Alarmist climate science and the principle of exclusion

AGW theorists are being misled by the principle of exclusion

Story submitted by Paul Macrae

In 1837, Charles Darwin presented a paper to the British Geological Society arguing that coral atolls were formed not on submerged volcanic craters, as argued by pioneering geologist Charles Lyell, but on the subsidence of mountain chains.

The problem, as Darwin saw it, was that corals can not live more than about 30 feet below the surface and therefore they could not have formed of themselves from the ocean floor. They needed a raised platform to build upon.

However, the volcanic crater hypothesis didn’t satisfy Darwin; he thought the atoll shape was too regular to have been the craters of old volcanos. There were no atoll formations on land, Darwin reasoned; why would there be such in the ocean? Therefore, Darwin proposed that corals were building upon eroded mountains, an hypothesis that, he wrote happily, “solves every difficulty.”

Darwin also argued, in 1839, that curious geological formations—what appeared to be parallel tracks—in the Glen Roy valley of Scotland were the result of an uplifted sea bed.

Darwin didn’t have any actual physical evidence to support these two hypotheses: he arrived at them deductively, through the principle of exclusion. A deductive conclusion is reached through theory—if X, then logically Y must be so—as opposed to induction, which builds a theory out of empirical data. The principle of exclusion works from the premise that “there is no other way of accounting for the phenomenon.”[1]

As it turned out, Darwin was wrong on both hypotheses. Later physical evidence showed that Lyell’s volcano theory was closer to the mark, and the Glen Roy tracks were caused by glaciers, which were still a mystery in Darwin’s time.

Darwin later wrote of his Glen Roy hypothesis: “Because no other explanation was possible under our then state of knowledge, I argued in favour of sea-action; and my error has been a good lesson to me never to trust in science to the principle of exclusion.”[2]

While Darwin rejected the principle of exclusion, at least as a primary scientific tool, alarmist climate science has not. Instead, the principle of exclusion is one of the most-cited arguments to support the anthropogenic global warming (AGW) hypothesis.

For example, in a 2010 interview with the BBC on the Climategate scandal, Climate Research Unit (CRU) head Phil Jones was asked: “What factors convince you that recent warming has been largely man-made?” Jones’s reply: “The fact that we can’t explain the warming from the 1950s by solar and volcanic forcing.” In other words, Jones is using the principle of exclusion: while he and his colleagues can’t prove that human activities are causing warming, they can’t find any other explanation.

Canada’s Andrew Weaver also relies on the principle of exclusion when he writes, in his 2008 book Keeping Our Cool: “There is no known natural climate mechanism to explain the warming over the 20th century. And that is one of the many pieces suggesting that a substantial portion of the warming of the 20th century is associated with greenhouse gases.”[3]

Similarly, the IPCC’s 2007 report notes: “Most of the observed increase in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations.” The IPCC has no empirical proof that human carbon emissions are the main cause of planetary warming; the “proof” is that the scientists can’t find another explanation, i.e., the principle of exclusion.

It’s not unreasonable to claim that human activities are the main cause of global warming. If carbon emissions and temperatures increase at the same time, it’s possible they are connected although, of course, correlation does not equal causation. And many scientific theories are based on the principle of exclusion, including much of Darwin’s theory of evolution itself.

Where alarmists like Jones, Weaver and the IPCC betray the accepted principles of science is in claiming that a possible causal connection between human carbon emissions and temperatures is settled, certain, and, as Weaver puts it in his book, beyond debate (he writes: “there is no such debate [about the certainty of the AGW hypothesis] in the atmospheric or climate scientific community” (p. 22)).

Even worse, these scientists call anyone who dares to challenge their hypothesis a “denier,” deluded, a fraud, bought-off by the oil industry, or worse. One cannot imagine Darwin, a modest scientist, making similar claims of certainty for his two hypotheses, or throwing slurs at anyone who didn’t accept them.

Yet there may well be other explanations for a warming earth that we still don’t know about or enough about—the cosmic ray theory seems like a good contender, as do fluctuations in solar intensity and cyclical ocean temperatures: given the complexity of climate, there are many possible causes for a temperature rise (or fall).

