parochial and narrow minded thinking. The only saving grace is most academics choose the career because they have a genuine love of teaching and learning. I fully agree it's a mixed bag.

23

You assert that the primary argument against the prevailing theory of AGW is that "we can't be sure" and "there might be another mechanism - something mysterious".
You're wrong. Utterly and completely. You show absolutely zero critical understanding of the skeptical position on this issue. Here is their case, boiled down to bullet points:
- CO2 is a heat trapping gas, but the window of outgoing radiation it can actually trap is relatively small. All of the scientists, including the AGW crowd, agree that CO2, by itself, cannot warm the planet all that much more than it already has.
- The theory of AGW is that CO2 trapping of some additional heat will result in the atmosphere uptaking more water vapor - which is a MUCH...MUCH more powerful greenhouse gas. If you by the climate models lock sock and barrel, then CO2 warming is a few tenths of a degree and H2O warming is the whole rest of the picture. The claim made by warmists is that increasing CO2 has a strong positive feedback linked to water vapor which actually causes most of the warming.
- We have 35+ years of observation of the water favor content in the atmosphere by satellites. There has been no increase in water vapor since 1979.
- As well, climate models argue that the upper atmosphere should warm first, and especially in the tropics. We again have lots of observations that say this is NOT happening.
- Climate models also completely fail to accurately replicate the basic cyclical nature of the atmosphere/ocean/climate state, and how these processes work is not well understood.
- On top of that, Current estimates of the estimated impact of the doubling of CO2 are proving to be wrong by better statistical analysis of the satellite data, yielding new estimates of the "climate sensitivity" to CO2 that are a factor of two lower
- insert about fifty other fact-based arguments attacking many of the core pillars of the theory
Do you see what I'm saying here? It's really easy to dismiss your opponents as being intellectually dishonest when you don't know anything at all about what they argue to counter your theory. It turns out that skeptics, when you let them talk, will absolutely CRUSH YOU with a gigantic mountain of factual evidence supporting the claim that the climate models are wrong about the level of impact humans are having on climate.
I, personally, believe we're having some impact, but that the impact is not well measured presently and likely to be overstated based on a swarm of factual evidence and my understanding of how very deeply flawed the science is support the climate models themselves.
I believe in Occam's Razor too...the simplest explanation is usually the best...but it has to be the simplest explanation that fits the facts. It is known...it is a FACT...that CO2 cannot explain all of the warming predicted by the climate models...I await FACTUAL evidence that the second impact of water vapor is occurring before I believe the most extreme predictions of the IPCC.
But I guess my insistence that the climate models occasionally make a good forecast (so far, they are worse than worthless at making climate forecasts as per their abysmal track record of verification) makes me intellectually dishonest.
It might help your case that you were on the honest side of this debate if you...um..knew anything about the debate.

24

Anybody have any Q's left about LR's enthusiasm for slapping labels, sneering, and waving off the opposing point of view?  The audience will forgive me for not responding to him much from this point.  He's free to remain on the board and argue with you-all.
But answering his question before I give him the last word:
.......
I don't believe that the Earth is young, no.  I'd be shocked to discover that it was.  
And by the way, I think that the hominid fossil account, given in the textbooks, has a lot of merit.  And a lot of problems that are covered up by anthropologists.
.......
I don't know what a sneering cynic means by "Creationist."  Something pejorative, I would suspect.
I looked up the term and it said that "Creationism" is "the belief that the universe and living organisms originate from specific acts of divine creation."
By that definition, everybody who believes in God is a Creationist.  Yes, I believe that a Transcendent Intelligence wrote the "library" that Einstein referenced when Einstein admired the intelligent design of the laws of physics.  I've said that I'm a Christian, as are many great scientists.
........
If you want to know more about how I harmonize Genesis with science, see Reasons.org, run by astrophysicist Dr. Hugh Ross.  He does a great job of dovetailing the six creation phases of Genesis with "Moses' panoramic view" of the beginning of the universe.
Interested readers (as opposed to LR, apparently) might be interested to compare
(1) the other ancient mythical accounts of two deities cutting each other in half, the sea being made of their blood, the planet standing on elephants, etc., with
(2) Genesis' simple account of this sequence:
The introduction of force, matter, space, light/energy, and time (Gen. 1:1:2),
The formation of the earth in a mysterious evolutionary manner,
The parting of the vapor canopy,
Plant life,
Aquatic animal life,
Lower land animals,
Higher land animals, and finally
Man.
As an evolutionist myself when I began to argue with Christians, I remember thinking, "What is that sequence doing in a book supposedly dating from 1450 BC?  They hadn't even invented writing then."
.......
There are challenges to work through in this harmonization, certainly.  None that I found were insurmountable, and certainly not important in context of the above.
It is true that Gen. 1 is written in "yom", English "days."  But "day" means "period of time"; the same Hebrew word is used in Gen. 2:4 when it says "these are the phases of the heavens and the earth ... in the day that God created them."   The same writer who used "one Yom" for each of 6 days then used "one Yom" for all 6 days.
Remember that Genesis had to be written for people in all millenia, on many continents.  It's a child's-recital, mnemonic summary.
So, yes.  As a skeptical -- NOT CYNICAL -- first time reader, I was quite taken aback at the impressive material in Gen. 1-3.
 

