Guest Post By Paul MacRae
“The evidence … however properly reached, may always be more or less wrong, the best information being never complete, and the best reasoning being liable to fallacy.”
-Thomas Huxley, Science and Christian Tradition, p. 205
Thomas H. Huxley (1825-1895) was one of the first and most vigorous promoters of modern scientific thinking. He is perhaps best-known as “Darwin’s bulldog”-no one did more to fight for Darwin’s theory of natural selection in the face of theological opposition-but he also almost single-handedly introduced science into the British school curriculum at all levels.
Huxley was a formidable philosopher of science, anticipating many of the principles of scientific inquiry that Karl Popper would make a mainstay of scientific thinking in the 20th century, including the need for falsifiable hypotheses and non-dogmatic, continuous inquiry.
In short, in the history and philosophy of science, Huxley is someone to be reckoned with.
So what would T.H. Huxley have thought of today’s “consensus” climate scientists, with their claims that the issue of man-made climate change is “settled,” that there is no need for further debate, and that those who challenge the hypothesis of anthropogenic warming in any way are, in effect, heretics?
Three of Huxley’s books-Science and Hebrew Tradition (SHT), Science and Christian Tradition (SCT), and Hume, a biography of Scottish philosopher David Hume (1711-1776)-present Huxley’s philosophy of science very clearly. How well does “consensus” climate science bear up in Huxley’s crucible?
Science is never certain
The pretension to infallibility, by whomsoever made, has done endless mischief; with impartial malignity it has proved a curse, alike to those who have made and it those who have accepted it.
–Science and Hebrew Tradition, Preface, p. ix
Just as Huxley fought against religious certainty in his time, so he undoubtedly would have questioned the consensus claim that the evidence for human-driven climate change is “overwhelming” and therefore beyond question.
But, then, orthodoxy always hates criticism, a point Huxley underscored by quoting from David Hume’s “Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.” In “Dialogues,” Hume has the religious Cleanthes, who believes that because nature is harmonious there must be a Supreme Designer, say to the skeptical Philo:
You [Philo] alone, or almost alone, disturb this general harmony. You state abstruse doubts, cavils, and objections. You ask me what is the cause of this cause? I know not: I care not: that concerns me not. I have found a Deity and here I stop my inquiry. (Hume, p. 178)
Against this view, Huxley wrote: “No man, nor any body of men, is good enough, or wise enough, to dispense with the tonic of criticism” (SCT, “Science and Pseudoscience,” p. 93).
But, of course, the consensus climate science orthodoxy, as expressed many times by believers like Al Gore, Goddard Institute director James Hansen, and Canada’s Andrew Weaver and David Suzuki (who once stormed out of a radio interview because the interviewer dared to suggest the global warming issue is “not totally settled”)(1), is that “abstruse doubts, cavils, and objections” that don’t fit within the consensus paradigm should not be aired lest the public’s faith in anthropogenic global warming be weakened.
For example, in refusing to debate skeptical environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg , Gore said: “We have long since passed the time when we should pretend this is a ‘on the one hand, on the other hand’ issue. It’s not a matter of theory or conjecture.”
Canada’s leading climate computer modeler, Andrew Weaver of the University of Victoria, in explaining his reluctance to publicly debate the question of global warming on a CBC radio program, has written:
There is no such debate in the atmospheric or climate scientific community, and … making the public believe that such a debate exists is precisely the goal of the denial industry. (Keeping Our Cool, p. 22)
Why not debate with climate skeptics? Why not crush the abstruse doubts, cavils and objections, as Huxley did many times in publicly debating opponents of Darwin?
For example, in 1860, in one of the most famous debates in the history of science, Huxley demolished the arguments of Anglican Bishop Samuel Wilberforce, who was defending religious doctrine against Darwin’s theory of evolution. Huxley’s attitude wasn’t, like Weaver’s and Gore’s, “I’m right, the other side is wrong, and therefore I don’t need to debate them.” Huxley knew the public needed to hear both sides, not just one, to make up its mind.