But, then, the deductive rather than empirical (inductive) nature of alarmist climate science was stated clearly by climatologist Chris Folland two decades ago: “The data don’t matter… We’re not basing our recommendations on the data. We’re basing them on the climate models.”[4]

And so, alarmist climate scientists find themselves under siege by skeptics and increasingly distrusted by the public because they blindly accept the principle of exclusion, in the face of considerable empirical facts that don’t fit the AGW hypothesis. For example, for more than a decade, the earth has not warmed as the AGW hypothesis predicts. Nor are the oceans warming as the hypothesis predicts. Yet, when skeptics point out the problems, alarmists cannot admit they have made a mistake because then the whole alarmist edifice (and the juicy research grants that go with it) would collapse.

Darwin himself battled the principle of exclusion in proposing the theory of natural selection. Up to Darwin’s time, no one could think of any other way to explain the creation of species than by an all-powerful god. This led scientists and clerics into all sorts of logical absurdities, such as claims that the earth was mere thousands of years old or that God had put fossils into the earth to test scientists’ faith. However, in the mid-1800s, there was no better explanation to hand.

Darwin (and Alfred Russell Wallace) supplied a better, more scientific explanation: nature itself, acting over eons of time, was the creator of species, an hypothesis so simple and so logical that Thomas Huxley, Darwin’s main promoter, declared: “How extremely stupid not to have thought of that.”

The AGW hypothesis may well prove to be correct. However, the simplest and most logical explanation for climate change, in the past, now, and in the future, is natural variation. If so, then the AGW hypothesis, based on the treacherous principle of exclusion, will go the way of Darwin’s two hypotheses on the Glen Roy tracks and the creation of coral atolls.

And so, while alarmist climate scientists are quite within their rights to propose the AGW hypothesis, they should also be cautious: AGW is an hypothesis. It has not reached the status of a scientific theory (it has not passed enough scientific tests for that), nor is it a scientific fact, as the public is told. Instead, alarmist climate scientists have thrown the proper scientific caution to the winds to make claims that aren’t supported by the evidence, and to smear those who point out the possible errors in their hypothesis.

To repeat Darwin’s words: “My error has been a good lesson to me never to trust in science to the principle of exclusion.” This caution is especially true when climate-science errors could lead to anti-carbon policies that will cost billions of dollars and destroy millions of livelihoods, while having no effect upon the climate because humans are only a small part of a much larger picture.

Darwin gave good advice: beware the principle of exclusion. It’s a pity that today’s alarmist climate scientists are unwilling to heed that advice.

[1] Darwin’s thought process is described in Gertrude Himmelfarb, Darwin and the Darwinian Revolution. New York: W.W. Norton, 1962 (1959), pp. 99-106.

[2] Charles Darwin, Life and Letters, I, London, 1887, p. 69. Quoted in Himmelfarb, p. 106.

[3] Andrew Weaver, Keeping Our Cool: Canada in a Warming World. Toronto: Viking, 2008, p. 59.

[4] Quoted in Patrick J. Michaels, Sound and Fury: The Science and Politics of Global Warming. Washington: Cato Institute, 1992, p. 83.

Paul MacRae is the author of False Alarm: Global Warming—Facts Versus Fears, and publishes the blog False Alarm at paulmacrae.com

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June 8, 2011 3:06 am

Starwatcher says:
“Monckton is on the level of Al Gore.”
If you believe that then we are too far apart on the issue to have a meaningful conversation.
A debate between Gore and Monckton would be the equivalent of Bambi vs Godzilla.

Stacey
June 8, 2011 3:06 am

Very good post.
The self named climate scientists also have used the exclusion principle, to well, exclude the publication of papers
which they disagree with.
Certainty is madness?

Andy G55
June 8, 2011 3:08 am

As I see it, the most likely place to find the principle of expulsion used as the basis, is in a religion.

