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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Pompous Git
You cite a good example.
Recently I came up with a similar one.
At the swimming pool where my grandson attends swimming lessons, I observed that most of the adult females of child-bearing age were actually pregnant. Even the ones who were not obviously pregnant had small child(ren) in tow. The inductive hypothesis from this is that swimming causes pregnancy in adult females of childbearing age. There must be a fertilising factor in the water, maybe chlorine.
All I have to do now is exclude any consideration of the non-swimmers in the population (and a mass of medical reproductive science). Voila!
“The problem, as Darwin saw it, was that corals can not live more than about 30 feet below the surface…”
Darwin couldn’t see much below 30 feet…
“Black corals are a group of corals that belong to the order Antipatharia. Black corals are found all over the world and at all depths.”
http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/06laserline/background/blackcoral/blackcoral.html
“Different species of black coral can be found from shallow depths of 1m/3ft to depths up to 6000 m / 20 000 ft where no light can reach them.”
http://www.aquaticcommunity.com/corals/blackcoral.php
“I have argued that empirical science is a genuine human universal. In this chapter, I shall broaden this claim even further by arguing that the scientific method is not merely typical of all humans, but is also a key feature in the lives of most birds and mammals. Science as we know it in the Western world is the product of a highly formalized version of something very basic to life, namely the business of learning about regularities in the world.” — Robin Dunbar, The Trouble with Science, The Roots of Science, p. 58
Also, in the vernacular of modern science the somewhat ambiguous term “exclusion principle” is typically associated with Wolfgang Pauli’s important and useful contribution to quantum physics:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&biw=&bih=&q=exclusion+principle
At 5:37 PM on 8 June, gyptis444 asks of me:
Well, “preposterous” finds definition as “contrary to nature, reason, or sense; absurd; ridiculous [from Latin praeposterus reversed, from prae in front, before + posterus following].” Think “bass-ackwards.”
To the best of my recollection, the concept of anthropogenic atmospheric release of carbon dioxide as the sole cause of some kind of catastrophic planetary warming (by way of the greenhouse gas mechanism) first came to my attention sometime between 1979 and 1981, and I received it as follows: “Preposterous! These idiots are overstating the heat trapping effect by at least three orders of magnitude.”
And I learned later that I was underestimating their error by a couple orders of magnitude, too.
Given its “bass-ackwards” connotation, “preposterous” is particularly apt when we discuss the causal link between global warming and atmospheric CO2 levels on account of the fact – as has been demonstrated – atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration increases lag behind planetary warming by about eight hundred years. First the warming, then the CO2 comes up.
“Bogosity” is a widely used neologism derived from the term “bogus,” meaning “Counterfeit or fake; not genuine.”
The AGW contention is therefore accurately characterized as a “preposterous bogosity.” See?
That GRID (later AIDS) was an acquired condition of infectious cause was evident to every clinician of my acquaintance from the very beginning. Remember, however, that virologists at that time had not yet been able to characterize many of the RNA-based retroviruses. We still hadn’t gotten a handle on Hepatitis C, which is caused by a flavivirus species, and were calling it “Non-A, Non-B hepatitis.”
I was in medical school when “Non-A, Non-B hepatitis” first began to surface as a public health concern, and we got a series of special additional lectures on what was then known about the condition. I was the class note pool’s “designated hitter,” and so I was responsible for taping these lectures, digesting them, and writing them up for distribution. Subsequently, I lost family members and a ton of patients to hepatic cirrhosis with liver failure and primary hepatocellular carcinoma directly attributable to this bastardly little lentivirus.
Y’see, “the problems that arise when a new disease entity appears” have been encountered in medicine so often that we’ve developed an institutional fund of knowledge on the basis of that experience with which to undertake investigation of both etiologies and treatment options. Even guys like me – a contemptible primary care grunt suitable (in the eyes of the specialists) for no function higher than that of triage and listening to patients’ routine complaints – know enough to keep our antennae up and our noses twitching for the moment when that rare “zebra” gallops into our examining rooms.