For his part, Bishop Wilberforce must have felt he shouldn’t have to defend what he considered immutable religious truth against the upstart scientific heretics. Yet, unlike Weaver, Gore, and most others in the climate consensus, Wilberforce had the courage to publicly debate his views.
Why don’t Gore, Weaver, et al., feel the same need to put their “truths” to the public test? Perhaps because they fear that they and the climate orthodoxy would lose the debate, and quite rightly. The few times warming believers have publicly debated skeptics, the believers have lost.(2,3)
The facts must fit the theory
An inductive hypothesis is said to be demonstrated when the facts are shown to be in entire accordance with it [italics added].
–Science and the Hebrew Tradition, “Lectures on Evolution III,” p. 132
What would Huxley think of the claim that the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis is based on empirical facts (i.e., is an inductive hypothesis), when the facts no longer support (are no longer in “entire accordance with”) that hypothesis? Probably not much given that, despite increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the planet has not warmed since at least 2001 and perhaps earlier than that.(4)
Theory must account for previous experience
The more a statement of fact conflicts with previous experience, the more complete must be the evidence which is to justify us in believing it.
–Hume, p. 158
What is the planet’s “previous experience” in terms of carbon dioxide and temperature? The geological evidence of the past 600 million years shows the relationship between carbon dioxide and temperature is tenuous at best (see Figure 1. The black line is carbon dioxide; the blue line is temperature).
Note particularly 450 million years ago, when the earth’s temperature was as cold as today’s-i.e., the earth was in an Ice Age-while carbon dioxide levels were more than 10 times today’s levels. Clearly, high levels of CO2 weren’t keeping the planet warm then.
There are other periods, such as 100 million years ago, when the temperature remained high but carbon dioxide fell. If, as consensus climate science claims, carbon dioxide is the main driver of climate, why didn’t the temperature start to fall until tens of millions of years after CO2 did?
The consensus view, which closely links high carbon dioxide levels and high temperatures, had no validity in “previous experience” (the geological past). Why should we accept that view now?
Science must be able to predict phenomena
.
The true mark of a theory is without doubt its ability to predict phenomena.
– Science and Hebrew Tradition, “On the Method of Zadig,” p. 20
Huxley didn’t pen these words, although he heartily approved of them. They were written in 1822 by Baron Georges Cuvier (1769-1832), one of the founders of biological classification, and have been repeated by philosophers of science every since.(5) To be valid, a scientific hypothesis must be able to predict phenomena. An hypothesis that can’t make valid predictions is guesswork, not science.
So what would Huxley (much less Cuvier) say of the failure of climate computer models to predict the flat-lining of temperatures over the past decade?
Figure 2 shows the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s predictions for the next two decades in red, orange and yellow. The blue and green lines show the actual temperatures as measured by Britain’s Hadley Institute and the University of Alabama at Huntsville climate monitoring centres.
Figure 3 shows the predictions of climate alarmist James Hansen in 1988. The blue line is Hansen’s scary Scenario A prediction; the orange line is the actual temperature. The only point of contact between the two is 1998, the year of an unusually strong El Nino warming.
Both predictions-indeed, all of the consensus climate model predictions without exception-have been higher than observed temperatures.
But, then, the IPCC itself said, in its 2001 report: “In climate research and modelling, we should recognize that we are dealing with a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore that the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible.”(6)
Extreme claims require extreme proof
.
It is a canon of common sense, to say nothing of science, that the more improbable a supposed occurrence, the more cogent ought to be the evidence in its favor.
–Science and the Christian Tradition, “An Episcopal Trilogy,” p. 135
Huxley addressed, a century ago, the question of how much credence we should place in extreme claims of the type that Gore, Hansen, Weaver, and others present as scientific fact.
Not much, if we are also to believe astronomer Carl Sagan, who has written, in the same vein: “Apocalyptic predictions require, to be taken seriously, higher standards of evidence than do assertions on other matters where the stakes are not as great”(7). Sagan’s comment often appears online as “extreme claims require extreme proof,” but Huxley said it first.