Chris Wright
June 8, 2011 3:10 am

An excellent article. I had long been familiar with that particular argument, but it’s nice to have a convenient label: the exclusion principle. To have Darwin himself speaking against it is a nice piece of ammunition!
Of course, the exclusion principle as practised by climate scientists is complete nonsense. The very obvious problem is this: the very people who apparently can’t find other explanations are the very same people who don’t *want* to find other explanations. If they could find an alternative that completely explained the 20th century temperature rise, then there would be no place left for carbon dioxide – and that wouldn’t do, would it?
Another point. Are they able to explain the MWP and the earlier warmings? If not, then their ‘proof’ falls down completely – because CO2 levels were completely natural, as SUV’s and international air travel hadn’t really caught on in the Medieval and Roman periods. Oh, hang on – they solved that small problemette by ‘getting rid’ of the MWP.
In my opinion, having to invoke the exclusion principle is a pretty good indication that their theory is wrong. Real theories, Relativity being a perfect example, can only be proven by data and experiments that confirm predictions made by the theory. There doesn’t appear to be any genuine, empirical proof of AGW at all. And yet the world is poised to bet countless trillions of dollars on this unrproven theory – a theory that is almost certainly wrong.
Chris

June 8, 2011 3:11 am

At 1:26 AM on 8 June, gyptis444 writes:

Diagnosis by exclusion is based on the assumption that ALL the possible causes are known. In medicine this comprises a ‘differential diagnosis’ a working list of possible causes from which clinical tests can be performed to exclude/confirm candidate causes. In the case of climate science the assumption becomes ‘ALL the possible causes AND their feedbacks (positive/negative) are known and have been quantified’.
Given the complexity of the climate system and its non-linear, chaotic behaviour the assumption does not seem to be justified.

Not only that, but there’s the even more egregiously unjustified assumption that the evidence being used to advance the AGW contention hasn’t been so thoroughly “cooked” that the promulgation of this fraud needs to be moved from the Weather Channel to the Food Network.
Though I really don’t think that even Alton Brown could come up with something to sell this preposterous bogosity.

PS In medicine it is not uncommon to adopt a ‘working diagnosis’ (based on known circumstances, prevalence, etc.) for purposes of management while working towards confirmation/exclusion. Positive diagnosis is usually required. However, problems arise when a new disease appears (e.g. the early experiences with HIV/AIDS, toxic shock syndrome etc.) when intensive investigation and open-minded involvement of a multi-disciplinary team may be needed to understand and manage the condition.

Well, I remember when we were calling it GRID (gay-related immune deficiency) and there was serious consideration that it was being caused by amyl nitrate “poppers” then being used by sexually promiscuous males indulging in “fisting.” Before we had an identified retrovirus (HIV-1) and reliable serological testing to provide evidence of infection with the pathogen, we had begun to get a handle on the prevalence of the epidemic by using reliable serological markers for Hepatitis B, which is a virus also quite commonly transmitted by way of the same kinds of sexual contact and parenteral (IV) drug use through which HIV-1 has proven to be acquired.
Most people don’t realize that the constellation of opportunistic infections first noticed in AIDS cases (one of the annual multidisciplinary international meetings of greatest value in the cutting-edge research on HIV infection is still the CROI – the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections) were not unfamiliar to doctors in the developed or developing world. Congenital, malignant, and iatrogenic immune deficiency syndromes – the last category most commonly seen in patients on cytotoxic chemotherapy regimes for the management of malignant diseases – had been identified and were being addressed long before AIDS came out of Africa to start killing people all over the world.
A lot of the time you have to initiate treatment on the basis of disconcertingly tenuous “horseback” diagnoses because if you wait for the empirical evidence to come in, the potential for morbidity – and mortality – as well as economic treatment and recovery costs become damned adverse. You just gotta keep that “non nocere” bit in mind.
Is it any wonder that Arthur Conan Doyle – an ophthalmologist – modeled his Sherlock Holmes character on a demon diagnostician who’d been one of the author’s instructors in medical school?

Andy Mayhew
June 8, 2011 3:12 am

Coldish is correct re the Parallel Roads – they are now believed to be the shorelines of a glacial lake. So Darwin wasn’t too far off the mark.
btw if the warmists were predicting warming for the past 10 years and (some) sceptics predicting cooling over the same time period and we end up with a fairly static temp trend, what does it tell us? Maybe they were both right?

Starwatcher
June 8, 2011 3:15 am

@Smokey
Debates are poor mediums for discussing anything that is empirically based. The reason I conflated them both, is because they both look good until you fact check.

