Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
Judith Curry posted here on WUWT regarding rebuilding the lost trust we used to have in climate science and climate scientists. This is my response to her post, an expansion and revision of what I wrote in the comments on that thread.

First, be clear that I admire Judith Curry greatly. She is one of the very, very few mainstream climate scientists brave enough to enter into a public dialogue about these issues. I salute her for her willingness to put her views on public display, and for tackling this difficult issue.
As is often my wont in trying to understand a long and complex dissertation, I first made my own digest of what Judith said. To do so, I condensed each of her paragraphs into one or a few sentences. Here is that digest:
Digest of Judith Curry’s Post: On the Credibility of Climate Research, Part II: Towards Rebuilding Trust
1 I am trying an experiment by posting on various blogs
2 Losing the Public’s Trust
2.1 Climategate has broadened to become a crisis of trust in climate science in general.
2.2 Credibility is a combination of expertise and trust. Trust in the IPCC is faltering.
2.3 The scientists in the CRU emails blame their actions on “malicious interference”.
2.4 Institutions like the IPCC need to ask how they enabled this situation.
2.5 Core research values have been compromised by warring against the skeptics.
2.6 Climategate won’t go away until all this is resolved.
3 The Changing Nature of Skepticism about Global Warming
3.1 Skepticism has changed over time.
3.2 First it was a minor war between advocacy groups. Then, a “monolithic climate denial machine” was born. This was funded by the oil industry.
3.3 Because of the IPCC reports, funding for contrary views died up. It was replaced by climate auditors. The “climate change establishment” didn’t understand this and kept blaming the “denial machine”.
4 Climate Auditors and the Blogosphere.
4.1 Steve McIntyre’s auditing became popular and led to blogs like WUWT.
4.2 Auditors are independent, technically educated people mostly outside of academia. They mostly audit rather than write scientific papers.
4.3 The FOIA requests were motivated by people concerned about having the same people who created the dataset using the dataset in their models.
4.4 The mainstream climate researchers don’t like the auditors because Steve McIntyre is their arch-nemesis, so they tried to prevent auditors publishing in the journals. [gotta confess I couldn’t follow the logic in this paragraph]
4.5 The auditors succeeded in bringing the climate establishment to its knees because people trusted the auditors.
5 Towards Rebuilding Trust
5.1 Ralph Cicerone says that two aspects need attention, the general practice of science and the personal behaviours of scientists. Investigations are being conducted.
5.2 Climate science has not adapted to being high profile. How scientists engage with the public is inadequately discussed. The result is reflexive support for IPCC and its related policies.
5.3 The public and policy makers don’t understand the truth as presented by the IPCC. More efficient strategies can be devised by recognizing that we are dealing with two groups: educated people, and the general public. To rebuild trust scientists need to discuss uncertainty. [“truth as presented by the IPCC? say what?]
5.4 The blogosphere can be a powerful tool for increasing credibility of climate research. The climate researchers at realclimate were the pioneers in this. More scientists should participate in these debates.
5.5 No one believes that the science is settled. Scientists and others say that the science is settled. This is detrimental to public trust.
5.6 I hope this experiment will demonstrate how the blogosphere can rebuild trust.
Having made such a digest, my next step is to condense it into an “elevator speech”. This is a very short statement of the essential principles. My elevator speech of Judith’s post is this.
Climategate has destroyed the public trust in climate science. Initially skepticism was funded by big oil. Then a climate auditing movement sprang up. They were able to bring the climate establishment to its knees because people trusted them. Public and policy makers don’t understand the truth as presented by the IPCC. To rebuild trust, climate scientists need to better communicate their ideas to the public, particularly regarding uncertainty. The blogosphere can be valuable in this regard.
OK, now what’s wrong with Judith’s picture?
Can The Trust Be Rebuilt?
First, let me say that the problem is much bigger than Judith seems to think. Wiser men than I have weighed in on this question. In a speech at Clinton, Illinois, September 8, 1854, Abraham Lincoln said:
If you once forfeit the confidence of your fellow citizens, you can never regain their respect and esteem. You may fool all of the people some of the time; you can even fool some of the people all the time; but you can’t fool all of the people all of the time.
So it will not be easy. The confidence is forfeit, that ship has sailed.
