Thank you, Matt Ridley

Required reading.

UPDATE: Matt Ridley has graciously allowed me to repost his speech in entirety here. It follows below. If there’s one speech about the climate debate worth reading in your lifetime, this is it. Andrew Montford of Bishop Hill has also formatted the speech into a PDF file, with an improved version, better graphics, A5 format for printing by Mike Haesler here Ridley_RSA (PDF)  suitable for emailing, printing, and snail mail. Distribute both as widely as possible. The lecture was delivered with slides, Dr. Ridley has sent me the ones he considers key, and I have inserted them . For background on this prestigious lecture, here is the lecture web page, and here is what RSA is all about and the history since 1754.

It is a great honour to be asked to deliver the Angus Millar lecture.

I have no idea whether Angus Millar ever saw himself as a heretic, but I have a soft spot for heresy. One of my ancestral relations, Nicholas Ridley* the Oxford martyr, was burned at the stake for heresy.

My topic today is scientific heresy. When are scientific heretics right and when are they mad? How do you tell the difference between science and pseudoscience?

Let us run through some issues, starting with the easy ones.

  • Astronomy is a science; astrology is a pseudoscience.
  • Evolution is science; creationism is pseudoscience.
  • Molecular biology is science; homeopathy is pseudoscience.
  • Vaccination is science; the MMR scare is pseudoscience.
  • Oxygen is science; phlogiston was pseudoscience.
  • Chemistry is science; alchemy was pseudoscience.

Are you with me so far?

A few more examples. That the earl of Oxford wrote Shakespeare is pseudoscience. So are the beliefs that Elvis is still alive, Diana was killed by MI5, JFK was killed by the CIA, 911 was an inside job. So are ghosts, UFOs, telepathy, the Loch Ness monster and pretty well everything to do with the paranormal. Sorry to say that on Halloween, but that’s my opinion.

Three more controversial ones. In my view, most of what Freud said was pseudoscience.

So is quite a lot, though not all, of the argument for organic farming.

So, in a sense by definition, is religious faith. It explicitly claims that there are truths that can be found by other means than observation and experiment.

Now comes one that gave me an epiphany. Crop circles*.

It was blindingly obvious to me that crop circles were likely to be man-made when I first starting investigating this phenomenon. I made some myself to prove it was easy to do*.

This was long before Doug Bower and Dave Chorley fessed up to having started the whole craze after a night at the pub.

Every other explanation – ley lines, alien spacecraft, plasma vortices, ball lightning – was balderdash. The entire field of “cereology” was pseudoscience, as the slightest brush with its bizarre practitioners easily demonstrated.

Imagine my surprise then when I found I was the heretic and that serious journalists working not for tabloids but for Science Magazine, and for a Channel 4 documentary team, swallowed the argument of the cereologists that it was highly implausible that crop circles were all man-made.

So I learnt lesson number 1: the stunning gullibility of the media. Put an “ology” after your pseudoscience and you can get journalists to be your propagandists.

A Channel 4 team did the obvious thing – they got a group of students to make some crop circles and then asked the cereologist if they were “genuine” or “hoaxed” – ie, man made. He assured them they could not have been made by people. So they told him they had been made the night before. The man was poleaxed. It made great television. Yet the producer, who later became a government minister under Tony Blair, ended the segment of the programme by taking the cereologist’s side: “of course, not all crop circles are hoaxes”. What? The same happened when Doug and Dave owned up*; everybody just went on believing. They still do.

Lesson number 2: debunking is like water off a duck’s back to pseudoscience.

In medicine, I began to realize, the distinction between science and pseudoscience is not always easy.  This is beautifully illustrated in an extraordinary novel by Rebecca Abrams, called Touching Distance*, based on the real story of an eighteenth century medical heretic, Alec Gordon of Aberdeen.

Gordon was a true pioneer of the idea that childbed fever was spread by medical folk like himself and that hygiene was the solution to it. He hit upon this discovery long before Semelweiss and Lister. But he was ignored. Yet Abrams’s novel does not paint him purely as a rational hero, but as a flawed human being, a neglectful husband and a crank with some odd ideas – such as a dangerous obsession with bleeding his sick patients. He was a pseudoscientist one minute and scientist the next.

Lesson number 3. We can all be both. Newton was an alchemist.

Like antisepsis, many scientific truths began as heresies and fought long battles for acceptance against entrenched establishment wisdom that now appears irrational: continental drift, for example. Barry Marshall* was not just ignored but vilified when he first argued that stomach ulcers are caused by a particular bacterium. Antacid drugs were very profitable for the drug industry. Eventually he won the Nobel prize.

Just this month Daniel Shechtman* won the Nobel prize for quasi crystals, having spent much of his career being vilified and exiled as a crank. “I was thrown out of my research group. They said I brought shame on them with what I was saying.”

That’s lesson number 4: the heretic is sometimes right.

What sustains pseudoscience is confirmation bias. We look for and welcome the evidence that fits our pet theory; we ignore or question the evidence that contradicts it. We all do this all the time. It’s not, as we often assume, something that only our opponents indulge in. I do it, you do it, it takes a superhuman effort not to do it. That is what keeps myths alive, sustains conspiracy theories and keeps whole populations in thrall to strange superstitions.