Among these extreme claims is Andrew Weaver’s ominous prediction of a “sixth extinction” that will wipe out “between 40 per cent and 70 per cent of the world’s species” should the global temperature rise above 3.3 degrees Celsius” (a rise that is, for Weaver, entirely humanity’s fault) (Keeping Our Cool, p. 218). He has also called for a complete ban on fossil-fuel use.(8)
Hansen warns of sea level rises of five metres in the next century, 20 metres over the next 400 years (New Scientist, July 25, 2007). And, of course, we should all be familiar with Gore’s apocalyptic predictions (New York under water soon, no Arctic ice by 2014, etc.) if we fail to follow his draconian political and economic program.
Curiously, at least so far, none-not one-of the environmentalists’ apocalyptic predictions, from Thomas Malthus to Paul Ehrlich (mass starvation in the 1970s) to Suzuki, Weaver and Gore, has come to pass.
Or, as the CBC’s Rex Murphy notes:
So much of what the alarmists promised was supposed to be happening now isn’t happening. So many events are running counter to their near-term projections, they’ve decided to go all Armageddon with their long-term ones, projections for a future that none of us will be around to check.(9)
By any standard, the claims of Gore, Weaver, Hansen, et al., are extreme. Yet we are expected to accept these extreme claims with very little public debate, scrutiny, or criticism (after all, the debate is settled and the climate scientists are the experts), and based on almost no empirical evidence (unless mathematical models are considered the equivalent of empirical evidence).
Instead, climate alarmists abandon scientific principles of evidence, fall back on the precautionary principle (if it could happen we must act as if it will happen)(10), and try to silence anyone asking for proof more convincing than the flawed predictions of computer models.
Science doesn’t operate by consensus
My love of my fellow-countrymen has led me to reflect, with dread, on what will happen to them, if any of the laws of nature ever become so unpopular in their eyes, as to be voted down by the transcendent authority of universal suffrage.
–Science and Christian Tradition, p. 252
Huxley was worried that citizens would decide to vote against, for example, the laws of gravity. Undoubtedly, he would be equally concerned if scientists declared that a scientific assertion was true because, after a vote, a majority of them had agreed it was so, i.e., proof by “consensus.”
Just as a vote of citizens doesn’t make a scientific fact true or false, neither does a vote of scientists make a fact true or false. Only empirical evidence does that. And the empirical evidence for anthropogenic warming isn’t there.
Dealing with absurdity
When you cannot prove that people are wrong, but only that they are absurd, the best course is to let them alone.
–Science and Hebrew Tradition, “On the Method of Zadig,” p. 13
It would be nice to leave the consensus climate alarmists alone. After all, the hypothesis that anthropogenic gases might cause warming is not unreasonable. It may even be true, although so far the evidence (or lack of it) argues otherwise.
What takes consensus climate science into Huxley’s realm of absurdity is its dogmatic insistent that all other hypotheses are not just wrong, but so wrong that they should not be debated or, better, not even heard by the public or other scientists.
Moreover, the consensus climate science alarmists, and their environmentalist supporters, refuse to leave the rest of us alone. Instead, they wish to impose economy-crippling measures based on a global-warming hypothesis that becomes more and more surreal with each year that warming does not occur.
Conclusion
So, how well does consensus climate science meet Huxley’s conditions for real science?
Huxley: Scientific certainty does not exist. Consensus climate science: The evidence is so overwhelming there’s no need to discuss it any further.
Huxley: A strong theory must be “in entire accordance” with the data. Consensus climate science: Dismiss data (such as the current cooling) that doesn’t fit the theory (the planet should be warming).
Huxley: Data not in accord with previous experience should be regarded with suspicion. Consensus climate science: Ignore previous experience (such as the geological record showing little correlation between carbon dioxide and temperature) if it doesn’t fit the theory.
Huxley: Theories must be able to predict accurately. Consensus climate science: Nothing, so far, predicted accurately.
Huxley: Extreme claims require extreme proof. Consensus climate science: If the proof doesn’t exist, fall back on the precautionary principle.
Huxley: Science doesn’t operate by consensus. Consensus climate science: Yes, it does.