25

lr - the Creationist beliefs versus ID / Ancient Alien ideas versus the Darwinian Hypothesis is a whole different discussion, and there are plenty on ALL of these sides of this discussion with even more passion than AGW.... so until Jesus or an alien shows up, or a scientist can actually create life or matter from nothing... let's stick to the subject at hand.

26

... are what Mojician has given me a friendly recommendation against, and he's right.
So thanks Tacoma Rain.  I've said quite a bit on these hot topics -- and the topic was supposed to be about open inquiry, inclusiveness and tolerance as principles.  Rather than global warming, the creation of the universe, or ancient aliens.
I better get back to the shtick (mostly) (and unless an open inquirer wants to discuss Christianity / theistic evolution off-site).  There's plenty here for interested debaters to jump off.
Warm regards,
Jeff

27

Through all of the passion, assertions and the personal stories, there is a lot of GREAT info these past couple days. I only wish I had power / internet access to appreciate it sooner.
Further, I wish I had learned more from the PRO AGW side, but I guess I have some homework to do.
PS - I loved the Genesis 1 recap.... I had never heard it put quite that way.

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lr's picture

If I didn't know you and sat next to you on an airplane for a few hours I have no doubt we would get on pretty well. I definitely think we'd make good conversation, whether you are a biblical literalist or not. I think I could learn a lot from you. I just think you take my criticisms too personally.
--------------
I'm just connecting some dots, you shouldn't get so easily ruffled. For me, learning why people think the way do is more interesting than what they believe. Statistically speaking I just know that if you don't believe in AGW or you think the conversation is balanced on both sides, you MOST LIKELY (not always) come from the right, or the religious right, watch Fox as your main source of news, believe in Creationism, etc. That's no coincidence either, oh by the way. If you are offended at being asked if you are Creationist, as though I asked if you were a Jew Hater or something, then maybe you have an over sensitivity to your beliefs. Creationist isn't a hateful or pejorative term. That's what biblical literalists are called. It would be like me getting peeved if someone asked if I was a Darwinian Evolutionist. The fact that it carries some serious baggage to a pc conversation is the Creationists problem, not the one asking.
You've obviously been questioned, maybe even attacked for your beliefs. Maybe you've been mocked. I don't know, if it's me and someone is attacking my beliefs, or mocking me for having them, I can rebut with a grin on my face and not become offended in the slightest. I've done it on more than one occasion. I think it says something about the argument that you're more worried about tone and decorum than content at times. Maybe you're just a peaceful soul. I say let's get down to business! lol To which you'd agree, but with qualifications....
Anyway, I know I come on strong, and my tone is attacking at times. What can I say, the way you present your ideas gets people like me fired up. You do want dissent and passion on your site, no? You have to tire from the constant praise at some point.

29

I get the same argument just about everywhere I go when I declare myself skeptical of the scientific consensus tropes. No mention is made of creationism even - people just look for the first excuse to ignore any idea they don't like.