Bertrand Russell* pointed this out many years ago: “If a man is offered a fact which goes against his instincts, he will scrutinize it closely, and unless the evidence is overwhelming, he will refuse to believe it. If, on the other hand, he is offered something which affords a reason for acting in accordance to his instincts, he will accept it even on the slightest evidence.”

Lesson number 5: keep a sharp eye out for confirmation bias in yourself and others.

There have been some very good books on this recently. Michael Shermer’s “The Believing Brain”, Dan Gardner’s “Future Babble” and Tim Harford’s “Adapt”* are explorations of the power of confirmation bias. And what I find most unsettling of all is Gardner’s conclusion that knowledge is no defence against it; indeed, the more you know, the more you fall for confirmation bias. Expertise gives you the tools to seek out the confirmations you need to buttress your beliefs.

Experts are worse at forecasting the future than non-experts.

Philip Tetlock did the definitive experiment. He gathered a sample of 284 experts – political scientists, economists and journalists – and harvested 27,450 different specific judgments from them about the future then waited to see if they came true. The results were terrible. The experts were no better than “a dart-throwing chimpanzee”.

Here’s what the Club of Rome said on the rear cover of the massive best-seller Limits to Growth in 1972*:

“Will this be the world that your grandchildren will thank you for? A world where industrial production has sunk to zero. Where population has suffered a catastrophic decline. Where the air, sea and land are polluted beyond redemption. Where civilization is a distant memory. This is the world that the computer forecasts.”

“Science is the belief in the ignorance of the experts”, said Richard Feynman.

Lesson 6. Never rely on the consensus of experts about the future. Experts are worth listening to about the past, but not the future. Futurology is pseudoscience.

Using these six lessons, I am now going to plunge into an issue on which almost all the experts are not only confident they can predict the future, but absolutely certain their opponents are pseudoscientists. It is an issue on which I am now a heretic. I think the establishment view is infested with pseudoscience. The issue is climate change.

Now before you all rush for the exits, and I know it is traditional to walk out on speakers who do not toe the line on climate at the RSA – I saw it happen to Bjorn Lomborg last year when he gave the Prince Philip lecture – let me be quite clear. I am not a “denier”. I fully accept that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, the climate has been warming and that man is very likely to be at least partly responsible. When a study was published recently saying that 98% of scientists “believe” in global warming, I looked at the questions they had been asked and realized I was in the 98%, too, by that definition, though I never use the word “believe” about myself. Likewise the recent study from Berkeley, which concluded that the land surface of the continents has indeed been warming at about the rate people thought, changed nothing.

So what’s the problem? The problem is that you can accept all the basic tenets of greenhouse physics and still conclude that the threat of a dangerously large warming is so improbable as to be negligible, while the threat of real harm from climate-mitigation policies is already so high as to be worrying, that the cure is proving far worse than the disease is ever likely to be. Or as I put it once, we may be putting a tourniquet round our necks to stop a nosebleed.

I also think the climate debate is a massive distraction from much more urgent environmental problems like invasive species and overfishing.

I was not always such a “lukewarmer”. In the mid 2000s one image in particular played a big role in making me abandon my doubts about dangerous man-made climate change: the hockey stick*. It clearly showed that something unprecedented was happening. I can remember where I first saw it at a conference and how I thought: aha, now there at last is some really clear data showing that today’s temperatures are unprecedented in both magnitude and rate of change – and it has been published in Nature magazine.

Yet it has been utterly debunked by the work of Steve McIntyre and Ross McKitrick. I urge you to read Andrew Montford’s careful and highly readable book The Hockey Stick Illusion*. Here is not the place to go into detail, but briefly the problem is both mathematical and empirical. The graph relies heavily on some flawed data – strip-bark tree rings from bristlecone pines — and on a particular method of principal component analysis, called short centering, that heavily weights any hockey-stick shaped sample at the expense of any other sample. When I say heavily – I mean 390 times.

This had a big impact on me. This was the moment somebody told me they had made the crop circle the night before.

For, apart from the hockey stick, there is no evidence that climate is changing dangerously or faster than in the past, when it changed naturally.

  • It was warmer in the Middle ages* and medieval climate change in Greenland was much faster.
  • Stalagmites*, tree lines and ice cores all confirm that it was significantly warmer 7000 years ago. Evidence from Greenland suggests that the Arctic ocean was probably ice free for part of the late summer at that time.
  • Sea level* is rising at the unthreatening rate about a foot per century and decelerating.
  • Greenland is losing ice at the rate of about 150 gigatonnes a year, which is 0.6% per century.
  • There has been no significant warming in Antarctica*, with the exception of the peninsula.
  • Methane* has largely stopped increasing.
  • Tropical storm* intensity and frequency have gone down, not up, in the last 20 years.
  • Your probability* of dying as a result of a drought, a flood or a storm is 98% lower globally than it was in the 1920s.
  • Malaria* has retreated not expanded as the world has warmed.