The biggest problem with Judith’s proposal is her claim that the issue is that climate scientists have not understood how to present their ideas to the public. Judith, I respect you greatly, but you have grabbed the wrong end of the stick. The problem is not how climate scientists have publicly presented their scientific results. It is not a communication problem.
The problem is that 71.3% of what passes as peer reviewed climate science is simply junk science, as false as the percentage cited in this sentence. The lack of trust is not a problem of perception or communication. It is a problem of lack of substance. Results are routinely exaggerated. “Scientific papers” are larded with “may” and “might” and “could possibly”. Advocacy is a common thread in climate science papers. Codes are routinely concealed, data is not archived. A concerted effort is made to marginalize and censor opposing views.
And most disturbing, for years you and the other climate scientists have not said a word about this disgraceful situation. When Michael Mann had to be hauled in front of a congressional committee to force him to follow the simplest of scientific requirements, transparency, you guys were all wailing about how this was a huge insult to him.
An insult to Mann? Get real. Mann is an insult and an embarrassment to climate science, and you, Judith, didn’t say one word in public about that. Not that I’m singling you out. No one else stood up for climate science either. It turned my stomach to see the craven cowering of mainstream climate scientists at that time, bloviating about how it was such a terrible thing to do to poor Mikey. Now Mann has been “exonerated” by one of the most bogus whitewashes in academic history, and where is your outrage, Judith? Where are the climate scientists trying to clean up your messes?
The solution to that is not, as you suggest, to give scientists a wider voice, or educate them in how to present their garbage to a wider audience.
The solution is for you to stop trying to pass off garbage as science. The solution is for you establishment climate scientists to police your own back yard. When Climategate broke, there was widespread outrage … well, widespread everywhere except in the climate science establishment. Other than a few lone voices, the silence there was deafening. Now there is another whitewash investigation, and the silence only deepens.
And you wonder why we don’t trust you? Here’s a clue. Because a whole bunch of you are guilty of egregious and repeated scientific malfeasance, and the rest of you are complicit in the crime by your silence. Your response is to stick your fingers in your ears and cover your eyes.
And you still don’t seem to get it. You approvingly quote Ralph Cicerone about the importance of transparency … Cicerone?? That’s a sick joke.
You think people made the FOI (Freedom of Information) requests because they were concerned that the people who made the datasets were the same people using them in the models. As the person who made the first FOI request to CRU, I assure you that is not true. I made the request to CRU because I was disgusted with the response of mainstream climate scientists to Phil Jone’s reply to Warwick Hughes. When Warwick made a simple scientific request for data, Jones famously said:
Why should I make the data available to you, when your aim is to try and find something wrong with it?
When I heard that, I was astounded. But in addition to being astounded, I was naive. Looking back, I was incredibly naive. I was so naive that I actually thought, “Well, Phil’s gonna get his hand slapped hard by real scientists for that kind of anti-scientific statements”. Foolish me, I thought you guys were honest scientists who would be outraged by that.
So I waited for some mainstream climate scientist to speak out against that kind of scientific malfeasance … and waited … and waited. In fact, I’m still waiting. I registered my protest against this bastardisation of science by filing an FOI. When is one of you mainstream climate scientist going to speak out against this kind of malfeasance? It’s not too late to condemn what Jones said, he’s still in the news and pretending to be a scientist, when is one of you good folks going to take a principled stand?
But nobody wants to do that. Instead, you want to complain and explain how trust has been broken, and you want to figure out more effective communication strategies to repair the trust.
You want a more effective strategy? Here’s one. Ask every climate scientist to grow a pair and speak out in public about the abysmal practices of far, far too many mainstream climate scientists. Because the public is assuredly outraged, and you are all assuredly silent, sitting quietly in your taxpayer funded offices and saying nothing, not a word, schtumm … and you wonder why we don’t trust you?
A perfect example is you saying in your post:
Such debate is alive and well in the blogosphere, but few mainstream climate researchers participate in the blogospheric debate. The climate researchers at realclimate.org were the pioneers in this …
For you to say this without also expressing outrage at realclimate’s ruthless censorship of every opposing scientific view is more of the same conspiracy of silence. Debate is not “alive and well” at realclimate as you say, that’s a crock. Realclimate continues to have an undeserved reputation that it is a scientific blog because you and other mainstream climate scientists are unwilling to bust them for their contemptuous flouting of scientific norms. When you stay silent about blatant censorship like that, Judith, people will not trust you, nor should they. You have shown by your actions that you are perfectly OK with realclimate censoring opposing scientific views. What kind of message does that send?