30

Sorry if I derailed the conversation into global warming - you gotta understand, when I see people who are not engaged with the daily telling me that I (a person very much engaged with the field daily) am not intellectually honest or stating what my side of the argument thinks and getting it completely wrong...they're in my house and I have trouble resisting slapping that weak slop out of their hands like I'm Yao Ming (becuase I ain't that tall so it's a rare chance for me. :) ).
In all seriousness...I didn't mean to misdirect your topic...global warming is a deeply hot-buttom issue for me.

31

It would just be so convenient for you if your belief that AGW skeptics are all far-right, wouldn't it? [Editor: let's watch this tone, please]
Take your labels and your assumptions elsewhere if you won't address the substance of someone's commentary, rather than your own assumptions about the person making that comment.

32

So I'm curious - why do believe it is the case that conservatives would be skeptical of AGW? If I wanted to concede that claim (which i don't, but let's do it for the sake of argument here). Why do you believe a conservative-minded person would be more prone to back the skeptical position?

33

As a ratio Matt, your tone of irritation is rising like Chris Young's Sept. ERA... :- )
No need to raise your voice here, my friend.  The community is well aware that the minority view is welcome here - ironic that LR should insist on that, isn't it?! - and that LR is baiting me at this point.
LR:  I do agree that we'd probably get along fine in real life.  The internet is conducive to flame wars.  We can't soften our approach with body language.
........
:: Takes moderator cap off ::
If you'll stick to idea exchange, you have him way outgunned, in my opinion. :- )  No need to muddy the water.

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lr's picture

Because I knew someone would come in here screeching that I'm generalizing, as if I claimed ALL AGW deniers come from the GOP. Again, as I stated, statistically speaking, if you are anti AGW, or believe their is no scientific consensus, you MOST LIKELY come from the right. This isn't debatable, or hard to find evidence for.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2013/11/01/only-tea-party...
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/may/6/fed-report-global-warming...
"All told, 163 elected representatives in the 113th Congress have taken over $58.8 million from the fossil fuel industry that’s driving the carbon emissions which cause climate change."
http://thinkprogress.org/climate-denier-caucus/
http://www.people-press.org/2013/11/01/gop-deeply-divided-over-climate-c...
-----------------------
Want more links? How about something that addresses Fox news coverage of climate change, and how it can be linked to AGW denial.
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/09/30/3573869/fox-news-addiction-c...
"In these pieces, I identified 6 separate studies showing Fox News viewers to be the most misinformed, and in a right wing direction–studies on global warming, health care, health care a second time, the Ground Zero mosque, the Iraq war, and the 2010 election."
http://www.desmogblog.com/fox-news-effect-few-references
"These studies tend to take the same basic form. First, they survey Americans to determine their views about some matter of controversy. Inevitably, some significant percentage of citizens are found to be misinformed about the core facts of the issue–but not just that. The surveys also find that those who watch Fox, or watch it frequently, are more likely to be misinformed."
---------------------
How about instead of me having to post 100000 links, you read what I write, how I write it, and if you have problems with it, then we can debate fairly.
I get that you fancy yourself a climate expert. You've been trained as such, and you either currently or did work in a related field. You CLEARLY know much much more about climate science than I do. I am not equipped to debate you on technical details. That's why I rely on reading tons of information about arguments from both sides, not just listening to one person.

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I overreacted - for that I apologize.
I tried to redirect the conversation more constructive in my next comment - asking LR to state his assumptions (as to why he believed conservative-minded or religious people would tend to be more likely to be skeptical of AGW).
My irritation comes from his refusal to meet my arguments with counter-arguments - still not appropriate, though.

36
lr's picture

http://www.gallup.com/poll/108226/Republicans-Democrats-Differ-Creationi...
http://www.gallup.com/poll/27847/majority-republicans-doubt-theory-evolu...
Let me make a tiny change to my original claim, while maintaining the original intent. If you are an AGW denier, or believe that science doesn't have an answer, then statistically speaking, you are MORE LIKELY to come from the right. You are more likely to be a Fox news watcher. You are more likely to believe other unscientific things, like say creationism. You are more likely misinformed about other political and scientific topics. If you read the polls, and look at the research that's been done, this is not a controversial statement. at. all.
Can we move past this basic premise?
My asking him if he was a Creationist was an attempt to tie a few things together and show that these things are related. I believe I have done that on a basic level.
----------------
When you or someone else accuse me of baiting people, it takes merit away from my points, as though my only intent is to embarrass people or start an emotional shouting contest. I have given you my opinion, backed with link after link supporting it. Can we move past the insinuations that I'm a troll?