And so on. I’ve looked and looked but I cannot find one piece of data – as opposed to a model – that shows either unprecedented change or change is that is anywhere close to causing real harm.

No doubt, there will be plenty of people thinking “what about x?” Well, if you have an X that persuades you that rapid and dangerous climate change is on the way, tell me about it. When I asked a senior government scientist this question, he replied with the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum. That is to say, a poorly understood hot episode, 55 million years ago, of uncertain duration, uncertain magnitude and uncertain cause.

Meanwhile, I see confirmation bias everywhere in the climate debate. Hurricane Katrina, Mount Kilimanjaro, the extinction of golden toads – all cited wrongly as evidence of climate change. A snowy December, the BBC lectures us, is “just weather”; a flood in Pakistan or a drought in Texas is “the sort of weather we can expect more of”. A theory so flexible it can rationalize any outcome is a pseudoscientific theory.

To see confirmation bias in action, you only have to read the climategate emails, documents that have undermined my faith in this country’s scientific institutions. It is bad enough that the emails unambiguously showed scientists plotting to cherry-pick data, subvert peer review, bully editors and evade freedom of information requests. What’s worse, to a science groupie like me, is that so much of the rest of the scientific community seemed OK with that. They essentially shrugged their shoulders and said, yeh, big deal, boys will be boys.

Nor is there even any theoretical support for a dangerous future. The central issue is “sensitivity”: the amount of warming that you can expect from a doubling of carbon dioxide levels. On this, there is something close to consensus – at first. It is 1.2 degrees centigrade. Here’s* how the IPCC put it in its latest report.

“In the idealised situation that the climate response to a doubling of atmospheric CO2 consisted of a uniform temperature change only, with no feedbacks operating…the global warming from GCMs would be around 1.2°C.” Paragraph 8.6.2.3.

Now the paragraph goes on to argue that large, net positive feedbacks, mostly from water vapour, are likely to amplify this. But whereas there is good consensus about the 1.2 C, there is absolutely no consensus about the net positive feedback, as the IPCC also admits. Water vapour forms clouds and whether clouds in practice amplify or dampen any greenhouse warming remains in doubt.

So to say there is a consensus about some global warming is true; to say there is a consensus about dangerous global warming is false.

The sensitivity of the climate could be a harmless 1.2C, half of which has already been experienced, or it could be less if feedbacks are negative or it could be more if feedbacks are positive. What does the empirical evidence say? Since 1960 we have had roughly one-third of a doubling, so we must have had almost half of the greenhouse warming expected from a doubling – that’s elementary arithmetic, given that the curve is agreed to be logarithmic. Yet if you believe the surface thermometers* (the red and green lines), we have had about 0.6C of warming in that time, at the rate of less than 0.13C per decade – somewhat less if you believe the satellite thermometers (the blue and purple lines).

So we are on track for 1.2C*.  We are on the blue line, not the red line*.

Remember Jim Hansen of NASA told us in 1988 to expect 2-4 degrees in 25 years. We are experiencing about one-tenth of that.

We are below even the zero-emission path expected by the IPCC in 1990*.

Ah, says the consensus, sulphur pollution has reduced the warming, delaying the impact, or the ocean has absorbed the extra heat. Neither of these post-hoc rationalisations fit the data: the southern hemisphere has warmed about half as fast as the northern* in the last 30 years, yet the majority of the sulphur emissions were in the northern hemisphere.

And ocean heat content has decelerated, if not flattened, in the past decade*.

By contrast, many heretical arguments seem to me to be paragons of science as it should be done: transparent, questioning and testable.

For instance, earlier this year, a tenacious British mathematician named Nic Lewis started looking into the question of sensitivity and found* that the only wholly empirical estimate of sensitivity cited by the IPCC had been put through an illegitimate statistical procedure which effectively fattened its tail on the upward end – it hugely increased the apparent probability of high warming at the expense of low warming.

When this is corrected, the theoretical probability of warming greater than 2.3C is very low indeed.

Like all the other errors in the IPCC report, including the infamous suggestion that all Himalayan glaciers would be gone by 2035 rather than 2350, this mistake exaggerates the potential warming. It is beyond coincidence that all these errors should be in the same direction. The source for the Himalayan glacier mistake was a non-peer reviewed WWF report and it occurred in a chapter, two of whose coordinating lead authors and a review editor were on WWF’s climate witness scientific advisory panel. Remember too that the glacier error was pointed out by reviewers, who were ignored, and that Rajendra Pachauri, the head of the IPCC, dismissed the objectors as practitioners of “voodoo science”.

Journalists are fond of saying that the IPCC report is based solely on the peer-reviewed literature. Rajendra Pachauri himself made that claim in 2008, saying*:

“we carry out an assessment of climate change based on peer-reviewed literature, so everything that we look at and take into account in our assessments has to carry [the] credibility of peer-reviewed publications, we don’t settle for anything less than that.”

That’s a voodoo claim. The glacier claim was not peer reviewed; nor was the alteration to the sensitivity function Lewis spotted. The journalist Donna Laframboise got volunteers all over the world to help her count the times the IPCC used non-peer reviewed literature. Her conclusion is that*: “Of the 18,531 references in the 2007 Climate Bible we found 5,587 – a full 30% – to be non peer-reviewed.”