The key to restoring trust has nothing to do with communication. Steve McIntyre doesn’t inspire trust because he is a good communicator. He inspires trust because he follows the age-old practices of science — transparency and openness and freewheeling scientific discussion and honest reporting of results.
And until mainstream climate science follows his lead, I’ll let you in on a very dark, ugly secret — I don’t want trust in climate science to be restored. I don’t want you learning better ways to propagandize for shoddy science. I don’t want you to figure out how to inspire trust by camouflaging your unethical practices in new and innovative ways. I don’t want scientists learning to use clever words and communication tricks to get people to think that the wound is healed until it actually is healed. I don’t want you to learn to use the blogosphere to spread your pernicious unsupported unscientific alarmism.
You think this is a problem of image, that climate science has a bad image. It is nothing of the sort. It is a problem of scientific malfeasance, and of complicity by silence with that malfeasance. The public, it turns out, has a much better bullsh*t detector than the mainstream climate scientists do … or at least we’re willing to say so in public, while y’all cower in your cubbyholes with your heads down and never, never, never say a bad word about some other climate scientist’s bogus claims and wrong actions.
You want trust? Do good science, and publicly insist that other climate scientists do good science as well. It’s that simple. Do good science, and publicly call out the Manns and the Joneses and the Thompsons and the rest of the charlatans that you are currently protecting. Call out the journals that don’t follow their own policies on data archiving. Speak up for honest science. Archive your data. Insist on transparency. Publish your codes.
Once that is done, the rest will fall in line. And until then, I’m overjoyed that people don’t trust you. I see the lack of trust in mainstream climate science as a huge triumph for real science. Fix it by doing good science and by cleaning up your own backyard. Anything else is a coverup.
Judith, again, my congratulations on being willing to post your ideas in public. You are a rara avis, and I respect you greatly for it.
w.
PS – In your post you talk about a “monolithic climate denial machine”?? Puhleease, Judith, you’re talking to us individual folks who were there on the ground individually fighting the battle. Save that conspiracy theory for people who weren’t there, those who don’t know how it went down.
This is another huge problem for mainstream climate scientists and mainstream media alike. You still think the problem is that we opposed your ideas and exposed your errors. You still see the climate scientists as the victims, even now in 2010 when the CRU emails have shown that’s nonsense. Every time one of your self-appointed spokes-fools says something like “Oh, boo hoo, the poor CRU folks were forced to circle their wagons by the eeevil climate auditors”, you just get laughed at harder and harder. The CRU emails showed they were circling the FOI wagons two years before the first FOI request, so why haven’t you noticed?
The first step out of this is to stop trying to blame Steve and Anthony and me and all the rest of us for your stupidity and your dishonesty and your scientific malfeasance. [Edited by public demand to clarify that the “your stupidity” etc. refers to mainstream climate scientists as a group and not to Judith individually.] You will never recover a scrap of trust until you admit that you are the source of your problems, all we did was point them out. You individually, and you as a group, created this mess. The first step to redemption is to take responsibility. You’ve been suckered by people like Stephen Schneider, who said:
To capture the public imagination, we have to offer up some scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements and little mention of any doubts one might have. Each of us has to decide the right balance between being effective, and being honest. This ‘double ethical bind’ we frequently find ourselves in cannot be solved by any formula. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest. I hope that means being both.
That worked fine for a while, but as Lincoln pointed out, it caught up with you. You want trust? Disavow Schneider, and STOP WITH THE SCARY SCENARIOS. At this point, you have blamed everything from acne to world bankruptcy on eeevil global warming. And you have blamed everything from auditors to the claimed stupidity of the common man for your own failures. STOP IT! We don’t care about your pathetic justifications, all you are doing is becoming the butt of jokes around the planet. You seem to have forgotten the story of the Boy Who Cried Wolf. Read it. Think about it. Nobody cares about your hysteria any more. You are in a pit of your own making, and you are refusing to stop digging … take responsibility.
