I’m honored to offer this guest post by Jerome Ravetz, of Oxford University in the UK. Mr. Ravetz is an environmental consultant and professor of philosophy of science best known for his books challenging the assumptions of scientific objectivity, discussing the science wars and post-normal science. Read more about him at his personal web page here, his Oxford page here, or at his blog the Post-normal Times. Also, my thanks to WUWT regular “tallbloke” for his facilitation. – Anthony
Guest post by Jerome Ravetz
At the end of January 2010 two distinguished scientific institutions shared headlines with Tony Blair over accusations of the dishonest and possibly illegal manipulation of information. Our ‘Himalayan glaciers melting by 2035’ of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is matched by his ‘dodgy dossier’ of Saddam’s fictitious subversions. We had the violations of the Freedom of Information Act at the University of East Anglia; he has the extraordinary 70-year gag rule on the David Kelly suicide file. There was ‘the debate is over’ on one side, and ‘WMD beyond doubt’ on the other. The parallels are significant and troubling, for on both sides they involve a betrayal of public trust.
Politics will doubtless survive, for it is not a fiduciary institution; but for science the dangers are real. Climategate is particularly significant because it cannot be blamed on the well-known malign influences from outside science, be they greedy corporations or an unscrupulous State. This scandal, and the resulting crisis, was created by people within science who can be presumed to have been acting with the best of intentions. In the event of a serious discrediting of the global-warming claims, public outrage would therefore be directed at the community of science itself, and (from within that community) at its leaders who were either ignorant or complicit until the scandal was blown open. If we are to understand Climategate, and move towards a restoration of trust, we should consider the structural features of the situation that fostered and nurtured the damaging practices. I believe that the ideas of Post-Normal Science (as developed by Silvio Funtowicz and myself) can help our understanding.
There are deep problems of the management of uncertainty in science in the policy domain, that will not be resolved by more elaborate quantification. In the gap between science and policy, the languages, their conventions and their implications are effectively incommensurable. It takes determination and skill for a scientist who is committed to social responsibility, to avoid becoming a ‘stealth advocate’ (in the terms of Roger Pielke Jr.). When the policy domain seems unwilling or unable to recognise plain and urgent truths about a problem, the contradictions between scientific probity and campaigning zeal become acute. It is a perennial problem for all policy-relevant science, and it seems to have happened on a significant scale in the case of climate science. The management of uncertainty and quality in such increasingly common situations is now an urgent task for the governance of science.
We can begin to see what went seriously wrong when we examine what the leading practitioners of this ‘evangelical science’ of global warming (thanks to Angela Wilkinson) took to be the plain and urgent truth in their case. This was not merely that there are signs of exceptional disturbance in the ecosphere due to human influence, nor even that the climate might well be changing more rapidly now than for a very long time. Rather, they propounded, as a proven fact, Anthropogenic Carbon-based Global Warming. There is little room for uncertainty in this thesis; it effectively needs hockey-stick behaviour in all indicators of global temperature, so that it is all due to industrialisation. Its iconic image is the steadily rising graph of CO2 concentrations over the past fifty years at the Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii (with the implicit assumption that CO2 had always previously been at or below that starting level). Since CO2 has long been known to be a greenhouse gas, with scientific theories quantifying its effects, the scientific case for this dangerous trend could seem to be overwhelmingly simple, direct, and conclusive.
In retrospect, we can ask why this particular, really rather extreme view of the prospect, became the official one. It seems that several causes conspired. First, the early opposition to any claim of climate change was only partly scientific; the tactics of the opposing special interests were such as to induce the proponents to adopt a simple, forcefully argued position. Then, once the position was adopted, its proponents became invested in it, and attached to it, in all sorts of ways, institutional and personal. And I suspect that a simplified, even simplistic claim, was more comfortable for these scientists than one where complexity and uncertainty were acknowledged. It is not merely a case of the politicians and public needing a simple, unequivocal message. As Thomas Kuhn described ‘normal science’, which (as he said) nearly all scientists do all the time, it is puzzle-solving within an unquestioned framework or ‘paradigm’. Issues of uncertainty and quality are not prominent in ‘normal’ scientific training, and so they are less easily conceived and managed by its practitioners.
Now, as Kuhn saw, this ‘normal’ science has been enormously successful in enabling our unprecedented understanding and control of the world around us. But his analysis related to the sciences of the laboratory, and by extension the technologies that could reproduce stable and controllable external conditions for their working. Where the systems under study are complicated, complex or poorly understood, that ‘textbook’ style of investigation becomes less, sometimes much less, effective. The near-meltdown of the world’s financial system can be blamed partly on naïvely reductionist economics and misapplied simplistic statistics. The temptation among ‘normal’ scientists is to work as if their material is as simple as in the lab. If nothing else, that is the path to a steady stream of publications, on which a scientific career now so critically depends. The most obvious effect of this style is the proliferation of computer simulations, which give the appearance of solved puzzles even when neither data nor theory provide much support for the precision of their numerical outputs. Under such circumstances, a refined appreciation of uncertainty in results is inhibited, and even awareness of quality of workmanship can be atrophied.