Why the hell do you think that “History of Medicine” is taught in med school?
We got a structured method for handling “the problems that arise when a new disease entity appears.” Think “standard of care” and you’ve got a handle on just about everything that medical doctors cling to as we stumble our way through the cloud of inaccuracies and outright lies we get from our patients and their family members.
Darwin used the exclusion principle with evolution also. He was batting 1000!!!!
@Starwatcher:
Are you sure you want to be a “consensus guy”? You may want to bone up on your Charles Mackay.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraordinary_Popular_Delusions_and_the_Madness_of_Crowds
@Alfred Ledner Wagner
No one argues that the consensus of experts is always right, merely that it is the best tool we have.
This is eerily similar to “Intelligent Design” (i.e. backdoor creationism)… we can’t think of any natural explanation for the universe, therefore it must have been created by an omnipototent supreme being.
@James Baldwin Evans
Good for you. (Not being sarcastic)
@Smokey
Sources are appreciated. Also, how do you reconcile your statements that greenhouse gases are not linked to warming and your own supplied graph having temperatures follow a curve that is claimed to represent what should happen with a climate sensitivity of 1.6C per doubling of CO2?
Starwatcher says: “To be blunt; Alot (sic) more of us that know a little about this topic but not enough to evaluate high level discussion independently would be more understanding of the skeptical side if obvious charlatans, some of which that have multiple appearances on this very site, didn’t get such uncritical applause from what seems to be a plurality of skeptics. There is no excuse for holding people such as Christopher Monckton in high esteem.”
Argument ad hominem, the first refuge of climate scoundrels. Next!
Of Starwatcher‘s comment:
…at 11:16 PM on 8 June jorgekafkazar writes:
Actually, no. It is regrettably very common to erroneously use the term argumentum ad hominem when what is actually being described is nothing more than simple insult.
Were Starwatcher to write that the denial of the AGW bogosity is wrong because Christopher Monckton is not to be held in high esteem – and for no other reason than that – then and only then would you have an ad hominem fallacy.
As it is, what we have of Starwatcher in his assertions here regarding Mr. Monckton are assessments of the latter as a “charlatan” without any supporting argument whatsoever. A naked conclusion which Starwatcher seems to expect will be accepted without his effort to provide justification for the opinion he voices.
Solar: We have sunspot records since 1749, and they indicate the sun got more active in the C20th. However, there is a strong move from the mainstream to say the Sun hasn’t varied enough to be the cause of warming in the C20th. At the same time they have to invoke the sun to explain climate change before co2 took over so they are in a contradiction, and don’t like to discuss it. The only solar measure they will use is TSI, which doesn’t vary much (0.1% – enough to cause a ~0.07-0.15C change in surface temp over the 11 year solar cycle, without considering amplification caused by changes in humidity, cloud cover etc). They won’t consider the fact that various wavelengths within the TSI (total solar irradiance) vary a lot more, especially UV. UV variation has poorly known but large effects on ozone, plankton density and etc which have poorly understood but possibly large effects on the absorbance of energy into the ocean, cloud cover, and etc.
Clouds: The elephant in the room. Simple calcs show that a 1% variation in tropical cloud cover could reverse or double the warming trend. We can’t measure cloud cover (and droplet size, density etc) accurately enough, so the models assume it remains constant. The empirical data (not without its problems) says cloud cover dropped in the tropics 1979-1998. Empirical study of the satellite data shows overall cloud feedback is negative. The modelers assume it is positive.
Sea surface temp: There’s a pretty flat trend in the southern hemisphere. Co2 mixes fairly quickly from where it is emitted worldwide. How is it that global warming supposedly caused by co2 has warmed the northern hemisphere more than the south? The answer would seem to be that back radiation from greenhouse gases warm the land but not the ocean so much. Since the global ocean surface temp drives atmospheric temp, they don’t really want to go there.