Because we don’t want scientists who are advocates. We’re not interested in scientists who don’t mention their doubts. We’re sick of your inane “simplified dramatic statements”. We laugh when you cry wolf with your scary scenarios. Call us crazy, but we want scientists who are honest, not scientists who balance honesty and effectiveness. You want trust? Get honest, kick out the scoundrels, and for goodness sakes, get a clue about humility.
Because the truth is, climate science is one of the newest sciences. The truth is, we know little about the climate, we’ve only been studying it intensely for a couple decades. The truth is, we can’t project the climate of the next decade, much less that of the next century. The truth is, we have no general theory of climate. The truth is, we don’t know if an average temperature rise of a couple degrees will be a net benefit or a net loss. The truth is, all of us are human, and our knowledge of the climate is in its infancy. And I don’t appreciate being lectured by infants. I don’t appreciate being told that I should be put in the dock in a Nuremberg style trial for disagreeing with infants. You want to restore trust? Come down off your pedestals, forsake your ivory towers, and admit your limitations.
And through all of this, be aware that you have a long, long, long climb back up to where we will trust you. As Lincoln warned, you have forfeited the confidence of your fellow citizens, and you will be damn lucky if you ever get it back.
[Update: please see Dr. Curry’s gracious response below, at Judith Curry (04:34:45)]
[Update 2: Dr. Curry’s second response is here, and my reply is here]
[Update 3: Dr. Curry steps up and delivers the goods. My reply.]
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Dave Williams (03:20:26) :
Wow, I put my first posting on this site and now I’m ready to leave forever.
Name-calling, insults, pottymouth and everything that I’m NOT looking for in a site that I thought was about science is missing here… at least on this particular topic.
Seriously, couldn’t it be that there is some credibility to the AGW theory as well as the “it is all natural” camp? Humans are modifying the face of the earth, pumping enormous amounts of various chemicals (some more harmful than others) and many seem not willing to accept any responsibility whatsoever for the impact that humans are probably having on the earth.
I can only say how unimpressed I am by the closemindedness exhibited thus far. It’s like listening to Sheldon on The Big Bang Theory… geez.
You have missed the point. I don’t see a lot of name calling outside the fact that we are talking about credibility – again, the point of the commentary.
But also we aren’t talking about ‘toxins’ when we are debating global warming, specifically CO2 driven. This specific commentary is on credibility and the scientific principle which have been abused by those pushing global warming. The mechanics of AGW are discussed in many places on this site, this is part of the socio-political argument which AGW has become, and is raised every time any AGW advocate states that anyone against AGW is a ‘denier’ and in the pay of ‘big oil’.
No-one denies that humans are consumers, but far too much energy (sic) and money is expended in trying to prove AGW that the real addressable problems are being ignored.
Thanks! Willis well said.
I would happily sign that as an open letter to the climate research community.
Larry
Great piece and spot on!!
Looks like China sees the picture better than the West:
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=42301
When cold weather starts taking out all the crops in the NH corridor, looks like they will be well prepared to take over.
Governments embrace the IPCC reports only for the fact that the true science would wreck economies far worse than right now.
Our society has developed a word for people who have pure physical evidence to the alternative “crack-pot” when they even hint at the word “Ice Age”.
IsoTherm (06:50:50),
Yes, CO2 is a so-called “greenhouse gas” that raises the temperature. The question is: how much does it raise the temperature? The alarmists claim the rise in temperature will cause climate catastrophe. But the planet’s response to CO2 shows that any rise in temps is insignificant.
The IPCC says the planet will warm at up to 4.5°C per doubling of CO2, or even more [they have to give a preposterously high number, because otherwise there is no cause for alarm].
But CO2’s effect is logarithmic. Almost all of the warming produced by CO2 occurs within the first 20 ppm: click
Warming is also a function of the persistence of a newly emitted CO2 molecule into the atmosphere, before it is re-absorbed.
If the residence time of a CO2 molecule is a century or more [as is baselessly claimed by the IPCC], CO2 would have a much greater effect than if the same molecule were re-absorbed within only ten years: click
The CO2 residence time is related to the climate sensitivity number: the increase in temperature resulting from a doubling of CO2 from pre-industrial levels [a number with very large error bars] is a function of the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.