In the course of the development of climate-change science, all sorts of loose ends were left unresolved and sometimes unattended. Even the most fundamental quantitative parameter of all, the forcing factor relating the increase in mean temperature to a doubling of CO2, lies somewhere between 1 and 3 degrees, and is thus uncertain to within a factor of 3. The precision (at about 2%) in the statements of the ‘safe limits’ of CO2 concentration, depending on calculations with this factor, is not easily justified. Also, the predictive power of the global temperature models has been shown to depend more on the ‘story line’ than anything else, the end-of century increase in temperature ranging variously from a modest one degree to a catastrophic six. And the ‘hockey stick’ picture of the past, so crucial for the strict version of the climate change story, has run into increasingly severe problems. As an example, it relied totally on a small set of deeply uncertain tree-ring data for the Medieval period, to refute the historical evidence of a warming then; but it needed to discard that sort of data for recent decades, as they showed a sudden cooling from the 1960’s onwards! In the publication, the recent data from other sources were skilfully blended in so that the change was not obvious; that was the notorious ‘Nature trick’ of the CRU e-mails.
Even worse, for the warming case to have political effect, a mere global average rise in temperature was not compelling enough. So that people could appreciate the dangers, there needed to be predictions of future climate – or even weather – in the various regions of the world. Given the gross uncertainties in even the aggregated models, regional forecasts are really beyond the limits of science. And yet they have been provided, with various degrees of precision. Those announced by the IPCC have become the most explosive.
As all these anomalies and unsolved puzzles emerged, the neat, compelling picture became troubled and even confused. In Kuhn’s analysis, this would be the start of a ‘pre-revolutionary’ phase of normal science. But the political cause had been taken up by powerful advocates, like Al Gore. We found ourselves in another crusading ‘War’, like those on (non-alcoholic) Drugs and ‘Terror’. This new War, on Carbon, was equally simplistic, and equally prone to corruption and failure. Global warming science became the core element of this major worldwide campaign to save the planet. Any weakening of the scientific case would have amounted to a betrayal of the good cause, as well as a disruption of the growing research effort. All critics, even those who were full members of the scientific peer community, had to be derided and dismissed. As we learned from the CRU e-mails, they were not considered to be entitled to the normal courtesies of scientific sharing and debate. Requests for information were stalled, and as one witty blogger has put it, ‘peer review’ was replaced by ‘pal review’.
Even now, the catalogue of unscientific practices revealed in the mainstream media is very small in comparison to what is available on the blogosphere. Details of shoddy science and dirty tricks abound. By the end, the committed inner core were confessing to each other that global temperatures were falling, but it was far too late to change course. The final stage of corruption, cover-up, had taken hold. For the core scientists and the leaders of the scientific communities, as well as for nearly all the liberal media, ‘the debate was over’. Denying Climate Change received the same stigma as denying the Holocaust. Even the trenchant criticisms of the most egregious errors in the IPCC reports were kept ‘confidential’. And then came the e-mails.
We can understand the root cause of Climategate as a case of scientists constrained to attempt to do normal science in a post-normal situation. But climate change had never been a really ‘normal’ science, because the policy implications were always present and strong, even overwhelming. Indeed, if we look at the definition of ‘post-normal science’, we see how well it fits: facts uncertain,values in dispute, stakes high, and decisions urgent. In needing to treat Planet Earth like a textbook exercise, the climate scientists were forced to break the rules of scientific etiquette and ethics, and to play scientific power-politics in a way that inevitably became corrupt. The combination of non-critical ‘normal science’ with anti-critical ‘evangelical science’ was lethal. As in other ‘gate’ scandals, one incident served to pull a thread on a tissue of protective plausibilities and concealments, and eventually led to an unravelling. What was in the e-mails could be largely explained in terms of embattled scientists fighting off malicious interference; but the materials ready and waiting on the blogosphere provided a background, and that is what converted a very minor scandal to a catastrophe.
Consideration of those protective plausibilities can help to explain how the illusions could persist for so long until their sudden collapse. The scientists were all reputable, they published in leading peer-reviewed journals, and their case was itself highly plausible and worthy in a general way. Individual criticisms were, for the public and perhaps even for the broader scientific community, kept isolated and hence muffled and lacking in systematic significance. And who could have imagined that at its core so much of the science was unsound? The plausibility of the whole exercise was, as it were, bootstrapped. I myself was alerted to weaknesses in the case by some caveats in Sir David King’s book The Hot Topic; and I had heard of the hockey-stick affair. But even I was carried along by the bootstrapped plausibility, until the scandal broke. (I have benefited from the joint project on plausibility in science of colleagues in Oxford and at the Arizona State University).
Part of the historic significance of Climategate is that the scandal was so effectively and quickly exposed. Within a mere two months of the first reports in the mainstream media, the key East Anglia scientists and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change were discredited. Even if only a fraction of their scientific claims were eventually refuted, their credibility as trustworthy scientists was lost. To explain how it all happened so quickly and decisively, we have the confluence of two developments, one social and the other technical. For the former, there is a lesson of Post-Normal Science, that we call the Extended Peer Community. In traditional ‘normal’ science, the peer community, performing the functions of quality-assurance and governance, is strictly confined to the researchers who share the paradigm. In the case of ‘professional consultancy’, the clients and/or sponsors also participate in governance. We have argued that in the case of Post-Normal Science, the ‘extended peer community’, including all affected by the policy being implemented, must be fully involved. Its particular contribution will depend on the nature of the core scientific problem, and also on the phase of investigation. Detailed technical work is a task for experts, but quality-control on even that work can be done by those with much broader expertise. And on issues like the definition of the problem itself, the selection of personnel, and crucially the ownership of the results, the extended peer community has full rights of participation. This principle is effectively acknowledged in many jurisdictions, and for many policy-related problems. The theory of Post-Normal Science goes beyond the official consensus in recognising ‘extended facts’, that might be local knowledge and values, as well as unoffficially obtained information.