How, we might wonder, would Huxley fare in a public debate with consensus climate believers like Al Gore, James Hansen, or Andrew Weaver, assuming they had the courage to take him on?
As Bishop Wilberforce discovered, they wouldn’t know what hit them.
Notes
1. Barbara Kay, “David Suzuki vs. Michael Crichton.” National Post, Feb. 21, 2007.
2. See, for example, Marc Sheppard’s “No wonder climate extremists refuse to debate” at http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/04/no_wonder_climate_alarmists_re.html. For a list of the few debates that have occurred, and their outcomes, see Climate Depot, http://www.climatedepot.com/a/39/Climate-Depotrsquos-Morano-debates-Global-Warming-with-former-Clinton-Admin-Official-Romm.
3. Losing a debate to skeptic Marc Morano prompted Joe Romm to write, in his blog Climate Progress: “While science and logic are powerful systematic tools for understanding the world, they are no match in the public realm for the 25-century-old art of verbal persuasion: rhetoric.” To say that consensus climate scientists like David Suzuki, Andrew Weaver and James Hansen, much less ex-politician Al Gore, don’t have the rhetorical skills to match the skeptics is absurd. What Romm lacks, what consensus science lacks, and what Bishop Wilberforce lacked, is an argument that makes sense.
4. Meteorologist Richard Lindzen argues that the most recent cycle of global warming ended in 1995. See the Watts Up With That website, http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/03/30/lindzen-on-negative-climate-feedback.
5. Georges Cuvier, Recherches sur les Ossemens., Paris: Chez G. Dufour et d’Ocagne, Libraires, 1822, p. 292.
6. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Climate Change 01, Chapter 14, Advancing Our Understanding, Section 14.2.2.2.
7. Carl Sagan, “Nuclear War and Climatic Catastrophe: Some Policy Implications,” Foreign Affairs, Winter 1983/84, pp. 257-258.
8. Andrew Weaver, “Environmentalists’ are abandoning science.” Vancouver Sun, March 24, 2009.
9. Rex Murphy, “Armageddon theory: Vancouver,” Toronto Globe and Mail, Jan. 10, 2009.
10. For example, environmental writer Jonathan Schell has written: “Now, in a widening sphere of decisions, the costs of error are so exorbitant that we need to act on theory alone. It follows that the reputation of scientific prediction needs to be enhanced” [italics added]. “Our Fragile Earth,” Discover, Oct., 1987, p. 47.
Works Cited
Huxley, T.H., Hume: With Helps to the Study of Berkeley. New York. D. Appleton, 1896.
Huxley, T.H., Science and Christian Tradition. New York, D. Appleton, 1896.
Huxley, T.H., Science and Hebrew Tradition. New York: D. Appleton, 1896.
Weaver, Andrew, Keeping Our Cool: Canada in a Warming World. Toronto: Viking Canada, 2008.
Paul MacRae is a former editor with the Toronto Globe and Mail and former editorial writer and editor with the Victoria Times Colonist. He teaches professional writing at the University of Victoria and is currently finishing a book on global warming entitled False Alarm: Why Almost Everything We’ve Been Told About Global Warming is Misleading, Exaggerated, or Plain Wrong. His blogsite is: paulmacrae.com.
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Sorry for OT…Anthony, did you see that you were mentioned by Lord Moncton in his letter to congress??
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/reprint/markey_barton_letter.html
REPLY: No I didn’t, but thanks for the heads up. – Anthony
Chris Colose has posted a paper that says that decadal coolings are not unusual during global warming.
A most fascinating read here.
A little perspective on all this fuss — in any disagreement between two people, both cannot be right; however, they can both be wrong.
“Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad.”–Euripedes
This is the best refutal to global warming i have read. Thank you very much both Paul and Anthony.
A bit O/T here —
NOAA reports that March 2009 was the tenth warmest March on record.
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2009/20090416_globalmarchstats.html
Included in this report was one little detail from that report that the period Jan-March 2009, was the eighth warmest on record, so of course, USA Today ran that as its headline.