Hector Pascal
June 8, 2011 3:22 am

A slight clarification here. The “parallel tracks” used to be marked on the old OS 1 inch to 1 mile maps as parallel roads. When I were a nipper in the scouts, their origin was explained as them being beaches formed at the margins of (temporary) glacially dammed lakes.

June 8, 2011 3:26 am

Starwatcher,
You want to discuss empirical facts? Then answer me this. The central claim of the alarmist contingent is that CO2 is harmful. Let’s ‘fact check’ that assertion: provide empirical evidence showing global harm from CO2. Such evidence must be testable and falsifiable, per the scientific method.
The fact that there is no such evidence does not eliminate CO2 as the cause of global warming. It does point out that there is no evidence that CO2 causes global warming. None. That makes for an incredibly weak argument, based on faith rather than data.

MrX
June 8, 2011 3:27 am

I’ve talked about this many times. It’s not that they know humans caused it. It’s that they’re ignorant of the cause and their lack of imagination is their proof.

polistra
June 8, 2011 3:30 am

The problem isn’t really the exclusion principle, it’s a religious mindset. Before the Mead/Schneider gang took over climate science, everyone who analyzed climate scientifically understood the influence of sunspots, and took sunspots into account. When the Carbon Cultists monopolized the discipline, they automatically turned every explanation other than CO2 into Unfacts. Sunspots can’t be the explanation because sunspots can’t be the explanation. Why? Because we know. It’s an axiom, not a fact.

Starwatcher
June 8, 2011 3:33 am

@Smokey
The IPCC took over a thousand pages to make their case, and you want me to provide that chain of logic in an internet post? Sorry, but the world isn’t always so simple where big sweeping questions like that can be answered in brevity. Besides, I’m more of a consensus guy. Way I look at it is Atmospheric Physics is hard! I banged my head against it for a while and still don’t get alot of it. But what the hell, I do know a little. If you can pick a topic a little more precise then is CO2 bad I’m game

Roger Knights
June 8, 2011 3:39 am

Starwatcher:
Monckton is not blameless. Many of us here recognize that. I’ve said so here several times. But he stacks up very well against his critic Abraham. Here’s the first video in a series of videos titled “Monckton Refutes Abraham”:
http://www.youtube.com/user/cfact#p/u/26/Z00L2uNAFw8

Alexander K
June 8, 2011 3:41 am

An excellent, clearly-written post.
I shall be using ‘The Exclusion Principle’ in future discussions with Warmist acquaintances.

June 8, 2011 3:42 am

How is the “Principle of Exclusion” any different from the fallacious “Arguement from Ignorance?”

Alexander K
June 8, 2011 3:43 am

Anthony, what happened to the clear, easy-to-read script that was a feature of ‘Leave a Reply’?
The new model is damnably hard on elderly eyesight!
[Reply: This comment should be posted in Tips & Notes, which Anthony always reads. Any other comments regarding the small font should be posted there as well. ~dbs, mod.]

richard verney
June 8, 2011 3:47 am

The reliance upon ‘there being no other known explanation’ for what is being observed is not proof of anything other than the fact that we do not have sufficient knowledge about and understanding of the system being observed. It is simply an admission of ignorance, since if we had sufficient knowledge and understanding of the system in question we would be able to positively explain and prove empirically the cause behind the observations in question.
The precautionary principle is fundamentally misconceived since its limits are constrained by no more than one’s imagination and is therefore always as long as a piece of string. The precautionary principle always begs the next question, what if the percieved threat is not curtailed by the action thought to be necessary and desirable? What happens then?
For example say that we spend spend trillions of dollars in decarbonising the world and say that this does not have any noticeably effect on temperatures which continue to rise at an accelerated rate (say because what is driving upward temperatures is not CO2 but something different) and say that these rising temperatures bring about the disasterous consequences that the CAGW crowd claim that will occur (eg., drastic sea level rise, crop failures, droughts, prolonged excessive heat waves, melting of ice caps and glaciers etc). What happens then if we have effectively bankrupted the developed economies? The developed world will not have the financial wherewithall to spend yet further trillions on required adaption. Indeed, it will not be able to muster the industrial might to conduct the constructural challenges that adaption would require since it has killed off its industry (possibly forcing these overseas etc). The developing nations will not have the industry, skill set, expertise nor infrastructure to carry out the required construction and indeed, these countries may well (in this scenario) be on their knees through drought and famine etc so that they could not conduct the required and necessary adaption. Thus the precautionary principle demonstrates that mitigation is not the answer because one always has to ask what if that course of action goes wrong and does not solve the problem or perhaps even what if it makes the situation worse (there is always a chance that with a system not well understood, reducing CO2 ,may make matters worse eg., by stunting forest, plant and crop growth).
What we shoulkd be doing is not focusing to the exclusion of all other causes on just one ‘culprit’ and we should be looking for a proper and full understanding of the system so that we can positively explain what is going on rather than saying we can think of no other explanation. If mankind had simply been prepared to accept that we can think of no other explanation, we would be stuck in the dark ages with hundreds of gods explaining events surrounding us. Fortunately, there are some who are not so blinkered or complacent and will strive to know and understand the world around them.