The task of creating and involving the extended peer community (generally known as ‘participation’) has been recognised as difficult, with its own contradictions and pitfalls. It has grown haphazardly, with isolated successes and failures. Hitherto, critics of scientific matters have been relegated to a sort of samizdat world, exchanging private letters or writing books that can easily be ignored (as not being peer-reviewed) by the ruling establishment. This has generally been the fate of even the most distinguished and responsible climate-change critics, up to now. A well-known expert in uncertainty management, Jeroen van der Sluijs, explicitly condemned the ‘overselling of certainty’ and predicted the impending destruction of trust; but he received no more attention than did Nikolas Taleb in warning of the ‘fat tails’ in the probability distributions of securities that led to the Credit Crunch. A prominent climate scientist, Mike Hulme, provided a profound analysis in Why We Disagree About Climate Change, in terms of complexity and uncertainty. But since legitimate disagreement was deemed nonexistent, he too was ignored.
To have a political effect, the ‘extended peers’ of science have traditionally needed to operate largely by means of activist pressure-groups using the media to create public alarm. In this case, since the global warmers had captured the moral high ground, criticism has remained scattered and ineffective, except on the blogosphere. The position of Green activists is especially difficult, even tragic; they have been ‘extended peers’ who were co-opted into the ruling paradigm, which in retrospect can be seen as a decoy or diversion from the real, complex issues of sustainability, as shown by Mike Hulme. Now they must do some very serious re-thinking about their position and their role.
The importance of the new media of communications in mass politics, as in the various ‘rainbow revolutions’ is well attested. To understand how the power-politics of science have changed in the case of Climategate, we can take a story from the book Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirkey. There were two incidents in the Boston U.S.A. diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, involving the shuffling of paeodophile priests around parishes. The first time, there was a criminal prosecution, with full exposure in the press, and then nothing happened. The second time, the outraged parents got on their cell phones and organised; and eventually Cardinal Archbishop Bernard Francis Law (who had started as a courageous cleric in the ‘60’s) had to leave for Rome in disgrace. The Climategate affair shows the importance of the new IT for science, as an empowerment of the extended peer community.
The well-known principle, ‘knowledge is power’ has its obverse, ‘ignorance is impotence’. And ignorance is maintained, or eventually overcome, by a variety of socio-technical means. With the invention of cheap printing on paper, the Bible could be widely read, and heretics became Reformers. The social activity of science as we know it expanded and grew through the age of printing. But knowledge was never entirely free, and the power-politics of scientific legitimacy remained quite stable for centuries. The practice of science has generally been restricted to a social elite and its occasional recruits, as it requires a prior academic education and a sufficiency of leisure and of material resources. With the new information technology, all that is changing rapidly. As we see from the ‘open source’ movement, many people play an active role in enjoyable technological development in the spare time that their job allows or even encourages. Moreover, all over IT there are blogs that exercise quality control on the industry’s productions. In this new knowledge industry, the workers can be as competent as the technicians and bosses. The new technologies of information enable the diffusion of scientific competence and the sharing of unofficial information, and hence give power to peer communities that are extended far beyond the Ph.D.s in the relevant subject-specialty. The most trenchant and effective critics of the ‘hockey stick’ statistics were a University-employed economist and a computer expert.
Like any other technology, IT is many-faceted. It is easily misused and abused, and much of the content of the blogosphere is trivial or worse. The right-wing political agendas of some climate sceptics, their bloggers and their backers, are quite well known. But to use their background or motivation as an excuse for ignoring their arguments, is a betrayal of science. The blogosphere interacts with other media of communication, in the public and scientific domains. Some parts are quite mainstream, others not. The Climategate blogosphere is as varied in quality as any other. Some leading scholars, like Roger Pielke, Jr. have had personal blogs for a long time. Some blogs are carefully monitored, have a large readership and are sampled by the mainstream media (such as the one on which this is posted, Wattsupwiththat.com). Others are less rigorous; but the same variation in quality can be found in the nominally peer-reviewed scientific literature. Keeping up with the blogosphere requires different skills from keeping up with traditional literature; it is most useful to find a summarising blog that fits one’s special interests, as well as a loyal correspondent, as (in my case) Roger ‘tallbloke’ Tattersall.
Some mainstream publications are now saying nice things about the blogosphere. Had such sentiments been expressed a while ago, the critical voices might have had a public hearing and the Climategate scandal might have been exposed before it became entrenched so disastrously. And now the critical blogosphere does not need to be patronised. Like any extension of political power, whether it be the right to believe, to protest, to vote, to form trades unions, or to be educated, it can lead to instabilities and abuses. But now the extended peer community has a technological base, and the power-politics of science will be different. I cannot predict how it will work out, but we can be confident that corruptions built on bootstrapped plausibility will be less likely in the future.