Yet even to say things like this is to commit heresy. To stand up and say, within a university or within the BBC, that you do not think global warming is dangerous gets you the sort of reaction that standing up in the Vatican and saying you don’t think God is good would get. Believe me, I have tried it.

Does it matter? Suppose I am right that much of what passes for mainstream climate science is now infested with pseudoscience, buttressed by a bad case of confirmation bias, reliant on wishful thinking, given a free pass by biased reporting and dogmatically intolerant of dissent. So what?

After all there’s pseudoscience and confirmation bias among the climate heretics too.

Well here’s why it matters. The alarmists have been handed power over our lives; the heretics have not. Remember Britain’s unilateral climate act is officially expected to cost the hard-pressed UK economy £18.3 billion a year for the next 39 years and achieve an unmeasurably small change in carbon dioxide levels.

At least* sceptics do not cover the hills of Scotland with useless, expensive, duke-subsidising wind turbines whose manufacture causes pollution in Inner Mongolia and which kill rare raptors such as this griffon vulture.

At least crop circle believers cannot almost double your electricity bills and increase fuel poverty while driving jobs to Asia, to support their fetish.

At least creationists have not persuaded the BBC that balanced reporting is no longer necessary.

At least homeopaths have not made expensive condensing boilers, which shut down in cold weather, compulsory, as John Prescott did in 2005.

At least astrologers have not driven millions of people into real hunger, perhaps killing 192,000 last year according to one conservative estimate, by diverting 5% of the world’s grain crop into motor fuel*.

That’s why it matters. We’ve been asked to take some very painful cures. So we need to be sure the patient has a brain tumour rather than a nosebleed.

Handing the reins of power to pseudoscience has an unhappy history. Remember eugenics. Around 1910 the vast majority of scientists and other intellectuals agreed that nationalizing reproductive decisions so as to stop poor, disabled and stupid people from having babies was not just a practical but a moral imperative of great urgency.

“There is now no reasonable excuse for refusing to face the fact,” said George Bernard Shaw*, “that nothing but a eugenics religion can save our civilization from the fate that has overtaken all previous civilizations.’’ By the skin of its teeth, mainly because of a brave Liberal MP called Josiah Wedgwood, Britain never handed legal power to the eugenics movement. Germany did.

Or remember Trofim Lysenko*, a pseudoscientific crank with a strange idea that crops could be trained to do what you wanted and that Mendelian genetics was bunk. His ideas became the official scientific religion of the Soviet Union and killed millions; his critics, such as the geneticist Nikolai Vavilov, ended up dead in prison.

Am I going too far in making these comparisons? I don’t think so. James Hansen of NASA says oil firm executives should be tried for crimes against humanity.  (Remember this is the man who is in charge of one of the supposedly impartial data sets about global temperatures.) John Beddington, Britain’s chief scientific adviser, said this year that just as we are “grossly intolerant of racism”, so we should also be “grossly intolerant of pseudoscience”, in which he included all forms of climate-change scepticism.

The irony of course is that much of the green movement began as heretical dissent. Greenpeace went from demanding that the orthodox view of genetically modified crops be challenged, and that the Royal Society was not to be trusted, to demanding that heresy on climate change be ignored and the Royal Society could not be wrong.

Talking of Greenpeace, did you know that the collective annual budget of Greenpeace, WWF and Friends of the Earth was more than a billion dollars globally last year? People sometimes ask me what’s the incentive for scientists to exaggerate climate change. But look at the sums of money available to those who do so, from the pressure groups, from governments and from big companies. It was not the sceptics who hired an ex News of the World deputy editor as a spin doctor after climategate, it was the University of East Anglia.

By contrast scientists and most mainstream journalists risk their careers if they take a skeptical line, so dogmatic is the consensus view. It is left to the blogosphere to keep the flame of heresy alive and do the investigative reporting the media has forgotten how to do. In America*, Anthony Watts who crowd-sourced the errors in the siting of thermometers and runs wattsupwiththat.com;

In Canada*, Steve McIntyre, the mathematician who bit by bit exposed the shocking story of the hockey stick and runs climateaudit.org.

Here in Britain,* Andrew Montford, who dissected the shenanigans behind the climategate whitewash enquiries and runs bishop-hill.net.

In Australia*, Joanne Nova, the former television science presenter who has pieced together the enormous sums of money that go to support vested interests in alarm, and runs joannenova.com.au.

The remarkable thing about the heretics I have mentioned is that every single one is doing this in his or her spare time. They work for themselves, they earn a pittance from this work. There is no great fossil-fuel slush fund for sceptics.

In conclusion, I’ve spent a lot of time on climate, but it could have been dietary fat, or nature and nurture. My argument is that like religion, science as an institution is and always has been plagued by the temptations of confirmation bias. With alarming ease it morphs into pseudoscience even – perhaps especially – in the hands of elite experts and especially when predicting the future and when there’s lavish funding at stake. It needs heretics.

Thank you very much for listening.

