The illogic of climate hysteria

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Special to the Financial Post (reposted here with permission from the author)

IMG_3846
Erin Delman, President of the Environmental Club, debates with Monckton - photo by Charlotte Lehman

“But there’s a CONSENSUS!” shrieked the bossy environmentalist with the messy blonde hair.

“That, Madame, is intellectual baby-talk,” I replied.

I was about to give a talk questioning “global warming” hysteria at Union College, Schenectady. College climate extremists, led by my interlocutor, had set up a table at the door of the lecture theatre to deter students from hearing the sceptical side of the case.

The Greek philosopher Aristotle, 2300 years ago, listed the dozen commonest logical fallacies in human discourse in his book Sophistical Refutations. Not the least of these invalid arguments is what the mediaeval schoolmen would later call the argumentum ad populum – the consensus or headcount fallacy.

A fallacy is a deceptive argument that appears to be logically valid but is in fact invalid. Its conclusion will be unreliable at best, downright false at worst.

One should not make the mistake of thinking that Aristotle’s fallacies are irrelevant archaisms. They are as crucial today as when he first wrote them down. Arguments founded upon any of his fallacies are unsound and unreliable, and that is that.

Startlingly, nearly all of the usual arguments for alarm about the climate are instances of Aristotle’s dozen fallacies of relevance or of presumption, not the least of which is the consensus fallacy.

Just because we are told that many people say they believe a thing to be so, that is no evidence that many people say it, still less that they believe it, still less that it is so. The mere fact of a consensus – even if there were one – tells us nothing whatsoever about whether the proposition to which the consensus supposedly assents is true or false.

Two surveys have purported to show that 97% of climate scientists supported the “consensus”. However, one survey was based on the views of just 77 scientists, far too small a sample to be scientific, and the proposition to which 75 of the 77 assented was merely to the effect that there has been warming since 1950.

The other paper did not state explicitly what question the scientists were asked and did not explain how they had been selected to remove bias. Evidentially, it was valueless. Yet that has not prevented the usual suspects from saying – falsely – that the “consensus” of 97% of all climate scientists is that manmade global warming is potentially catastrophic.

Some climate extremists say there is a “consensus of evidence”. However, evidence cannot hold or express an opinion. There has been no global warming for a decade and a half; sea level has been rising for eight years at a rate equivalent to just 3 cm per century; hurricane activity is at its lowest in the 30-year satellite record; global sea-ice extent has hardly changed in that time; Himalayan glaciers have not lost ice overall; ocean heat content is rising four and a half times more slowly than predicted; and the 50 million “climate refugees” that the UN had said would be displaced by 2010 simply do not exist. To date, the “consensus of evidence” does not support catastrophism.

“Ah,” say the believers, “but there is a consensus of scientists and learned societies.” That is the argumentum ad verecundiam, the reputation or appeal-to-authority fallacy. Merely because a group has a reputation, it may not deserve it; even if it deserves it, it may not be acting in accordance with it; and, even if it is, it may be wrong.

“But it’s only if we include a strong warming effect from Man’s CO2 emissions that we can reproduce the observed warming of the past 60 years. We cannot think of any other reason for the warming.” That argument from the UN’s climate panel, the IPCC, is the argumentum ad ignorantiam, the fallacy of arguing from ignorance. We do not know why the warming has occurred. Arbitrarily to blame Man is impermissible.

“The rate of global warming is accelerating. Therefore it is caused by us.” That is the fallacy of ignoratio elenchi, the red-herring fallacy. Even if global warming were accelerating, that would tell us nothing about whether we were to blame. The IPCC twice uses this fallacious argument in its 2007 Fourth Assessment Report. Even if its argument were not illogical, the warming rate is not increasing. The notion that it is accelerating was based on a statistical abuse that the IPCC has refused to correct.

Superficially, the red-herring fallacy may seem similar to the fallacy of argument from ignorance. However, it is subtly different. The argument from ignorance refers to fundamental ignorance of the matter of the argument (hence an arbitrary conclusion is reached): the red-herring fallacy refers to fundamental ignorance of the manner of conducting an argument (hence an irrelevant consideration is introduced).

“What about the cuddly polar bears?” That is the argumentum ad misericordiam, the fallacy of inappropriate pity. There are five times as many polar bears as there were in the 1940s – hardly the population profile of a species at imminent threat of extinction. There is no need to pity the bears (and they are not cuddly).

“For 60 years we have added CO2 to the atmosphere. That causes warming. Therefore the warming is our fault.” That is the post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy, the argument from false cause. Merely because one event precedes another it does not necessarily cause it.

“We tell the computer models that there will be strong warming if we add CO2 to the air. The models show there will be a strong warming. Therefore the warming is our fault.” This is the argumentum ad petitionem principii, the circular-argument fallacy, where a premise is also the conclusion.