There is an important philosophical dimension to Climategate, a question of the relation of personal scientific ethics to objective scientific facts. The problem is created by the traditional image of science (as transmitted in scientific education) as ‘value-free’. The personal commitments to integrity, that are necessary for the maintenance of scientific quality, receive no mention in the dominant philosophy of science. Kuhn’s disenchanted picture of science was so troubling to the idealists (as Popper) because in his ‘normal’ science criticism had hardly any role. For Kuhn, even the Mertonian principles of ethical behaviour were effectively dismissed as irrelevant. Was this situation truly ‘normal’ – meaning either average or (worse) appropriate? The examples of shoddy science exposed by the Climategate convey a troubling impression. From the record, it appears that in this case, criticism and a sense of probity needed to be injected into the system by the extended peer community from the (mainly) external blogosphere.
The total assurance of the mainstream scientists in their own correctness and in the intellectual and moral defects of their critics, is now in retrospect perceived as arrogance. For their spokespersons to continue to make light of the damage to the scientific case, and to ignore the ethical dimension of Climategate, is to risk public outrage at a perceived unreformed arrogance. If there is a continuing stream of ever more detailed revelations, originating in the blogosphere but now being brought to a broader public, then the credibility of the established scientific authorities will continue to erode. Do we face the prospect of the IPCC reports being totally dismissed as just more dodgy dossiers, and of hitherto trusted scientists being accused of negligence or worse? There will be those who with their own motives will be promoting such a picture. How can it be refuted?
And what about the issue itself? Are we really experiencing Anthropogenic Carbon-based Global Warming? If the public loses faith in that claim, then the situation of science in our society will be altered for the worse. There is very unlikely to be a crucial experience that either confirms or refutes the claim; the post-normal situation is just too complex. The consensus is likely to depend on how much trust can still be put in science. The whole vast edifice of policy commitments for Carbon reduction, with their many policy prescriptions and quite totalitarian moral exhortations, will be at risk of public rejection. What sort of chaos would then result? The consequences for science in our civilisation would be extraordinary.
To the extent that the improved management of uncertainty and ignorance can remedy the situation, some useful tools are at hand. In the Netherlands, scholars and scientists have developed ‘Knowledge Quality Assessment’ methodologies for characterising uncertainty in ways that convey the richness of the phenomenon while still performing well as robust tools of analysis and communication. Elsewhere, scholars are exploring methods for managing disagreement among scientists, so that such post-normal issues do not need to become so disastrously polarised. A distinguished scholar, Sheila Jasanoff, has called for a culture of humility among scientists, itself a radical move towards a vision of a non-violent science. Scientists who have been forced to work on the blogosphere have had the invaluable experience of exclusion and oppression; that could make it easier for them to accept that something is seriously wrong and then to engage in the challenging moral adventures of dealing with uncertainty and ignorance. The new technologies of communications are revolutionising knowledge and power in many areas. The extended peer community of science on the blogosphere will be playing its part in that process. Let dialogue commence!
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My thanks to numerous friends and colleagues for their loyal assistance through all the drafts of this essay. The final review at a seminar at the Institute of Science, Innovation and Society at Oxford University was very valuable, particularly the intervention from ‘the man in the bus queue’.
Theo Goodwin (15:41:03) :
Re: “There is no theory behind so-called climate science. ”
I’m not so sure about that.
Jasper Kirkby has a theory. He has illustrated multiple instances of correlation and is attempting to establish causation at the atomic level.
The CLOUD experiment going on at CERN will attempt to establish a fundamental physical link (as in physics) between sunspots and clouds.
If you were to ask him about his theory of climate change he might simply say:
“In the absence of sunspots more cosmic rays enter the atmosphere this causes more clouds which increases the refection of light and cools the planet.”
It is simple, makes a prediction, is testable and can be proven wrong. As I understand the meaning of the word, it is a theory.
If he is correct, then it will be very problematic, since his theory begins with sunspots which are beyond our control, and can not be taxed.
We should know more latter this year.
I particularly like the comments of everyman. I also remember a comment by a well known scientist, ” the money thrown at the global warming problem has
corrupted the system. He was not talking about corporations. Maybe recognition
and the power it bestows was a small factor
The sheer volume of error of science in this piece is quite telling. Try to demonstrate a rudimentary grasp of a field before you attempt to demolish it. Otherwise, you appear quite foolish.
Pete (18:33:30) :
I must admit to being a little confused. This article is by a Professor of Philosophy who’s essay is basically a rehash of information that has been out in the open for some time>
What’s to be confused about? Everything about this whole debate, both sides, has been said before and has been out in the open. I wrote a post a while back in a different thread that says (less eloquently) almost exactly what this professor just said. That doesn’t make what he wrote any less original. Because he is who he is, and has the credentials he does, he perhaps convinced thousands while I only convinced perhaps one or two or none. But my post from a couple of weeks back proves his point (and mine). The internet in general, and the blogosphere in particular, enable access to information and analysis that will prevent forever the control of the masses by the shaman/priesthood/priest-scientist.
Of course that means that Google is the index to human knowledge and who ever controls Google….. uh oh.
Why are we pandering to this person? Note that the creators of PNS, Jerome Ravetz and Mike Hulme, are Marxists who sought to promote post-normal science further by capitalizing on the public disgust at the corruption of ‘normal’ science.