37

You and Mr. Ellison, each, at different times in this and the previous thread made the claim that climate skeptics base their argument on something that is both intellectually dishonest, and not rooted in facts, but rather speculations as to alternative theories. I tried to explain to you what the skeptic position was, since you were clearly poorly informed.
I didn't come to my position in a dungeon somewhere. I came to it from both my study of the science itself and by studying both sides of the argument. I have particular concerns with the AGW theory that are not necessarily globally shared by the skeptics at large, but I kept the points I mentioned above to such points that are broadly agreed upon by skeptics. You can choose to believe me when I talk about the skeptical position, or you can (even better) go read a skeptical blog like Watts Up With That, or the papers of prominent skeptics like Bob Tisdale, Ryan Maue, Roy Spencer, or lately, Judith Curry (not a pure skeptic, but a brilliant scientist who questions the dire conclusions of the IPCC). If you had dedicated a bunch of time to reading about both sides of the argument from the source itself (the skeptic and the AGW proponent, speaking in their own words) rather than reading articles about what the skeptics say from Think Progress or some other mouthpiece for progressivism and/or AGW alarmism (Think Progress? Is your source? The Washington Post? DesmogBlog? - it explains how you could come away with such a stunted understanding of the skeptical position).
And if it's "screeching" to request that you not make broad statements that, while statistically true of the uninformed who follow the debate, do not represent the people LEADING the debate from the skeptical side...then I'm sorry you feel that way, but I suggest that you should consider differentiating between subject matter experts who are skeptics and less-informed people who are skeptics reflexively. And I also would suggest that I am not the only one who has been screeching.
I react with some annoyance when it seems that someone arguing the other position wants to put me in a box so the box can be discarded. And that, I think, is what you are doing. Even if you protest that you understand there are exceptions to your claim, the only reason to speculate as to whether Dr. D is a creationist or whether either of us is a far-right religious conservative is to cast doubt on the points being made as having an indefensible non-scientific bias.
In this entire thread (and the previous)...I am the only person thus far to attempt to use scientific facts/arguments to make my case. You admit that you are not well versed on this subject. Perhaps you shouldn't hold such lofty and aggressive opinions of your position on the issue then.

38

...some of the "screeching" you complain about MIGHT have something to do with condescending language like "I get that you 'fancy yourself' a climate expert". Is that possible?

39

Instead of addressing what he has said, you were hoping that he would admit that he was a Young Earth Creationists so that you could impugn his knowledge and judgment. First, that is fallacious argumentation. A person can be wrong on one subject and right on another. Second, he explained he is NOT a Young Earth Creationist so your tangent is especially irrelevant.
If you really want to discuss the substance of Dr. D's post then focus on what has actually been said instead of trying to suggest that by disagreeing with the theory of AGW a person must be ignorant about the subject. And don't use perjoratives like "denier".

