Climategate Analysis From SPPI

by John P. Costella | January 18, 2010

From SPPI

INTRODUCTORY ESSAY

Why Climategate is so distressing to scientists

by John P. Costella | December 10, 2009

The most difficult thing for a scientist in the era of Climategate is trying to explain to family and friends why it is so distressing to scientists. Most people don’t know how science really works: there are no popular television shows, movies, or books that really depict the everyday lives of real scientists; it just isn’t exciting enough. I’m not talking here about the major discoveries of science—which are well-described in documentaries, popular science series, and magazines—but rather how the process of science (often called the “scientific method”) actually works.

The best analogy that I have been able to come up with, in recent weeks, is the criminal justice system—which is (rightly or wrongly) abundantly depicted in the popular media. Everyone knows what happens if police obtain evidence by illegal means: the evidence is ruled inadmissible; and, if a case rests on that tainted evidence, it is thrown out of court. The justice system is not saying that the accused is necessarily innocent; rather, that determining the truth is impossible if evidence is not protected from tampering or fabrication.

The same is true in science: scientists assume that the rules of the scientific method have been followed, at least in any discipline that publishes its results for public consumption. It is that trust in the process that allows me, for example, to believe that the human genome has been mapped—despite my knowing nothing about that field of science at all. That same trust has allowed scientists at large to similarly believe in the results of climate science.

Until now.

So what are the “rules” of the scientific method? Actually, they are not all that different from those of the justice system. Just as it is a fundamental right of every affected party to be heard and fairly considered by the court, it is of crucial importance to science that all points of view be given a chance to be heard, and fairly debated. But, of course, it would be impossible to allow an “open slather” type of arrangement, like discussion forums on the Internet; so how do we admit all points of view, without descending into anarchy?

This question touches on something of a dark secret within science one which most scientists, through the need for self-preservation, are scared to admit: most disciplines of science are, to a greater or lesser extent, controlled by fashions, biases, and dogma. Why is this so? Because the mechanism by which scientific debate has been “regulated” to avoid anarchy—at least since the second half of the twentieth century—has been the “peer review” process. The career of any professional scientist lives or dies on their success in achieving publication of their papers in “peer-reviewed” journals. So what, exactly, does “peer-reviewed” mean? Simply that other professional scientists in that discipline must agree that the paper is worthy of publication. And what is the criterion that determines who these “professional scientists” should be? Their success in achieving publication of their papers in peer-reviewed journals! Catch-22.

It may seem, on the surface, that this circular process is fundamentally flawed; but, borrowing the words of Winston Churchill, it is the worst form of government except for all those others that have been tried. Science is not, of course, alone in this respect; for example, in the justice system, judges are generally selected from the ranks of lawyers. So what is it that allows this form of system work, despite its evident circularity?

The justice system again provides a clue: judges are not the ones who ultimately decide what occurs in a courtroom: they simply implement the laws passed or imposed by the government—and politicians are not, in general, selected solely from the ranks of the legal profession. This is the ultimate “reality check” that prevents the legal system from spiraling into navel-gazing irrelevance.

Equivalent “escape valves” for science are not as explicitly obvious, but they exist nonetheless.

Firstly, a scientific discipline can maintain a “closed shop” mentality for a while, but eventually the institutions and funding agencies that provide the lifeblood of their work— the money that pays their wages and funds their research—will begin to question the relevance and usefulness of the discipline, particularly in relation to other disciplines that are competing for the same funds. This will generally be seen by the affected scientists as “political interference”, but it is a reflection of their descent into arrogance and delusions of self-importance for them to believe that only they themselves are worthy of judging their own merits.

Secondly, scientists who are capable and worthy, but unfairly “locked out” of a given discipline, will generally migrate to other disciplines in which the scientific process is working as it should. Dysfunctional disciplines will, in time, atrophy, in favor of those that are healthy and dynamic.

The Climategate emails show that these self-regulating mechanisms simply failed to work in the case of climate science—perhaps because “climate science” is itself an aggregation of many different and disparate scientific disciplines. Those component disciplines are extremely challenging. For example, it would be wonderful if NASA were able to invent a time machine, and go back over the past hundred thousand years and set up temperature and carbon dioxide measurement probes across the breadth of the globe. Unfortunately, we don’t have this. Instead, we need to infer these measurements, by counting tree rings, or digging up tubes of ice. The science of each of these disciplines is well-defined and rigorous, and there are many good scientists working in these fields. But the real difficulty is the “stitching together” of all of these results, in a way that allows answers to the fundamental questions: How much effect has mankind had on the temperature of the planet? And how much difference would it make if we did things differently?

It is at this “stitching together” layer of science—one could call it a “meta-discipline”— that the principles of the scientific method have broken down. Reading through the Climate-gate emails, one can see members of that community usually those with slightly different experience and wisdom than the power-brokers questioning (as they should) this “stitching together” process, particularly with regard to the extremely subtle mathematical methods that need to be used to try to extract answers. Now, these mathematical and statistical methods are completely within my own domain of expertise; and I can testify that the criticisms are sensible, carefully thought-out, and completely valid; these are good scientists, asking the right questions.