You need to read this:
http://buythetruth.wordpress.com/2009/10/31/climate-change-and-the-death-of-science/
Note: the above referenced article was written on October 31 and updated November 3, before the ‘Climategate’ CRU email scandal broke, and it is all the more pertinent in the light of those disclosures. The CRU emails show how science has been perverted into a political movement, and how scientists conspired to serve a ‘post-normal’ agenda where truth is trampled – exactly as the proponents of ‘post-normal’ science had anticipated. With the association between ‘post-normal’ science developed by Ravetz and its application in climate science by Hulme now widely exposed by this present post, Ravetz and Hulme jointly authored an article, published by the BBC on December 1, entitled ‘Show Your Working’: What ‘ClimateGate’ means in which they sought to promote post-normal science further by capitalizing on the public disgust at the corruption of ‘normal’ science. This is cynical because normal science was corrupted by covertly introducing post-normal activities in the first place.
Bruce King (18:34:51) :
Money is still being thrown at global warming, and it’s getting to the point of at the expense of far more deserving lines of research. Science faces a dilemna: either disengage itself from the bad science that has seen scandal & failure, or watch in horror as political agenda captures and enslaves all lines of research to the tune of ‘Science on demand’.
It is a far easier thing to start over, rebuild a line of research than it is to stop a runaway train of misused science. To wit: you cannot undo the Bomb.
One has only to examine climate remedies put forth recently that failed to answer the question “Should we be doing this?” to see the dangers of entrenchment.
Assholes ensconced.
Does that sum up the essay?
The essay by Professor Ravetz is an elegant apologia for poor science and bad behaviour. Invoking Kuhn and Post-normal philosophy cannot change this. The science is poor because the evidence was “massaged” and normal criticisms or attempts to disprove the conclusions were thwarted. The latter action constitutes bad behaviour as a scientist or non-scientist. The word science is used without definiton in Professor Ravetz’ essay. Science is using a series of well-defined methods that were not adhered to by some researchers at UEA and elsewhere. Couching such actions in post-modern cant (sorry, Post-normal) cannot excuse them.
Morley
Thank you, an interesting read. I wonder if “climate science” is just a product of our time and will eventually be left to the side like so many others in the long history of scientific work.
I often wonder if the bigger picture might be the benefit of a warming climate and increasing CO2 to life.
I meant Jerome Ravetz and Silvio Funtowicz not Mike Hulme
As I see it, isn’t it obvious that the problem here is that Mann, Jones, Hanson et al have been practicing Post Normal Science? Read this from Wikipedia:
Detractors of post-normal science, conversely, see it as a method of trying to argue for a given set of actions despite a lack of evidence for them, and as a method of trying to stifle opposing voices calling for caution by accusing them of hidden biases. Many consider post-normal science an attempt to ignore proper scientific methods in an attempt to substitute inferior methodology in service of political goals. Practitioners advocating post normal science methods defend their methods, suggesting that their methodologies are not to be considered replacements for dealing with those situations in which normal science works sufficiently well
I think its unfair when people have a go at Popper for being an idealist. Popper even acknowledged that science can benefit from tautology. Popper himself was not an idealist and understood that theories had various degrees of empirical content but he did understand the need for a theory of demarcation for a scientific ideal. Popper spelt out the scientific methodology which should be undertaken to protect against personal opinions and inductivism. You cannot assess quality in the absence of an ideal and the problem is I think that more scientists need to take time to reflect on their hypotheses and work and compare it to the scientific ideal and assess if their methods contain all the essential components of the theory of scientific demarcation. There are certain aspects which are quintessential to science which if are not present in your method then you can be sure that what you are doing is not science. There is certainly some research going on out there that would not stand up to such a reflection and people would find they are just trying to pass logical tautology off as science.
Thank you sir.
Alright people, here we go… by the numbers now: Symptoms of groupthink
To make groupthink testable, Irving Janis devised eight symptoms indicative of groupthink (1977).
Illusions of invulnerability creating excessive optimism and encouraging risk taking.
Rationalizing warnings that might challenge the group’s assumptions.
Unquestioned belief in the morality of the group, causing members to ignore the consequences of their actions.
Stereotyping those who are opposed to the group as weak, evil, biased, spiteful, disfigured, impotent, or stupid.
Direct pressure to conform placed on any member who questions the group, couched in terms of “disloyalty”.
Self censorship of ideas that deviate from the apparent group consensus.
Illusions of unanimity among group members, silence is viewed as agreement.
Mind guards — self-appointed members who shield the group from dissenting information.
Groupthink, resulting from the symptoms listed above, results in defective decision making. That is, consensus-driven decisions are the result of the following practices of groupthinking[5]
Incomplete survey of alternatives
Incomplete survey of objectives
Failure to examine risks of preferred choice
Failure to reevaluate previously rejected alternatives
Poor information search
Selection bias in collecting information
Failure to work out contingency plans.
When I first read this it floored me. Someone had delineated a process…
Now, I see how Challenger, Columbia, Credit Default Swaps, Iraq & the Neo-Cons… are justified. Sure we will dig up Spanish Flu… we are smart… It is everywhere; all around the world the long-ears are saving man-kind from himself. They AGW folks are pure and care more, we the irritating but “unimportant unwashed masses need to learn all about soap”. The IPCC and CAP-n-TRADE was part of a long term strategy… There is planning behind it. It has been well funded by the foundations as well as public and private money. Who is at the heart of this I wonde? I am about ready to start toppling the Moai. God. You folks have really spent a bunch of our money, for what? You can fly the Shuttle but my car has to pass DEQ? What’s up with all that? Tell us more. THX
We may not have reached this state if more scientists had knowledge across a broader range of disciplines. Such folk naturally are more comfortable with characterizing uncertainty and should be reticent to diminish it in their pronouncments. These are the folks that we need more of. They are the “Jacks of all trades”. The problems are that we don’t have enough of these folks and so a post-normal science extended blogo-peer review is required.