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/climate/2009-04-16-march-temperatures-emissions-reduction-study_N.htm
Of interest is the chart they ran with the story, showing the Jan-March anomalies since 1880.
http://asp.usatoday.com/_common/_scripts/big_picture.aspx?width=490&height=148&storyURL=/weather/climate/2009-04-16-march-temperatures-emissions-reduction-study_N.htm&imageURL=http://i.usatoday.net/weather/_photos/2009/04/16/global-tempsx-large.jpg
I just wonder, how many years will it be before that downturn on those red bars (warmer than ‘normal’) turn into blue bars (cooler than ‘normal’)? Time will tell and not any consensus.
The function of Darwin’s Bulldog was to make evolution a consensus opinion.
MikeN
Chris Colose has posted a paper that says that decadal coolings are not unusual during global warming.
Thats interesting, if AGW has never happened before, and the warming is unprecedented, then how can decadal coolings not be “unusual” if this is the first time it has happened? lol!
Thank you, Paul, for this cool disection of the great global warming plague inflicted upon the world by narrow cash and control interests… and to Anthony for recognising your contribution and providing the vehicle for is dissemination.
I am surprised that the CBC has not yet fired Rex Murphy. I have written and thanked him for his courage. He stands alone at the CBC. Can anyone guess who it is that Andrew Weaver refuses to debate? I find it very telling that NONE of the AGW proponents will take question from the audience after a speaking engagement. My father will sit and discuss for hours after a talk as Mike from Canmore was kind enough to mention in another thread. He has no fear when it comes to clarifying his views for anyone who has questions. It is too late in the evening, but I will try to access my fathers response to Weavers’ letter in the Vancouver Sun. Check out the title of Weaver’s article, I almost (snipped) my pants laughing, …….
Item # 8 in Notes, ….
MikeN (22:11:53) :
Chris Colose has posted a paper that says that decadal coolings are not unusual during global warming.
[1] If not unusual, than why wasn’t it predicted by the models?
[2] How long must cooling go on – before it’s real cooling and not just a pause in global warming? (a) More than 10 years, (b) more than 20 years, (c) more than 30 years, or (d) Until the grant money dries up?
[3] What’s overwhelming the CO2 climate forcing to cause the cooling?
G Alston, both Darwin and Einstein ( and every other real scientist) have gone through rigorous falsification (as is done in science) since their theories were published. For the most part, they have stood up to intense scrutiny. Can Hansen, Schmidt, and the rest of the hockey team say this? No, because they WILL NOT release there methodology. EVERY scientists goal is to have their research accepted into the mainstream, so what was your point?
The Darwin wars were fought in the US between Louis Agassiz and Huxley’s equivalent Asa Gray. Agassiz tried to silence Gray by having a board member at Harvard threaten his career- which only seemed to motivate Gray. Agassiz and a few colleagues in a renewed attempt to crush Darwinism struck upon the idea of forming an elitist organization- limited to fifty internally selected members- that would become designated as the federal government’s science advisor. The organization was the National Academies of Science and its mission was to use the power of government prestige and hand selected members to control the scientific debate.
Some things never change. There is a great book “Reef Madness” by David Dobbs on the politics of the Darwin battle that seem to be simply an earlier incarnation of the AGW debate. The tactics, personal enmity, political intrgue, career threats were all on display a 130 years ago.
OT Turns out the droughts in africa in the 1970’s was not due to pollution from europe like some suggested
“West’s pollution ‘led to African droughts'”
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2042856.stm
“1970-85 Famine Blamed On Pollution”
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/07/21/home/main515765.shtml
Its all down to natural cycles.
“Africa trapped in mega-drought cycle”
“The infamous 1970s drought of the African Sahel region, which lasted several decades and killed more than 100,000 people, was actually a “minor” event, say researchers who have uncovered evidence that such droughts occur cyclically in the region and can be much more severe.”
“Several studies have suggested that fluctuations in the surface temperature of the North Atlantic Ocean are partly responsible for shifts in the African monsoon. Shanahan and colleagues found more evidence in support of that when they compared sea temperature records with the patterns in their sediment samples and found a strong correlation.”