40
jellison's picture

My apologies (again) Matt. I really did not mean to offend - only to be honest. I should try harder not to over share.
My first job in industry I was making contrast agents for magnetic resonance angiography. I was a medicinal inorganic chemist, and we would on occasion be asked to review articles for journal submissions (in the technical area). One article was an in silico study of the structures of gadolinium complexes based upon empirical data from crystallographic studies. The authors claimed to have developed a predictive model and showed that they could match in silico the observations made crystallographically for certain known metal complexes. They went further and made predictions about structures they believed were unknown. The whole thing smelled bad to me. At the outset, I knew they were mistaken about the "unknown" structures. The structure were know, and their predictions in silico were wrong. Their methods were poor, and I criticized them bitterly for it. That part of their paper was redacted prior to publication.
I guess that is my really long winded way of saying that, like you, I am rather skeptical of the in silico modelling. I come by my skepticism honestly and from first hand experience. I am especially skeptical of efforts to model the whole damned planet. Have you ever calculated how much energy is released (potential to kinetic) over the course of an hour worth of rain? It is a surprisingly large amount. Where does it all go? Don't ask me. I cannot begin to guess. This modeling business seems like a really daunting task, and I don't have the time or the talent to evaluate these models.
I have no idea why one should expect the upper atmosphere to warm first. Maybe that makes sense to you. I don't know and someone would need to take a good long time explaining to me why I should care what warms first.
The part that disturbs and convinces me is the empirical data and the timing.
I assume that we are all in agreement that change is happening. The only debate among us is what is causing this change and is it anthropogenic or not. These observable changes are a rather recent phenomenon, coinciding with industrialization.
When I think about how humans influence the environment in ways that other animals simply never have, the two that seem likely to be the biggest insults are burning fuel to produce electricity and industrial farming. There's no disputing that we have been releasing a lot of CO2 and fixing a lot of nitrogen. I suppose that with ranching we are also releasing a lot of methane, but shouldn't killing all the buffalo even that part out?
When I think about this problem, I ask myself what is the likelihood that non-anthropogenic climate change should occur at exactly the same time as these rather dramatic changes in how humans live. If the change were part of some natural cycle, it could have happened at any time. But it didn't - and that seems much too coincidental to me.
And this is the part of the show where Ellery Queen turns to the camera and says "now I know who made a mess of the planet. Do you?" Answer after the break: it was you and me and everyone we know.
On the preponderance of the evidence I find that CO2 is, more likely than not, responsible for recent deleterious changes in the earth's climate and related hooliganism involving the acidity of salt water. We cannot let CO2 escape culpability based solely upon the testimony of a model none of us believed to begin with.
And that really is my final two cents on this topic.
Best regards,
Jeff

41
lr's picture

I asked jemanji if he was a NEC because he said something about the fossil record. You inserted yourself in the conversation to say I was lumping all deniers into the same boat, blah blah blah, even though I went out of my way to point out that I was making general connections, not sweeping accusations. You got fired up and got some comments edited and starting firing off at me. I then went out of my way to defend my initial point, which was and remains factually correct, by posting links, which OF COURSE come from such LIBERAL/PROGRESSIVE sources as Pew research polling and Gallup polling, The Washington Times, etc. The links you are responding to were establishing a link between being a Republican and denying AGW, accepting creationism, being misinformed, etc. I didn't put the links up to debate technical details of the skeptic position, because that wasn't my initial intent.
You are hot headed and are just flying around looking to stick your chest out to let everyone how much of an expert you are. I've already said I know you are trained in related fields, and you know much more about the skeptic position than I do. That's why I didn't engage you on the skeptic position. I didn't enter into a conversation with you to debate water vapor not increasing for the last 35 years. In fact, I didn't even initiate conversation with you at all.
I'm not all that interested in debating you, one because it sometimes takes literally days for my posts to show up, at which time the conversation has moved on, and two, you are a hot head. You don't read what I write in its' context, and you're looking for someone to beat up on because you feel you're the resident expert on the subject. Additionally, I've seen how these debates usually go. I'll post SEVEN independent links, and you'll ignore them and/or dismiss them at first sight because they come from sites you don't respect, never mind much of the source material is coming from polling sources.
----------------
By the way, the Republicans that deny it aren't just the misinformed public. Some are important people that make important decisions. These are the people that are deliberately misinforming the public. "I am not a scientist". Which side is parroting that utterly stupid line over and over?
---------------
I don't have to cast doubts on you or jemanji specifically. The links I posted cast doubt on the skeptic position just by association alone. I'm not particularly interested in whether either of you, specifically, are creationists. I'm more interested in pointing out that generally speaking, the skeptic position carries with it lots of baggage.

42

Would love to hear you and JEllison exchange ideas on this.  I'm going to probably redirect my energy from writing about the environmental stuff, is all.  Tough enough for me to budget time for the shtick :- )

43

That was a lucid, intelligent, well-thought-out objection.  (Not) overruled :- )
I could listen to JEllison and Matt all day, in that mode.  And that might have been the first time I ever heard two specialists do so, on that subject.