The CO2 residence time is short. This was empirically demonstrated by physically monitoring the cloud of carbon isotopes resulting from the South Pacific atomic bomb tests, which showed the residence time for CO2 is well under 10 years.
The physics of CO2 causing global warming is sound, as far as it goes. But its effect is wildly exaggerated. There is much we don’t know about the climate, and much that is not taken into consideration: what is the effect of cloud cover? And since CO2 is plant food, what is the effect of the additional uptake by plants? click. We already know that the U.S. is a net CO2 sink due to the rapid increase in forest cover over the past century. And why does longwave radiation, presumably emitted due to CO2, have apparently no correlation to global temperature? click
The climate alarmists make the claim that the recent increase in CO2 is entirely the result of human activity. But only a very tiny amount of the planet’s total CO2 emission results from human activity: click. Over 96% of the recent rapid rise in CO2 is the result of natural factors, such as out-gassing from CO2 stored in the deep ocean during the MWP.
The assumptions that go into the models are wildly exaggerated. The IPCC’s political appointees claim a sensitivity of 4.5C, while Prof Richard Lindzen and many others show the sensitivity to be around 0.5. Anything at or below 1.0 is insignificant, and can be disregarded.
If the climate’s sensitivity to CO2 was anywhere near as high as the alarmists want us to think it is, then the rapid rise in CO2 would be easily detectable as a measurable rise in temperature. But over most of the past decade the planet has not warmed at all: click
CO2 has risen by about one-third over the past century, but global temperatures are not much different than they were thirty years ago. Something is wrong with the CO2=CAGW hypothesis. It’s too bad Dr Curry can’t bring herself to admit that the assumptions used by climate alarmists are consistently wrong for a self-serving reason: they want to scare the public into shoveling more money their way.
Isotherm,
I regret getting to checkmate so fast, because I had a couple of ripostes of my own ready to go:
Every day after a snowstorm, there are many cars in the ditch beside the highway. There is clearly a problem with the ditch. Something about the snowstorm causes the ditch to undulate, snatching cars of the highway and retaining them in the ditch. This happens EVERY snowstorm, and the number of cars correlates to the length and severity of the snowstorm. The ditchs will have to be replaced. I recommend DDDS (Dave’s Ditch Digging Service).
On another thread there was an excellent comment about baseball teams. If you plot the total number of wins by team A and team B, they will both rise over the course of the season, leading to the conclusions that wins by one cause wins by the other. This is of course just a coincidence. The only time the two teams affect each other is when they play each other, in which case a win by one can only result in a loss by the other.
Judith Curry (04:34:45)-
Please stop using the “d” word and you will receive many more thoughtful responses.
bobdenton (02:38:52) : edit
[snip] I asked for no such thing, that’s your fantasy. Read what I wrote. I asked for two simple things — for honest science, and for climate scientists to police their own back yard. All that stuff about red chinese confessions is your own fevered imagination.
Is my writing really that hard to understand?
Raht-on, raht-on, raht-on!
Dave Wendt (02:39:32) : edit
Fascinating insight, Dave, I’d never considered that.
Another excellent post Willis, well done
Willis,
As I commentd to Anthony on the Dr. Curry Part II post, I know that you’ve been fighting this fight a lot longer than me. So I know you’re close to this and have a lot of emotion tied to it. I was in grade school when CFCs and the ozone hole were all the rage, so I haven’t been in the fight as long. In fact, until the last couple of years, I was not truly being skeptical and asking my own questions.
HOWEVER, give her some slack, at least drop the attacks like “your stupidity… dishonesty… malfeascence” et cetera. “Your” may have been directed at the “climate science establishment” but it certainly read to me as if it were directed directly at Dr. Curry. Either way, here’s why I say cut her some slack:
– I too am enraged that we have all been lied to. I have lost trust in the “experts” and they will have to do a lot to win it back, including going to the axeman’s block with their future work and letting people that I am growing to trust (and me) take a swing at it and see if it holds up.