Also, my sense of this essay is that it is more of an elaborate rationalization for unethical behavior and poorly skilled practitioners, than a completely accurate application to the problem.
K2 (16:53:23) states “The problem is we have a lot of good carpentry tools and a lot of bad carpenters. ” Actually, their statistical tools seem to be very dull and their plans (read databases) seem to lack proper scaling, suffer from missing information, etc. Their tape measures appear to be made of latex. I could go on but you get the drift.
Prof. Ravetz has clearly succeeded in accomplishing his objective. The discussion is, with a few exceptions, very thoughtful. Hats off to Anthony and TallBloke for facilitating.
davidmhoffer (18:55:44) :
Sorry David, I missed your post on the subject. I do not disagree about the power of the blogosphere. I love the fact that people like Anthony give us a collective voice and a power beyond the vision of the MSN until not to long ago.
My point (and I should have made it better) was really about the “Post-normal philosophy/science”. It is a new subject to me and I noticed as I scrolled through the posts that someone had put up a warning and a link…
http://buythetruth.wordpress.com/2009/10/31/climate-change-and-the-death-of-science/
(my thanks to the person that posted)
I have actually been away reading the post and its very enlightening! Well worth a read.
Here is my post from a couple of weeks ago, in the Glaciergate thread on this site. I would like to thank the professor for confirming my hypothesis and showing that the blogosphere is out ahead of the academics and scientists. In addition to being a pretend physicist and a pretend artificial intelligence developer, I am now also a pretend philosopher. I am however, still waiting to be awarded my Howler Monkey number:
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In primitive tribes, the fiercist warrior held the power to make group decisions. The smartest guy in the tribe became the shaman. He could challenge the chief with impunity by consulting the spirits (which of course only he could do) so that it was them that disagreed with the chief, not the shaman. If he was clever, he could control the chief while leaving him in charge. In human history, the chief was displaced by government, the shaman by the priesthood. Now they were both organized. But power and knowledge became synonymous and both built libraries. Power belonged to those who could assemble the most knowledge and apply it which was a labour intensive process involving many scribes. The printing press destroyed all that, driving the cost of a printed record down to the point where educational institutes and corporations could assemble knowledge that rivaled that of governments and priesthoods. At each of these stages in our history, the same tools were used to promote misinformation and control the masses as they were to document fact and prove it.
The internet is the last chapter in this progression, with the collective knowledge of humanity available to anyone who takes the time to research and comprehend. Those who wish to control others disseminate misinformation via the internet too, but they can be confronted en masse by the common man, and alliances can spring up on a moments notice involving millions of people who can make their own analysis and communicate it with a single voice.
The power of the government and the priesthood to control the common man by speaking for the spirits, or propogating falshoods to foster hatred and justify a war while the truth of matters is locked in records to which the pulic has no access. I fear not the machinations of the IPCC and their ilk to control my life because the information to expose them and the medium to express it is so available. I always knew they would lose this one.
But the watchword is vigilance. Albert Einstein said he did not know what weapons world war III would be fought with, but that world war iv would be fought with sticks and stones. He may have been wrong. World war III is being fought as we speak, but the weapon is information. Organized government recruited and built its own special priesthood, which will be defeated by the common man with nothing more than a keyboard and an ethernet cable.
thanx to scientistfortruth for linking:
http://buythetruth.wordpress.com/2009/10/31/climate-change-and-the-death-of-science/
Prof. Ravetz says:
“Climategate is particularly significant because it cannot be blamed on the well-known malign influences from outside science, be they greedy corporations or an unscrupulous State.” WRONG
“The whole vast edifice of policy commitments for Carbon reduction, with their many policy prescriptions and quite totalitarian moral exhortations, will be at risk of public rejection. What sort of chaos would then result? The consequences for science in our civilisation would be extraordinary.” WRONG
“Are we really experiencing Anthropogenic Carbon-based Global Warming? If the public loses faith in that claim, then the situation of science in our society will be altered for the worse.” WRONG
the politics preceded the ‘science’. the rejection of carbon trading and the collapse of the AGW “theory” would be a triumph for science over propaganda.
meanwhile, back in the real world, there’s an article in the Indonesian Jakarta Post today by Jonathan Wootliff of Reputation Partners in Chicago. Not mentioned is Wootliff’s history: he was Communications Director at Greenpeace International located in Amsterdam, Netherlands where he was a member of the organization’s Senior Management team, and managed the organization’s public outreach and communications in over 35 countries.
Jakarta Post: Jonathan Wootliff: Green watch: No time to waste for detailed climate action plan
But environmental groups including Greenpeace are demanding more details from the government as to how it plans to fulfill this commitment to cut the nation’s climate-threatening emissions.