BBk
June 8, 2011 3:53 am

Is it any wonder that Arthur Conan Doyle – an ophthalmologist – modeled his Sherlock Holmes character on a demon diagnostician who’d been one of the author’s instructors in medical school?
Sherlock Holmes works simply because ACD can posit that SH has perfect knowlege of any pertainant fact. It’s fiction. 🙂 Imagine how SH, with his old knowlege, would have trouble deducing modern crimes comitted using cell phones, infrared scanners, etc, etc.
“The only reasonable explaination is that the gunman made a deal with the Devil to observe the movements of the occupants of the house from 400 yards away through solid brick. All other reasonable explainations have been exhausted, so whatever remains, however outlandish, must be true.”

Mark in Oz
June 8, 2011 3:58 am

Starwatcher.
“Besides, I’m more of a consensus guy.”
You just blew your credibility out of the water with that lame admission.

June 8, 2011 4:00 am

Good job, Paul. Philosopher Larry’s stoopid question of the day: Isn’t the Principle of Exclusion a glorified version the classical logical fallacy: Argument from Ignorance?

observa
June 8, 2011 4:07 am

Yes the medical analogy is a good one as medicine is dealing with an extremely complex system just like the global climate. That’s where I find the term ‘Climatologist’ and the consequent pseudo-science of ‘Climatology’ so pathologically presumptuous. It’s like me and a few jumped up mates getting together and calling ourselves peer reviewed Humanologists and the doyens of the settled science of Humanology(what you haven’t heard of us?) and all bow to our new edicts and prescriptions henceforth. How often have you heard some scientist commenting upon climate research pooh poohed for not being a ‘Climate Scientist’ or ‘Climatologist.’ You can instantly see how the current ignorati and deniers in medicine, psychology, biology, sociology, economics,etc can all be subsumed by we superior Humanologists in the know about all such things. Welcome to the very essence of the exclusivity of climatology today.

richard telford
June 8, 2011 4:11 am

Still waiting for the deus ex machina?

mikemUK
June 8, 2011 4:13 am

This is such a delightfully moderate piece, it would be interesting to see it in print in the MSM together with an invitation to major protagonists to offer their personal responses.
For example, in the UK it should be an irresistible challenge to people like Beddington, Paul Nurse, etc. on the one hand, and Monckton, Lawson, etc. on the other – for the enlightenment of the general public, not just those of us who already hold a view.
I deliberately omit mention of those actively involved in ‘climate science’ itself, on the grounds that anything useful they might say on the matter would be hopelessly compromised by legal advice.

TA
June 8, 2011 4:28 am

Can anyone explain to me why soot (black carbon), can’t be one of the biggest contributors to our recent wave of warming? We have been steadily pumping it out since the industrial revolution began, besides being a GHG that warms the atmosphere it also accelerates the melting of ice when it lands on it and introduces more water into our hydrosphere. Water vapor, being the greatest GHG of them all, warms the earth and causes the soil to respire Co2 more and a downward spiral begins.
That story of the man towing iceburgs seemed to me a apt metaphor. It’s not the Co2, it’s man’s effect on the hydrosphere that should be focused on.

Tom in Florida
June 8, 2011 4:29 am

Since all religions are based on the principle of exclusion, AGW clearly meets the criteria for a religion.