The fixation with global average surface air temperature masks the underlying important variables:
Ocean heat content, which is only known with reasonable accuracy since 2004, and has been falling, according to people I trust who have managed to get the data.
Outgoing longwave radiation: The error in measurement is three times the claimed co2 signal.
There is a lot that those who call us deniers are in denial of. Especially true levels of uncertainty.
tallbloke says:
June 9, 2011 at 12:06 am
A very nice summary of these climate essentials, and of the aversion to reality of the AGW modellers; thanks!
Starwatcher said @ur momisugly June 8, 2011 at 10:59 pm
“No one argues that the consensus of experts is always right, merely that it is the best tool we have.”
Sorry, but I disagree (and Bert Russell) on this. The best tool we have is between our ears. It’s just that some refuse to use it.
“The boy’s got brains; he just refuses to use ’em that’s all”. Paul Simon
The role of imagination is often understated in science: A good scientist is required to imagine (and discount) as many alternative explanations as possible in order to support their hypothesis. This, of course, can be very difficult for those that believe from the outset that theirs is the only possible explanation. Science is done by humans who are far from perfect.
If my science proposed wholesale changes to the world economy, then I would duly expect a huge amount of detailed suggestions and questions as where any flaws might be.
…Walter Dnes says:
June 8, 2011 at 11:01 pm
This is eerily similar to “Intelligent Design” (i.e. backdoor creationism)… we can’t think of any natural explanation for the universe, therefore it must have been created by an omnipototent supreme being.
No, intelligent design theory is based mainly on the percepton/observation of irreducible complexity in biologic systems, starting with the single cell.
And neither does the principle of exclusion find any expression othodox Judeo-Christian teaching on creation. It is fully acknowledged that a “creationist” has made a step of faith in order to understand origins. Belief is a mental process that everyone engages in, whether he is aware of it or not. In this case it is a conscious decision to accept by faith the existence of a spiritual order of things which is not visible to the eye, which is causitive and therefore more “real” than physical reality, and which is ruled by the Creater. The important point is that belief is a decision involving a conscious volitional act, and there is also usually an acceptance that all of one’s questions and arguments are not resolved by making this decision. Belief is a Constitutionally enshrined personal choice in the United States, and protection of the individual freedom to choose what one believes (rather than being conformed culturally and by the state in one’s belief system) is foundational to our society.
This is an interesting article. It attempts to make a case by skirting all of the existing science, ignores any data, and then claims that the science of Warmeration is based on exclusion. Weird, that’s what it is; it must be Weird Science. Along the way it oh so cleverly misunderstands Weaver’s statement about the cause of AGW: “There is no known natural climate mechanism to explain…” Does that mean that Weaver cannot suggest an explanation? No, he’s saying that if you’re going to postulate a cause other than anthropogenic CO2, you’d need some substantive evidence.
In other words, this is exactly analogous to Creationism: You don’t want to believe the mainstream scientific explanation, so you claim that your effect (lack of warming/creation) MUST be a consequence of some unexplained cause. As with creationism, science demands evidence to support those alternative hypotheses. Is there substantive evidence that temperature increases are caused by something other than anthropogenic CO2? Otherwise, this is just anti-science blather.
And, as mentioned upthread, people like Christopher Monckton, who is only too willing to lie and fabricate evidence to support his fatuous claims, only make the rest of the CC skeptics look like they don’t understand how basic science works. Kent Hovind, anyone? What’s up with that? You folks can’t really take Monckton seriously, can you?
The sycophantic responses are kind of amusing though.
We took the liberty to translate this article into French and to publish it here, http://www.contrepoints.org/2011/06/13/29733-science-climatique-alarmiste-et-principe-d%E2%80%99exclusion, in the hope of spreading the good word of Anthony wider, in an additional language and to an incremental audience. Anthony and WUWT are of course free to use this translation for any purpose they like.