45

He demonstrated what I said much earlier so well: that anti AGW scientists make important points and deserve a place at the table, even if they are a mere 5% of the scientific community - which is probably a skewing of statistics, because If he were asked if he thought man made CO2 contributed to the warming of the climate, I would suspect he would answer yes (but so insignificantly as to not warrant extreme political action, which may not be asked).
I'd much prefer hearing Matt than Al Gore on the subject, that's for sure. And his scientific assertions have not been challenged or refuted in this thread.
The coupling of anti AGW to conservatism does bother me somewhat because I want the debate argued on its own merits. Coupling it with political views is interesting - to be sure, LR, I've wondered about the correlation myself. I think it has to do with the massive government insertion that makes conservatives skeptical. We don't like our ID scientists shut out of academia as well. It's the politics behind the "settled science" assertions that most bother me. I don't smoke cigarettes, believe they cause cancer, but I hate the nanny state response to it (how I enjoy the way Germany is tolerant about it - having spent the past week here. You can buy them from a vending machine anywhere, but you need a valid ID card for the machine to operate for you. And you have to be 18. You can, however, order up a beer at sixteen. Somehow, it works. But lose the solar panels and windmills, please :-) - someday.).

46
misterjonez's picture

That was very well presented. Thanks for the insight, JEllison :)

47
misterjonez's picture

which you summed up more more cleanly and concisely than I did. Thanks for that, Rick. I'll just roundfile that other post now ;)
I think conservatism brings with it a strong (some would argue TOO strong) respect for history, precedent, and proven ways of thinking and behaving. This, coupled with an innate distrust of government (certainly a stronger distrust is exhibited by the Right than by the Left in the USA. I know of precious few people who would argue with that statement) should be expected to evoke rebellion at the notion that the very basis of our industry is poisonous, and that in order to fix the planet we have to stop doing everything we've been doing and disadvantage ourselves in the process (by not imposing the same restrictions on everyone else). Why are we being told this? Because some people in the government tell us to do it, and they can't (yet) show their work in a satisfactory manner. That last part is key.
Something I find truly fascinating (and this is not directed at anyone who has participated in this thread) is that atheists (a group to which an almost certainly higher percentage of scientists belong, compared to the general public) go on and on about skepticism being this core facet of their very being. They will vigorously contend that without active skepticism, one is merely setting themselves up to be taken advantage of by those in (religious) power over them. Why, then, does it *seem* to be that skepticism is criticized when employed in this particular (global warming) vein? I honestly don't *comprehend* it, but I believe I do understand it as a human being with human flaws.
As to solar panels and windmills...gonna have to disagree there ;) I've got a forklift battery getting delivered next week, with an 8kw inverter/charger just itching to get plugged into it. Once that's in place, it's an order for $10k worth of solar panels, charge controllers, and related gear and I'll be off the grid (meaning I'll have the bonus of a nifty, near-zero carbon footprint at my household). Solar panels are great in my opinion. They last for 20-30 years, are getting cheaper every day, and are a huge part of electrical self-sufficiency.

48

I don't know much about the acidity of the water. Temperatures are rising, but haven't for 19 years straight now. I worry more about a miniature ice age like we had in the 1700's - anyone know what caused that, by the way? Seems more destructive to man to have major cooling than warming. Farmers couldn't grow enough crops. But I believe economic progress in the first world will solve everything - except the sun cooling on us - not sure we can do much about that, except pump CO2 into the atmosphere. Then I will be bpvery happy to be wrong about AGW.

49

I count seven ideas that I enjoyed in that brisk little response.  The first line of the third paragraph was at the top, which is sayin' a lot.
The internet may be the salvation of American democracy.  There are no longer the 4 microphones that a monolith can control for itself. 

50

I am not trying to be unkind here.  There's an unspoken syndrome that you see again and again.
When the majority makes 2-D cartoon characters out of people "in the flyover states," imagines them as knuckle-dragging Young Earthers who don't read, but just parrot Fox News ... that's enjoyable for them, maybe, when running within their own circles.  But then they run into an actual person on the other side, and are woefully unprepared for serious debate.  You see it happen SO often.
Matt comes out with his position spit-polished and honed to a razor's edge, held out of view like a blackjack, whereas some people are surprised that he HAS a literate opinion.
Present company excepted, it's fun to watch somebody assume that Matt will be easy, and then try to debate him.  ;- )  Almost makes up for the bigotism you live with (elsewhere).

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