Oxfam, another leading international non-governmental organization, wants to know how the government is preparing adaptations and mitigation on the predicted impacts of climate change on the poor, who they say will be hardest hit.,,
Lofty population density and high levels of biodiversity, together with its 80,000 kilometers of coastline and 17,500 islands, makes Indonesia one of the most vulnerable countries to the impact of climate change…
A recent Worldwide Fund for Nature study is one of many reports documenting shifting weather patterns making it increasingly difficult for farmers to decide when to plant their crops.
It is estimated that Indonesia is now losing at least 300,000 tons of potential crop production each year because of the scourge of global warming.
Harsher weather conditions mean that millions of fishermen are making less money because of dwindling catches caused by changes in ocean temperatures.
Indonesia’s 40 million poor who depend on healthy land and sea for their livelihoods will be the worst affected due to prolonged droughts, tropical cyclones and rising sea levels thanks to climate change…
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/02/09/green-watch-no-time-waste-detailed-climate-action-plan.html
i’m afraid Prof. Ravetz essay, as grand and commendable as much of it is, is reminiscent of the fake investigation of Climategate by The Guardian and Elisabeth Rosenthal’s NYT article yesterday.
Well written article by Professor Ravetz, and loved the use of the past tense. For me – this article is the tipping point. The AGW assertion is finally OVER.
But Professor Ravetz’s argument at the end of the article however still asserts that AGW exists. But he can’t have it both ways: on one hand he described the flawed data and approaches (even seeming to be outraged? (the ‘decline’!)), yet simultaneously endorsing the AGW conclusions: “If the public loses faith in the claim of the existence of AGW, then the situation of science in our society will be altered for the worse” ?
That line of reasoning would lead one to arguing that the ‘sexed up’ intelligence reports didn’t matter – because (in the end) the outcome was good. I’m not buying it.
Quite arguably – I believe that the situation for science in our society will be altered for the BETTER, and the use of the Blogosphere for critical technical review (as opposed to the “Pal Review” now taking place) – a step in the right direction.
“Let dialogue commence?” Professor Ravetz – it is already well underway. And by the way – it is LONG passed time to start acknowledging these heroes by name. You know who they are – and they deserve our thanks.
As he points out in the final paragraph, humility, one of the ancient virtues, is a necessary concomitant of science. In fact it may very well be its foundational virtue. In their arrogance, many climate scientists forgot the basic grammar of science by touting the AGW-CO2 hypothesis as an established theory before it was rigorously tested.
As the National Academy of Science defines it: “…theory refers to a comprehensive explanation of an important feature of nature supported by facts gathered over time. Theories also allow scientists to make predictions about as yet unobserved phenomena…”
We are considerably short of a comprehensive explanation of the climate system, let alone an ability to predict its behavior decades into the future. If the proponents of AGW-CO2 had humbly submitted their hypothesis to the scientific community for verification, the ensuing dialogue (no matter what the outcome) could have enriched the atmospheric sciences beyond measure. But imprudence has left us in ruins. It will take years to rebuild what so few have destroyed.
Look….i’m not a scientist so please help me with this. CRU has not released the original hard Data. CRU has had the Hard Data quite some time and balked at all F.O.I.s In the unlikely event they ever release this hard data(erased my arse) ….how are we to know it is in fact the actual Hard data. We’ve never seen the original. They’ve had plenty of time to go through it and…massage it. Afterall, AGW is so obvious to them and so important, such a minor issue of inconvenient data should not get in the way of saving the planet? I would guess that the AGW is kicking themselves that they allowed the all important hard data and email server to be collected at the moronic CRU. Surely such data is now a matter of NAtional Security and belongs at the NSA / GCHQ not the CRU. My concern is how are we going to guarantee access to the the all important data necessary to mount Skeptical scientific inquiry as it is now surely Job 1 for AGW complex to come between us and it. Comments please… Thx
Thanks for the perceptive essay.
Kuhn’s normal science describes the political context in which the hockey team worked, but the move away from stringent measurement into computer modelling games was the means for their self delusion. Bring back publication of the raw data.
Fortunately, through sceptical sites like WUWT and ClimateAudit, “the whole vast edifice of policy commitmaents for carbon reduction with their many policy prescriptions and quite totalitarian moral exhortations”ARE “at risk of public rejection.”
I must offer my congratulations to Jerome Ravetz for his thought-provoking post. Mr. Ravetz’s post was so thought-provoking that I could scarcely read a single paragraph without substantive objections coming immediately to mind. Since, a detailed critical commentary on twenty-three paragraphs would be somewhat tedious, I have selected five particular statements that seemed representative.
(1) “In the gap between science and policy, the languages, their conventions and their implications are effectively incommensurable.”
In Kuhn’s {i}The Structure of Scientific Revolutions{/i}, he claimed that the terms of differing scientific paradigms were incommensurable.
The concept of incommensurability, although Quine tried to give it a precise logical meaning, has unfortunately become irreducibly fuzzy. It has some sense to the effect that different scientific claims cannot be empirically resolved. Thus, a proponent of this view might try to claim that there is no empirical difference between a Lorentzian and a Newtonian frame of reference. (there is one,, just mess around with clocks). The empirical difference between Lorentzian and Einstienian interpretation of the Lorentz transform is trickier. But that doesn’t mean they are incommensurable, rather that they may be empirically equivalent.