– My background is nuclear power… talk about an issue that has its advocates on both sides. I know what it’s like to try and make a reasonable argument to two emotional sides of an issue and get tomatoed from both sides. Issues that evoke emotion like nukes and the climate are hard to communicate to lay people and even harder to communicate to advocates. Not that the people are stupid, just that they have short attention spans and don’t typically like to listen to a detailed explanation of the science. In my personal quest to explain nuclear power, I have distilled Three Mile Island (TMI) and Chernobyl to an analogy with cars – TMI was like a Volvo that was telling the operator there was a problem with its operation, kept being driven regardless of the warning, got in a crash, the air bag went off, and nothing except the car was hurt; Chernobyl was like a vehicle of a completely different design that was being tested with many safety features disabled, the brakes weren’t designed to work the same way as the Volvo (reduced steam power, the brakes, actually increased, or sped up, the nuclear reaction in Chernobyl- EEK!!), and very bad things happened during the test. Should we not drive Volvos because someone had a catastrophe in a completely different type of vehicle whose breaks don’t even work like the Volvo and was being pushed to its limits? Methinks we should still try to drive safely. That explanation is relatively simple, but takes about 2-3 minutes to explain. That’s more time than many people/media outlets are willing to give to an explanation. Scientists MUST understand how to communicate to the target audience. That is not to say they should not be completely honest, but the ability to communicate well is NOT part of the science curriculum. That’s why most of us come off as nerds to the general public but brilliant leaders in the field to our colleagues. Similar to nuclear engineers, people who count tree rings and use isotopic ratios to do their job have a tough time getting through to people who barely understand many basic concepts of physics and chemistry, much less isotopes. Dr. Curry is absolutely correct that scientists in this field must be able to communicate better and that they probably need a little help learning how to do so. YOU are also correct that the message MUST be honest. Say what you know and why, say what you think and why, and say what you know that you don’t know.
– Dr. Curry is suffering from the same problem that most of us in technical fields suffer: She’s trying to communicate to everyone and having a tough time doing it. The advocates on both sides don’t want to hear ANY excuses for why it is OK to be an advocate on the other side. It is no different for us to shoot her down with name calling than it is for Joe Romm to shoot her down when she makes a salient point. I, for one, am no Joe Romm and I’m proud of that. So while I agree that some of her points could have been written more clearly (some that you disagree with above but I’m giving her the benefit of the poor-communications-gap doubt) and I don’t fully agree with all of her points that I think I clearly understood, we MUST be polite and keep this a DEBATE instead of a mudslinging screaming match or we will be right back where we started sooner than we want and maybe before we make any progress.
Keep up the fight. Your work is very appreciated. Please keep it clean and let’s try not to resort to things that sound just like the worst of the advocates.
“But no one person can sort through everything, so we have to trust the process and institutions of science to support the scientific progress”
This statement provides just another reason to not take Judith Curry seriously.
Science occurs WHEN ONE PERSON SORTS THOUGH EVERYTHING AND CAN SHOW WHAT THEY DID TO ANYONE WHO WANTS TO SEE.
We *have* to trust? What a joke.
Andrew
Willis is one of my personal heroes, but I disagree almost 100% with what he’s saying here (and no, this doesn’t mean he’s lost my trust 😎 ).
Now is the time to start with a clean slate. Who cares what Dr Curry thought and did and why. The climate debate has been given powerful “electroshocks” and the last thing we need is to recover the ugly memories.
The fact that Romm had little good to say about Dr Curry’s essay should make people think hard about what it actually means.
http://omniclimate.wordpress.com/2010/02/25/support-judith-curry-as-head-of-reformed-ipcc/
Judith:
“monolithic climate denial machine”
That makes us crave to respect ya.
Judith:
“So by staking this middle position, i pretty much am getting tomatoes thrown at me from both sides”
Thank God we can get juicy tomatoes in the winter. Too much frost and snow lately
http://climatecontrol.com/greenhousesupply.html#CO2
We buy CO2 generators from a supply house. Arm chair science overlooks some basic best practices real farmers use to raise good food.
Awsome job, well written!
One thing. The only problem I had with it, is that if I had input, I would have requested that you put some f-bombs on target, I don’t think the whole industry needs to be carpet bombed, but Mann, Hansen, Briffa, and Jones to name a few need their day in court. From everything that I have seen this group appears to have comitted fraud, government fraud (has a category all its own) conspiracy, and when the authorities get busy, obstruction will probably need to be added to the list. If she want our trust, she had better do more then wring her hands and talk. I want some lab coats in front of a jury!