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Jim Cripwell
November 2, 2011 8:35 am

Dave Springer writes “Engineers routinely make these conversions. Do you think they just guess at how hot or cold things get as surfaces are more or less exposed to sunlight? Your ignorance is just sad. Get a clue.”
Of course they do. That is not what I am talking about. I am talking about the alleged change of radiative forcing of 3.7 Wm-2 for a doubling of CO2. There is no way to change this number into a change of surface temperature using proper physics.

P.F.
November 2, 2011 8:37 am

Zac says: Nov. 1, 2011 at 6:02 pm “No. Evolution is a theory, Creationism is a belief.”
No. Evolution is a well-established fact, like planets orbiting around the sun. The process of evolution is where theories abound. Even religion itself provides multiple examples of evolution. For example: one central figure influences a tight band of 12 followers, each with their own take on the ideology and expressed in differing ways once the central figure passes. Then the ideologies of some of those twelve founding members evolve over time into factions and then into strong, established features on the political and cultural landscape. Some go extinct. Whether it be Abraham, Jesus, or Muhammad, all of their ideologies radiated across the land and evolved into things one can argue are similar, but not particularly fully consistent with the original form.

Kev-in-Uk
November 2, 2011 8:45 am

A great lecture in my opinion. I particularly felt empathy with the way he started to look into the climate issue – I reckon many of us skeptics were similarly drawn in to the debate. But the interesting part for me was his rationale on confirmation bias – basically stating that those without knowledge or expertise on a subject exhibit the least amount of bias. This is exactly how I started looking at climate science – and I suspect many other engineers/scientists were the same. ?
I looked at the data and ‘believed’ but wasn’t sure – then when I started to look – it definately wasn’t clear, and simple ‘concensus’ deductions from the media made little scientific sense. Curiosity killed the cat, I started to read about the issue – and here I am.
No confirmation bias from me – an engineer/scientist in a related field but having no actual ‘interest’ in the subject – but basic scientific inquisitiveness was my downfall….I really do agree with Matts deduction that the so called experts have all the confirmation bias and this really leads to an absolute requirement for papers, data, code, etc to be reviewed by totally non subject working (but perfectly scientifically valid) individuals.
I don’t know about others, but I do seriously find myself reading the majority of AGW BS and saying/thinking, ‘that’s a stretch’ or ‘that’s too much of an ssumption’, etc, etc – I can’t describe it – it’s just when things don’t seem to gel or fit right with basic science principles?

Symon
November 2, 2011 8:49 am

It’s hilarious to read the comments in this thread from ‘God squad’ folks apparently happy to read that climate scientists are falling for confirmation bias without removing the rafters from their own eyes when it comes to creationism. Love it, keep up the good work.

Jim Masterson
November 2, 2011 9:01 am

>>
Dave Springer says:
November 2, 2011 at 6:40 am
So you would then have no problem with prescribed evolution where the initial form(s) of life that diversified over billions of years into what we see today were preprogrammed to do this like an origami from a global genome where all the requisite information was repressed and merely waiting for environmental triggers to express it and move through the predetermined evolutionary sequence?
<<
This sounds like Panspermia, which I don’t agree with at all.
>>
Or maybe you do have some presumptions about the origin of life after all and you just don’t want to admit it.
<<
I do. But I didn’t want to hijack a thread about climate/AGW pseudoscience and discuss Abiogenesis.
Jim

Mark Hladik
November 2, 2011 9:06 am

Apologies if this has been suggested, but send the .pdf to the Weather Channel. They had a propaganda piece this morning (complete with “Dr” Muller) talking about ‘climate change’, extreme weather, the number of ‘hot’ days vs. the number of ‘cold’ days, ad infinitum ad nauseum … …
At least Heidi Cullen was easy on the eyes … … … …
Regards to all,
Mark H.

November 2, 2011 9:21 am

In his RSA talk, Matt Ridley said,

“I am not a “denier”. I fully accept that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, the climate has been warming and that man is very likely to be at least partly responsible.”
“I was not always such a “lukewarmer”. In the mid 2000s one image in particular played a big role in making me abandon my doubts about dangerous man-made climate change: the hockey stick*.”

Matt Ridely used ‘ ‘ quotes around the word lukewarmer and rightly so. It is an inane terminology. If someone says there is (within the current state of climate science that for 20+ years has had almost total funding biased toward AGW by CO2 from fossil fuels) a relatively uncertain amount of global warming attributable to fossil fuel CO2, then does it make any sense to call that person a ‘lukewarmer’? I say it is a senseless name for that position. That position, if left unlabeled, is just a state-of-current-science skeptical stance that recognizes the skeptical position has not been fully actualized (due to previous almost total funding bias toward AGW). Is it not expected that when funding is more balanced and broader perspectives on climate are more fully probed that the view of attribution significant will change? NOTE: Call this position ‘A’.
On the other hand, based only on some kind of a personal preference, if one takes a position using an a priori postulated premise that man is causing some (but not alarming) warming from fossil fuels then that is a pseudo-scientific position that begs for use of confirmation bias. One in that position looks at everything that happens in climate and in papers for supporting their view and does not listen to contrary information; ergo pseudo-science. If the label ‘lukewarmist’ were used in that sense then it is a pseudo-scientific position. NOTE: Call this position ‘B’.
I ask all self-named ‘lukewarmists’ to please step up to claim which of the above positions they are actually taking.
I am an ‘A’. So, I am an ’lukewarmist’. : )
John
PS – this was also posted at BH’s place.