In any case, the claim here, of science and policy having incommensurable languages, is more akin to C.P. Snow’s “The Two Cultures”, (i.e., the humanities and the sciences not speaking the same language, or maybe he meant Oxford and Cambridge, it was never quite clear.) Or maybe even Sapir-Whorf (e.g., those Dani people must be color-blind. I think the anthropologists are still living that one down.)
(2) “The near-meltdown of the world’s financial system can be blamed partly on naïvely reductionist economics and misapplied simplistic statistics. …he received no more attention than did Nikolas (sic) Taleb in warning of the ‘fat tails’ in the probability distributions of securities that led to the Credit Crunch.”
Mr. Ravetz appears to be blaming the current financial crisis on the shortcomings of VaR models. As an explanation, this is inadequate. VaR models have been in use since the 1990s. The current financial crisis, however, differs little from the many financial crises that preceded it. The introduction of VaR models may well have provided an excuse for why the responsible regulators didn’t remove the proverbial punchbowl from the financial party sooner, but the cause of the crises is the same as the cause of the preceding financial crises, namely debt/monetary inflation and moral hazard. We also note that the failure of VaR is due not simply to the use of Gaussian distributions, but also to false volatility and correlation assumptions.
(3) “The importance of the new media of communications in mass politics, as in the various ‘rainbow revolutions’ is well attested. ”
Free press was certainly important in the American Revolution. In the color revolutions, not so much. Way too much CIA involvement for that.
(4) “But knowledge was never entirely free, and the power-politics of scientific legitimacy remained quite stable for centuries. The practice of science has generally been restricted to a social elite and its occasional recruits, as it requires a prior academic education and a sufficiency of leisure and of material resources. ”
Like, Michael Faraday? Was he one of the occasional recruits? Is this thesis falsifiable, or is it perhaps the unremarkable thesis that influential scientists are socially influential and as such elite?
(5) “Like any other technology, IT is many-faceted. It is easily misused and abused, and much of the content of the blogosphere is trivial or worse. The right-wing political agendas of some climate sceptics, their bloggers and their backers, are quite well known.”
The term ‘right-wing’ is of course vague and usually used to denigrate an opponent. That said, the term has somewhat different connotations in the U.S. than in Europe. In the U.S. the term suggests a gung-ho populism, but is nonetheless far less denigrating a term than ‘left-wing’, which connotes elitism, and internationaliism with the distinct odor of treason. And is it only one wing, from whatever continent, which has the capacity to misuse and abuse IT?
It is refreshing, though, to find a naive Kuhnian walking about and typing up essays; it’s like finding a living fossil.
“Are we really experiencing Anthropogenic Carbon-based Global Warming? If the public loses faith in that claim, then the situation of science in our society will be altered for the worse.”
Up until here the Professor was doing well. He may have avoided speaking to financial malfeasance but presumably his acknowledgment of corruption recognizes this. Science has been perverted in pursuit of power and money. Period. The public stands only to lose faith in the undeserving of that faith. Those who have enriched themselves or encumbered society with false and costly claims of global warming must accept the consequences.
The only way to restore faith in science is precisely to excise the corrupt components. Professor Ravetz must understand that the public will readily accept corruption for what it is – the willingness of a comparative few institutions and key personnel within who have become “stealth advocates.” Most such people will claim to have done so in service to the greater good. Somesuch claims will be judged truthful – others will not.
There is little way going forward to avoid the distasteful work of cleaning up a mess that’s been festering for 50 years. But it is work that must be done – if we are ever to restore public trust in these institutions. Trust and good faith are vital to our movement through hazardous technological waters ahead. We have enormous issues with genetic engineering, artificial intelligence, population control, and human cloning just around the corner. To address these challenges we must have a body of science that we know is free of untoward political and financial influence. We must have unfettered trust.
Restoring trust in science and the communities that utilize it is the primary challenge going forward. It is not an easy one – but one that must be met now if we expect to survive the even bigger challenges that will follow.
So, a weak opposition is at fault for the ballooning of a myth? But I suggest that a far more important first development was a perception that “new” science was better than – and therefore superceded – older, established theories and records of climate history. This is a science which has always been on pretty good terms with historical, and allegorical records – benefitting and admitting the various data gathered over many centuries, and not just depending on recent research. Paleo records suddenly all started to take a new “slant”, all conformed to the same idea, all referred to other data gathered in the modern period. Sunspot records were hundreds – thousands – of years in the making. What these modern scientists first did was scorn history. Not just modify the historical record, but to obliterate it, to claim that modern truths were the new reality.
“What led to the current disparagement for past knowledge?” might be a better question. In my view, global warming “religion” is an evangelistic faith which resulted, not so much from the repackaging of traditional science as “values-free”, but from the venal substitution of false (e.g. “green”) values for far more substantial and important ones. There’s not a lot of personal integrity, conservatism, skepticism, and patience on display in those e-mails. And the back-room “peer-review” process is shown for what it had become, at least in climate science, and very likely in much of government and higher ed. institutions which supported it: a meritricious, Swiftian exercise in bending, stooping, leaping and grovelling for favor and reward.
I still wonder what on earth Phill Jones had in mind when he offered the offhand, and surely tongue-in-cheek expression “value-adding” to describe the plundering of HadCru’s data. If you have the power to dispose of other people’s history, your definition of “value” is still no more important than theirs. “Values-free” is not an apt description of those who use their power over a period of decades, as Jones and (probably Wigley did), to advance their own agendas and careers.