The Denial Machine conspiracy theory comes from the radical left, which is seriously lacking in critical thinking.
Jim Hoggan (?) wrote Climate Coverup last year, check out the 1* reviews at http://www.amazon.com/Climate-Cover-Up-Crusade-Global-Warming/dp/1553654854/
Before that, CBC produced the “documentary” The Denial Machine with Hoggan and others. Check out the review at http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/financialpost/story.html?id=2c07121b-85c2-4799-9aaf-0c2688bf5ca1&p=3
Climate Science cannot become credible unless it cuts all ties to radical left and green organizations.
Very well said. The problem is not poor communication, it is poor substance. Most of the breast beating you see from AGW supporting scientists focuses on the former. Until they accept it is the latter, progress will not be made. There’s a long way to go.
Dave Williams (03:20:26) :
“Wow, I put my first posting on this site and now I’m ready to leave forever.
I can only say how unimpressed I am by the closemindedness exhibited thus far”
We’re all going to die, and take you with us.
Feel better now?
Yes Willis! In the inimitable words of Paddy Chayevsky:
[ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMBZDwf9dok ]
When Romm and his supporters continue to claim there is some denialist machine it is proof positive that they don’t have a clue. It shows clearly they have no critical thinking abilities whatsoever. They are simply mired in their own belief system. It also means they never will understand what is happening around them.
Maurizio,
“Now is the time to start with a clean slate. Who cares what Dr Curry thought and did and why.”
That’s exactly the point. Where are we going? From Judith’s essay, it sounds suspiciously like business as usual, with a few carrots such as more openess, tossed in to placate the sceptics.
Part of reconcilliation is about coming to terms with the past, and owning up to damages inflicted. She has not yet done that.
4 billion (02:45:22)
It seems extreme, but sadly, that’s the case. In climate science, all too often peer review is so trivial as to be meaningless for studies which agree with the “consensus”, and impossibly hard for those which don’t. In addition, as the CRU emails showed, sometimes it is simply corrupt.
There are dozens of examples of this, with the type specimen being the Hockeystick and the host of Hockeystickalikes. Michael Mann used the Tiljander proxies upside down, and the reviewers didn’t catch it. Understandably, although not desirable. Then Steve McIntyre pointed it out to him, and what happened. Mann wrote another paper and used it upside down once again, and it sailed right through peer review again. Fool me once, my fault, …
However, that’s only part of the problem. There’s a couple other issues with peer review.
1. People don’t understand that peer review doesn’t mean a paper is right. The best case is that it simply means the paper is not egregiously wrong, which is a very different thing. Saying “how can you doubt my science, it’s peer reviewed” is akin to saying “how can you doubt my kid, he graduated from third grade.” The CRU emails clearly show that the intense focus on peer review was a deliberate and cynical ploy by Phil Jones and the unindicted co-conspirators to discredit people who doubted the party line.
2. Peer review suffers from the same problem as the internet, that of anonymity. If I ran the zoo, at the end of the anonymous review process, the reviewers would have to sign their reviews, and the reviews would be published along with the paper. If you agree with the paper and pass it through, you should have the courage to then identify yourself and publish your comments.
3. Peer review should be double blind, that is to say, during the process both the reviewers and the author should be anonymous. As it stands, the reviewers often know the identity of the author, which can turn the process into a personal vendetta.
Me, I’d like to see the process made quasi public (by invitation) and conducted (anonymously) on the internet … but I’m not holding my breath.
Judith Curry (04:34:45) :
“I am angry as a scientist, since I may have been using unnecessarily inaccurate surface temperature data in my research. Ecologists, chemical engineers, etc. who have made career decisions in directing their research toward climate change impacts or mitigation have been trusting the system to work. Etc.”
Her post has been stuck in my head for a while (I’m sorry Dr. but you’ll have to leave now) especially because of the above quote. It’s remarkable that apparently a handful of “trustworthy” scientists can corrupt a whole field of science by deliberately poisoning the well from which all others draw. If true, it narrows down the search for who initiated the process, how many are involved, and identifying their true motives. Sinister indeed.
Nailed it.