“Global warming caused Hurricane Katrina.” This is the inappropriate argument from the general to the particular that is the fallacy a dicto simpliciter ad dictum

secundum quid, the fallacy of accident. Even the IPCC admits individual extreme-weather events cannot be ascribed to global warming. Hurricane Katrina was only Category 3 at landfall. The true reason for the damage was failure to maintain the sea walls.

“Arctic sea ice is melting: therefore manmade global warming is a problem.” This is the inappropriate argument from the particular to the general that is the fallacy a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, the fallacy of converse accident. The Arctic ice may be melting, but the Antarctic has been cooling for 30 years and the sea ice there is growing, so the decline in Arctic sea ice does not indicate a global problem.

“Monckton says he’s a member of the House of Lords, but the Clerk of the Parliaments says he isn’t, so everything he says is nonsense.” That is the argumentum ad hominem, the attack on the man rather than on his argument.

“We don’t care what the truth is. We want more taxation and regulation. We will use global warming as an excuse. If you disagree, we will haul you before the International Climate Court.” That is the nastiest of all the logical fallacies: the argumentum ad baculum, the argument of force.

In any previous generation, the fatuous cascade of fallacious arguments deployed by climate extremists in government, academe and the media in support of the now-collapsed climate scare would have been laughed down.

When the future British prime minister Harold Macmillan arrived at Oxford to study the classics, his tutor said: “Four years’ study will qualify you for nothing at all – except to recognize rot when you hear it.” The climate storyline is rot. To prevent further costly scams rooted in artful nonsense, perhaps we should restore universal classical education. As it is, what little logic our bossy environmentalists learn appears to come solely from Mr. Spock in Star Trek.

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Snotrocket
April 21, 2012 5:41 am

omnologos says: April 20, 2012 at 11:45 pm “(1) Where’s the iPod app for the above?”
I have so enjoyed the education I have derived from reading this, Omnologus, that I have downloaded it to my Kindle through the Chrome gizmo that pushes web articles to Kindle. Magic!
And thank you Lord Monckton – who is far too much of a gentleman to rise to Huffman’s insult: ‘Mr’ – which says so much more about Huffman than Lord Monckton.

Bill Tuttle
April 21, 2012 5:49 am

harrydhuffman (@harrydhuffman) says:
April 21, 2012 at 3:23 am
Aristotle’s opinions–I repeat, opinions–held back physical science for 2,000 years. He was a renowned master of rhetoric, not of science, whose pedantic logic did not save him from spouting sheer nonsense.

Which doesn’t invalidate his description of logical fallacies, and Lord Monckton was citing from his rhetorical knowledge, not his scientific beliefs (okay, that’s an oxymoron)…

Jan P. Perlwitz
April 21, 2012 5:54 am

Monckton has published an opinion piece in an opinion blog w/o any proof of source for any quote or scientific reference for the assertions he makes about climate change. The crowd of devote followers getting presented what it wants to hear and being confirmed in its preconceived views, is raving. How exiting. The only purpose of the article is obviously to raise the morals among his followers and to make the crowd feel well.

Bill Tuttle
April 21, 2012 6:03 am

Somebody says:
April 21, 2012 at 4:14 am
There are countless fallacies used by the religious AGW dogma. Just an example: the fallacy of equivocation between a real temperature (a local temperature) with the ‘global temperature’, which is no physical temperature.

And the fallacy that carbon dioxide generated by human activities is chemically distinguishable from that generated by Mama Gaia…

manicbeancounter
April 21, 2012 6:04 am

Thanks for the excellent piece.
Just one minor point. Sea levels are rising at 30cm per century, not 3cm. Still a trivial amount though in the context of coastal dwellers though. The far bigger issue is the shifting coastlines.
Like with the long-term rate of temperature rise, and melting of pack ice, the important point here is the absence of any acceleration. There is a strong case for monitoring all of these things (with independent auditing of the figures), but no case I can see for doing much else.
http://sealevel.colorado.edu/

Pamela Gray
April 21, 2012 6:10 am

I love Latin. It is so affixive.

Mike Blackadder
April 21, 2012 6:11 am

harrydhuffman,
‘The rhetoricians–like Mr. Monckton–will always be with us, pretending to be masters of science. Science is a higher estate, and while I am a total denier of the climate consensus, I identify with true science, not rhetoric. This is just another angry, fevered rant, misleadingly couched as condescending pedantry, though it is well-intended, and I regret the need for it, for fever is the enemy of true reason.’
Well said and I agree with you to an extent. I believe that you mean to criticize the ancient version of science derived from pure reason, and that modern science is validated through observation. True enough. However, I don’t agree with the inference that modern science stands on the foundations of observation alone. It should go without saying, but any argument must also be reasonable (ie logical), and so Monkton I s right to criticise the manner in which AGW arguments are formed and accepted.