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn16967-africa-trapped-in-megadrought-cycle.html
The basic assumption that anyhting more complex than coin tossing och dice throwing can be predicted over time, using statistics, is flawed. It’s very hard to find real life phenomenae (other than coin tossing and dice throwing) that are easily studied based on the laws of probability.
Anyway, to be able to study phenomenae in this way, one first must have an almost complete understanding of the phenomena in detail.
The earths climate is not completely understood in this way, which is proven by the simple fact that scientists still study and learn more about the earths climate.
The general assumption made by many people today, that statistics is a scientific discipline is totally wrong.
Science is only that which can be proven by repeated experiments.
Statistics and mathematics are in this way non-scientific, neither can be proven.
You could of course try to prove that 1+1=2 by putting two apples on a table – but how on earth will You prove that there are in fact two apples?
Nice article. The consensus claim and the science is settled claims are nothing more than intimidation so that people don’t look into this and so they don’t speak out. Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.
Richard Feynman videos on :
The Key to Science (1 minute) :
Only can be sure we’re wrong (1 minute) :
Pseudoscience (2 minutes) :
Scientific Investigation (9 minutes) :
Bonus video (just because it’s good ;), 6 minutes) :
“MikeN (22:11:53) : Chris Colose has posted a paper that says that decadal coolings are not unusual during global warming.”
Sure, everything is ok with global warming. Is it ok that children can’t sleep good after they’ve seen Al Gore’s movie?
“Whoever undertakes to set himself up as a judge of Truth and Knowledge is shipwrecked by the laughter of the gods.” – Albert Einstein
And????
Do we need to have a 100% certainty about something to act on it?
– We’re not 100% sure that quantum mechanics is completely correct, but nevertheless we build hyper-expensive super-accelerators, fission and fusion power plants. We use computers and laser-discs and MP3s and they work.
– Tens of papers go out every year questioning Einstein’s theory of relativity, anyway the GPS satellites were launched with correcting factors taking relativity into account.
– We’re not 100% sure how tobacco causes lung cancers, but nevertheless we know it does and action has been take to take care of that.
– When we take the car, or a bus or a plane, we’re not 100% sure the brakes won’t give in or that birds won’t go through the reactors. Anyway, we take our cars and the planes.
Science is NEVER 100% sure of something, but we don’t need 100% certainty to take action. We only need a sufficient amount of converging evidences and a sufficiently high degree of confidence. Given that 97% of researchers in climate science are convinced that the present global warming is induced by anthropogenic causes, I think personally this degree of confidence is high enough. What do you think?
Huxley was indeed a formidable figure. But his legendary despatching of Wilberforce is largely that – legendary. See for example Stephen Jay Gould’s piece ‘Knight Takes Bishop?’ published in a couple of places, easily found by googling. Dispassionate and contemporary observers of the debate contradict much of the later Huxley version. Wilberforce did not do badly in the scientific debate. He was not silenced by a dazzling Huxley riposte, and was more effectively responded to by Hooker. The famous story about the bishop nastily asking Huxley if he was descended from an ape on his mother’s or his father’s side is probably a garbled version of a harmless joke, and this incident seems to have had little effect on the outcome of the debate.
Declaration of interest: I am a protestant but not a creationist. I am a global warming sceptic. I admire Huxley in some ways, but idols can have those feet of clay.
Evolution is not a consensus opinion it’s science fact. The theory of Darwin, however, seems to hold up pretty well as an explanation of how the mechanisim works. That plus modern biological theory, of course.
Even, Deus ex machina can not alter the geological record.
Flanagan (00:14:30) :
Hey Flanagan, what’s the weather going to be like next Wednesday? Is it going to be warmer than today? The same? Cooler than today?
Flanagan>> “Given that 97% of researchers in climate science are convinced that the present global warming is induced by anthropogenic causes, I think personally this degree of confidence is high enough. What do you think?”
You’re talking about 97% consensus. Consensus is not a scientific argument.
If the methods with which the consensus has been achieved are flawed, then the consensus is totally irrelevant.
This, my friend, is why most sceptics like to discuss the methods used rather than the percentage of scientists who believe in the results. 🙂