So what reception do they get? Instead of embracing this diversity of knowledge— thanking them for their experience (no one knows everything about everything) and using that knowledge to improve their own calculations—these power-brokers of climate science instead ignore, fob off, ridicule, threaten, and ultimately black-ball those who dare to question the methods that they—the power-brokers, the leaders—have used. And do not be confused: I am here talking about those scientists within their own camps, not the “skeptics” which they dismiss out of hand.

This is not “climate science”, it is climate ideology; it is the Church of Climatology.

It is this betrayal of the principles of science—in what is arguably the most important public application of science in our lifetime—that most distresses scientists.

Read the full essay here.

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Reed Coray
January 23, 2010 9:04 pm

Nick (16:57:31) :
“..explanations that appeal to the general public.”,Reed Coray,do not necessarily appeal to the truth.
Nick, in the sense that an “explanation appeals to the general public”, it is meaningless to argue the “explanation might not appeal to the truth”. An explanation that “appeals” to the general public is one that “has the ability to attract or stimulate the mind or emotions”. You can no more “attract or stimulate the mind or emotions of truth” than you can “attract or stimulate the mind or emotions of a brick“.
I happen to believe Dr. Costella’s thesis is “spot on”, but that is beside the point. My (11:10:11) comment wasn’t about the truthfulness of Dr. Costella’s thesis, it was about the tone he used to express that thesis. And although this blog is primarily scientific in nature, it is not totally so. IMO “Climategate” encompasses both political and scientific issues; and since the categories assigned to this thread are “Climategate, Science”, I believe my comment was consistent with the content of this thread.
I also believe we are on the brink of entering into a disastrous and ill-conceived reduction in fossil fuel use based on false or at least not sufficiently proven scientific claims. There are times to debate the science and times to debate the politics. Since it will be political leaders, not scientists, that push us off that cliff and since political leaders listen to their electorates, winning the political battle is critical. If you disagree, then convince people like Dr. Hansen, Dr. Pachauri, Dr. Trenberth, Dr. Holdren, and others to stick to science and cease being advocates–i.e., to stop pressuring political leaders to sign meaningless accords and to transfer wealth from developed countries to undeveloped countries.

Spector
January 24, 2010 3:37 am

Does anyone have an opinion about how Dr. Costella’s work compares with the Climategate book by Mosher and Fuller?
I believe Dr. Costella’s article is written in the style of a prosecutor carefully presenting his case — nothing wrong with that — as opposed to an ‘impartial’ judge weighing evidence presented before him. Dr. Costella does appear to be making a good case here.

Roger Knights
January 24, 2010 3:42 am

I suspect there are plenty more emails … held in reserve to protect the person leaking the first batch, or emails that were deleted from the first batch, which might have implicated the leaker as going along with the rent-seeking scientists. There are plenty of emails that are clearly missing a response, which must be held in reserve somewhere.

I recently noticed something that makes me suspect you’re right. (Just a tiny “something,” and one I don’t want to mention.) I’d now put the odds at 1 in 4 that there is more being held back.
This possibility, since the CRU scientists can’t know if it’s true or not, makes it likelier that there will be full disclosure of additional material in response to the Parliamentary inquiry.

Boudu
January 24, 2010 10:19 am

I just spent my Sunday reading through this excellent and enlightening analysis. A great compendium of the Climategate emails. I find it telling that in the final pages both Trenberth and Mann voice reservations if not doubts about their ‘science’.

Joe
January 24, 2010 5:03 pm

This is truely an excellent dissection of the Climategate emails. I couldn’t put it down…. I read until it was finished at 4:00 am! Maybe partly because I knew Mike really well in graduate school when he switched from theoretical nuclear physics into what would become climatology. He was convinced of GW on day one in 1990 when he attended his very first talk on climate. There was no open mind and no debate back then and I can see through the emails that he hasn’t changed at all.

geo
January 25, 2010 5:03 pm

@Reed Coray (11:10:11) :
It wasn’t *just* “tone”. At one point he has them unquestionably going to jail for FOIA obstruction, for instance –that’s not his job. Let the legal process decide that. At another he convicts Briffa of “treason” to the UK.
I suppose there are posters on this thread who are ready to convict the whole lot of “treason to the human race”, but I think that’s a bit beyond what most people were looking for in an analytical analysis of the content of those emails by another scientific expert.

Spector
January 28, 2010 6:41 am

It looks like the limitations on prosecution under the UK FOI law make it a legal fiction. In any case, I would not expect the government there to have any appetite to be seen by many as persecuting the ‘heroes’ of the green earth movement. That also applies in the United States.
I note that Dr. Mann’s book “Dire Predictions” is the number-one bestselling book in the “Climategate” books search category on Amazon.com. Mosher and Fuller’s book is number two and Ralph B. Alexander’s book, “Global Warming False Alarm” is number three.

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