More Soylent Green!
November 2, 2011 9:37 am

P.F. says:
November 2, 2011 at 8:37 am
Zac says: Nov. 1, 2011 at 6:02 pm “No. Evolution is a theory, Creationism is a belief.”
No. Evolution is a well-established fact, like planets orbiting around the sun. The process of evolution is where theories abound. Even religion itself provides multiple examples of evolution. For example: one central figure influences a tight band of 12 followers, each with their own take on the ideology and expressed in differing ways once the central figure passes. Then the ideologies of some of those twelve founding members evolve over time into factions and then into strong, established features on the political and cultural landscape. Some go extinct. Whether it be Abraham, Jesus, or Muhammad, all of their ideologies radiated across the land and evolved into things one can argue are similar, but not particularly fully consistent with the original form.

The issue is macro-evolution. How did species alive today evolve from prior species, and what is the evidence for it?
We can see evolution in the lab, using things like fruit flies. That’s evolution and that’s a fact. But how did we get from shrew-like early mammals to human beings? There are huge gaps in the fossil record, making macro-evolution extremely difficult to prove.
The problem is evolution has been politicized. The atheists have and continue to posit that evolution proves there is no God, no creator, a statement that shows as much scientific ignorance as saying the Bible proves the world was created in six days.

Lady in Red
November 2, 2011 9:44 am

Wow! I teared….
(Now, if only someone would take on Big Pharma…. if only medical schools taught the history of medicine, doctoring and heretics…. Next year….?)
Thank you, heretics! ….Lady in Red

pat
November 2, 2011 9:55 am

Surely someone will stand up for cereology?

oeman50
November 2, 2011 9:57 am

I appreciate Mr. Ridley’s discussion on confirmation bias. It is often puzzling to many why scientists would “deliberately” skew results in a particular direction if they are true scientists. There has been a lot of discussion on Mann “cooking the books” and some even harsher language, it makes it seem he was involved in deliberate falsification of results. This bias may be why it is so hard to shake Mssrs. Mann, Rohm and Schmidt, et. al. from their CAGW stance, they are only looking at what confirms what they believe in.
I’ve had many discussions about science with my peers. Science is not the knowledge gained from its practice, it is a process. It is also not a machine where we toss in data on one side, turn the crank and out pops the correct answer. It is the best way we have to organize our thinking so we don’t do something stupid and it obviously doesn’t always work. But when we find our livelyhood dependent on our own brand of science, it seems easy to slip into a bias that looks blindingly apparent to others.
Thanks, Matt. Your thoughts have brought clarity to the motivations behind the CAGW movement.

The Ghost Of Big Jim Cooley
November 2, 2011 9:57 am

Pity that this thread has become infected with the total absurdity that is religious belief. I’ll never understand how someone can believe something with absolutely no evidence at all, just a irrational and illogical belief that it is so. Truly bizarre. They must surely fall for every snake-oil salesman that darkens their doorstep.
Fantastic speech by Mr Ridley, by the way.

Mike M
November 2, 2011 9:59 am

(Yikes, I meant north not south!)

MattN
November 2, 2011 10:11 am

Anthony, I recommend this presentation be given a permanant link somehwere on the side fo the home page. This is just too good to let fall to the bottom.

November 2, 2011 10:21 am

Interpolation: good, reliable, computable, useful.
Extrapolation: bad, not reliable, not computable, produces nonsense.
Theories of AGW are extrapolations. Nobel prizes have been lost because of extrapolation (see R. Feynman). Some of the evolutionary theories are extrapolations, and therefore not reliable. Some evolutionary theories (the speciation of Darwin’s finches, the customizing of domestic animals, and so on) are quite reliable.
Where did the plasticity of the germ cells of domestic animals come from? I see house sparrows outside our window all the time; I cannot tell them apart. Did we domesticate the animals with characteristics which could be manipulated in the first place? How did such creatures evolve prior to our involvement?
Big Bang, inflation, etc: it has been known since Fritz Zwicky that something is wrong with our gravitational theories. He told us that galaxy clusters should not exist. The whole theory is redolent of ad-hoc solutions. Where is the man or woman who can come forward with a better explanation? Dark matter? Invisible stuff? Non-detectable gravity? Come on.
How about “I don’t know.” Is that too hard?
I don’t know what the overall carbon dioxide budget of the Earth is. No one else does either. I don’t know how to predict cloud cover, nor does anyone else. So let’s stop trying to pretend that we can.
AGW is bogus, pseudoscientific, claptrap.
Period.

geo
November 2, 2011 10:23 am

Awesome speech, thanks for sharing.

fredb
November 2, 2011 10:23 am

The irony of this speech is amazing. If you take the lessons learned that are numbered up front … they equally applicable to both sides of the debate — I, as one who acknowledges AGW, find it as easy to apply to the community who don’t believe is AGW. Its highly amusing (but not, I expect, to many WUWT readers). 😉

November 2, 2011 10:26 am

Whaaaa! “…alchemy was pseudoscience.”
Poor Matt has obviously no understanding about alchemy. If he did, he wouldn’t relegate it to the dustbin of history.
Pseudocience means, literally, something pretending to be science. But alchemy, which was invented thousands of years before Western material science, wouldn’t dream of trying to pretend that it’s science or even want to be associated in the same sentence with it.
Saying that alchemy is pseudoscience is the same as saying that Homo erectus was pseudo Homo sapiens. The same disdain for such an association, I’m sure, would apply to HE, who would be appalled to be mistaken for someone that was trying to ape (sorry!) such an over-gracialised, dumbed-down creature that disdains from even killing its own meat and who, in his ignorance, blithely trashes the natural world.
Alchemy is known as the Great Art (not science) because it is far more holistic in its approach to science, in that it takes in far more than science’s small and narrow brief to include Spirit, something science hasn’t historically had the tools to recognise although the quantum theorists are now getting warmer.
I’m not against science and I can see and appreciate it uses. But the worse thing about science ~ or should I say scientists? ~ is that they so often get above themselves and overextend their briefs so that they end up coming out with claptrap like this.
It’s a shame because I like Matt Ridley’s research usually … but I think he shouid stick to the subjects that he knows about … of which alchemy obviously isn’t one.
Signed
An Alchemist
PS If you’d like to learn more about the Great Art, and how alchemical processes differ from scientific ones, there’s plenty about it on my blog, including my most recent post: Saturn’s Return and The Prodigal Son. http://ishtarsgate.wordpress.com/2011/10/29/saturns-return-and-the-prodigal-son/

November 2, 2011 10:28 am

Steve Garcia says:
November 2, 2011 at 8:21 am
Yes. As Churchill said about D-Day, “This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it IS perhapsthe end of the beginning.”

He used the word “perhaps,” and he said it about the victory at El Alemain. (Later on he said, “Before El Alemain we never had a victory. After El Alemain we never had a defeat.”)

Septic Matthew
November 2, 2011 10:29 am

Dave Springer: I gave up on exposing the former but gained quite an education in the process and none of that education changed my skepticism of the neo-Darwinian narrative. Life and the universe have virtually no hallmarks of random construction but rather carries the hallmarks of design at every scale.
It depends where and when you look. In every species, almost all of the progeny do not survive to have progeny of their own: they starve, die of thirst, die of infection, die fighting with their brothers, sisters and cousins, die of cold or heat, get eaten, etc. It takes a redefinition of “design” to account for the fact that most progeny are so badly designed that they do not survive. The progeny contain countless unpredictable variations on their progenitors: metabolic rates, locomotion speed, structures of proteins, etc. In every characteristic that has been studied, the progeny are vastly more variable than their progenitors, and vastly outnumber their progenitors. Of those progeny with their vast numbers and great diversity, nature kills almost all of them.
It’s wonderful to watch a caterpillar spin a cocoon, then to watch the moth emerge and fly away; but most of the eggs never make it to the cocoon stage, some of the pupae die in the cocoons, and many of the moths (most of them, actually), don’t live to have offspring: either they get eaten, starve, don’t find mates, or die of disease.
It takes, as I wrote, a special definition of “design” to see its hallmarks among so much random variation and death in the progeny.

Sun Spot
November 2, 2011 10:33 am

@The Ghost Of Big Jim Cooley says: November 2, 2011 at 9:57 am
You see Jim Religion is not science; it falls under the category of the Arts. At this web site we try to force science into not being CAGW religion, there is very little call for making Religion not science (there is that strange thing called creation science, but very few religions take it seriously).
Now saying religion is “truly bizarre” is like saying Mozart, Beethoven or Pink Floyd are bizarre because you don’t like their music. You use the word “infected” that is the same as using the word “denier” in global warming parlance, your intent is to kick someone’s dog (impart an insult). Don’t fall into the Dawkins/Hitchens trap of being an uncivil and hateful anti-religion bigot.

Steve Garcia
November 2, 2011 10:36 am

A classic example of confirmation bias is this excerpt from the PBS’ NOVA presentation America’s Stone Age Explorers, which aired November 9, 2004:

[Narrator] Clovis First was such a powerful story that, for years, few archaeologists looked back beyond 13,500 years ago. But then a few did. Jim Adovasio has spent the past 30 years excavating at Meadowcroft, a prehistoric site near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The deeper he dug, the further back he descended in time.
JAMES ADOVASIO (Mercyhurst College): On these surfaces that you see before us, we have signs of repeated visits by Native Americans to this site. These discolorations literally represent a moment frozen in time.
NARRATOR: Each tag marks ancient fire pits that can be carbon dated, creating a cross section of who lived here and when, stretching back 13,500 years.
JAMES ADOVASIO: Just below the surface I’m standing on is where the conventional Clovis First model says that the earliest material should stop, basically, that there ought not to be anything beneath it, no matter how much deeper we dug.
NARRATOR: But then, Adovasio did go deeper, below 13,500 years, to a time in the Americas, when no trace of humans should exist, according to the Clovis First theory. He was astounded by what he found.
JAMES ADOVASIO: The artifacts simply continued, and we recovered blades like this all the way down to 16,000 B.C.
NARRATOR: When he published his findings, he was immediately attacked.
JAMES ADOVASIO: The majority of the archaeological community was acutely skeptical, and they invented all kinds of reasons why these dates couldn’t possibly be right.
NARRATOR: Some claimed that nearby coal deposits had contaminated Adovasio’s samples, but he was known to be a meticulous excavator. Eventually, a few other archaeologists began to report evidence questioning the Clovis First theory, and they too were attacked.
MICHAEL COLLINS: The best way in the world to get beaten up, professionally, is to claim you have a pre-Clovis site.
DENNIS STANFORD: When you dig deeper than Clovis, a lot of people do not report it, because they’re worried about the reaction of their colleagues.
MICHAEL COLLINS: I’ve been accused of planting artifacts. People will reject radiocarbon dates just simply because there’s not supposed to be any people here at those times, and it just goes on and on and on.
NARRATOR: Even faced with evidence to the contrary, Clovis First supporters refused to accept that people could have arrived in America earlier than 13,500 years ago. For, as they pointed out, although it was possible to walk across the land bridge into present day Alaska, ice sheets blocked entry to the rest of the continent until at least that time. As they put it, “If people were coming to the New World before then, how could they get past the ice?”

While the Colivs First proponents could envision men running around with spears over a land area of 8 million square miles and finding – much less being able to kill – every single mammoth, sabre-toothed tiger, sloth and camel, they weren’t as amenable to people being here before they envisioned.
They themselves had worked themselves into a corner in thinking that the ice sheets were impenetrable, and that the people had no other options than to walk. And what THEY decided was impossible allowed them to accept only what they wanted to believe. In a very real sense, the ice age people outwitted the modern-day scientists.
I would point out that it is common for archeologists to underestimate the intelligence of the peoples of the past, and not just those in the ice age.
But note how much more difficult they made it for people – and evidence itself – that did not confirm their bias. Accusations of even fraud by their peers and much denial was the way things went for DECADES in that field. And they were proven WRONG, in the end. Clovis First was a terrible black eye on science. Not because it was wrong, but because the confirmation bias stood in the way of knowledge and a better understanding – and the way the treated those who didn’t toe the line.
CAGW is only one in a line of paradigms that is taught as true and is proven wrong. Those older people here may remember that we were taught in school that Earth’s mountains were formed by the wrinkling of an Earth shrinking as it cooled, like the skin of a drying orange. This was during another era of scientific denial, when Wegener’s moving continents were laughed at. Then there is the idea that the Earth’s meteor craters were all volcanic. It took Gene Shoemaker in the 1970s and 1980s to finally show that craters were from impacts.
The list goes on and on.
Are they willfully stupid? No, just doing the CYA necessary in their chosen careers: Don’t rock the boat if you want the next grant or to be included in the next grant.
While they are right to be skeptical of the next new idea (enough to make it prove itself and stand on its own two feet), the balance of skepticism falls inordinately on new ideas. But not always.
CAGW is pretty much an exception, in that way. CAGW is the new idea that got a pass. It would make a decent book to show how it was politically connected people who proposed it and got it accepted as the “true science” even though it was new. I think it was given more shrift because the ozone hole claim did, before it. That is one that needs a healthy review.
The more or less contemporary acid-rain argument didn’t make it past the testing stage. They passed a bill to fund the testing of the acidity of lakes and ponds in the NE USA, and what was found proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that acid rain was not a problem in the slightest: only ONE pond in remote rural western New York state was found to have elevated acid. The idea died then and there.
I think to this day that the alarmists learned from that to NOT test their hypotheses, at least not in public and not in any meaningful way. It may, indeed, have been their reason for going so much to models, which they could make sure did not stab them in the back.
Which begs the question:
Are models tools of confirmation bias?
You tell me!

Mike
November 2, 2011 10:39 am

Ditto to what meemoe_uk says. Science is a process. Theories are tested against facts, best done in controlled experiments. Phlogiston was simply a theory that didn’t hold up and was therefore discarded. Was Maxwell a pseudo-scientist because he thought there was an ether?

November 2, 2011 10:44 am

“At least* sceptics do not cover the hills of Scotland with useless, expensive, duke-subsidising wind turbines whose manufacture causes pollution in Inner Mongolia and which kill rare raptors such as this griffon vulture”.
Griffon vultures roaming wild in Scotland? Are you sure? Maybe it’s this one.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-11011384
While I agree with much of this lecture, I live on an island full of wind turbines and I do not see any first hand evidence of the killing of rare raptors. Or does the author mean the production of windmills in Mongolia kill Vultures there? Clarity is crucial when lecturing on scientific accuracy.

kramer
November 2, 2011 10:45 am

Very good article. That said, who is Matt Ridley? I don’t recall ever hearing or reading anything about this person.

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