lenbilen
April 21, 2012 6:19 am

[SNIP: The topic of this post is logic, not Sarah Palion or Fox News. Please address the topic. -REP]

Editor
April 21, 2012 6:19 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says: April 21, 2012 at 5:54 am
Perlwitz, this is meant in the kindest possible way: everyone on this blog knows you are a modeler working for GISS, so finish your morning coffee before posting whiney, illiterate comments like this. WUWT is quite plainly a science blog: it gets more Ph.D. commenters than the RC echo chamber and real scientists are not afraid to pre-post and engage here even knowing that they are facing a tough audience.
You will also notice that Lord Monckton is not discussing science per se but rather epistemological issues using examples from “climate science” as illustrations. Of course, we understand perfectly the point you were trying to make: “Logic? Logic? We’re climate science modelers! We dunne need no steenkin’ logic!”

April 21, 2012 6:31 am

harrydhuffman (@harrydhuffman) says:
April 21, 2012 at 3:23 am
Aristotle’s opinions–I repeat, opinions–held back physical science for 2,000 years.
—-
Using a logical fallacy to dispute Aristotle? (affirming a disjunct – A or B; A; therefore not B)

April 21, 2012 6:31 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
April 21, 2012 at 5:54 am
Monckton has published an opinion piece in an opinion blog w/o any proof of source for any quote or scientific reference for the assertions he makes about climate change. The crowd of devote followers getting presented what it wants to hear and being confirmed in its preconceived views, is raving. How exiting.
>>>>>>>>>>>>
You may exit anytime you wish. If you elect to stay, perhaps you could present a cogent argument instead of simple mocking (which you may want to consider actually makes the very point that Monckton was raising).

Dr Burns
April 21, 2012 6:36 am

I feel that the driver behind argumentum ad populum is the Asch Effect … named after Solomon Asch (1951). Parroting nonsense allows one to be accepted by the tribe.

Bruce Cobb
April 21, 2012 6:38 am

Another example, and a favorite of Alarmists is one that sidesteps science altogether, speaking to the question of taking action on climate change. It uses the logical fallacy of the Appeal to Consequences (Argumentum ad consequentiam), as used by Greg Craven with his infamous Action Grid. His “argument” essentially is that, even if we don’t know whether or not manmade climate change is real, the risks of not acting to avert it far outweigh the risk of taking action (spending a lot of money needlessly). He’s even written a book called “What’s the Worst That Could Happen”?, and I believe he ups the ante, shrinking the size of the boxes where manmade climate change is false, using the consensus argument, asking, “what are the odds that all those scientists are wrong, or worse, engaged in some massive conspiracy”?
His type of “logic” is especially popular for those unwilling or too lazy (like “lazy teenager”) to delve into the science themselves.

Pamela Gray
April 21, 2012 7:03 am

Say. I wonder if said blond with red highlight captured the rinse from her bleach job in order to take it to a hazardous waste disposal company? That stuff should not be allowed down the drain you know. Plus, those stylish glass frames are likely a petroleum product. She needs to whittle up a pair of wooden ones. Unless she can find frames made from recycled metal from a company that runs their machinery from electrodes stuck in potatoes in order to generate an electric current. Not to mention the size of the lenses. If plastic, they are also a petroleum product. If glass, she again should locate a company that makes glass lenses in a facility that uses electrodes stuck in potatoes in order to generate electricity.
These earth muffins compete with door knobs. Which is good. Door knobs win Nobel peace prizes these days. Especially wooden ones.

Steve from Rockwood
April 21, 2012 7:08 am

I can’t believe you dissed Mr. Spock.

Steve from Rockwood
April 21, 2012 7:17 am

Monkton makes the classic mistake of argumentum ad alienus, the fallacy of using aliens to prove a point.
@Pamela Gray. Electricity from potatoes is not environmentally friendly. As a teacher you should know better.

Babsy
April 21, 2012 7:34 am

davidmhoffer says:
April 21, 2012 at 6:31 am
Jan P. Perlwitz says:
Don’t you know who he is?????

ferd berple
April 21, 2012 7:42 am

Fallacies:
Accent: Emphasis that changes the meaning of the sentence.
Accident: A general rule used to explain a specific case not covered by it.
Affirming the Consequent: If A then B. B is true, so A is true.
Amphiboly: A sentence has two different meanings.
Appeal to Authority: Referencing an ‘expert’.
Appeal to Common Belief: If others believe it to be true, it must be true.
Appeal to Common Practice: If others do it, it must be ok to do it too.
Appeal to Fear: Gaining compliance through threat.
Appeal to Flattery: Make them feel good.
Appeal to Emotion: If it feels good, it must be true.
Appeal to Novelty: Newer is better.
Appeal to Pity: Going for the sympathy vote.
Appeal to Ridicule: Mocking the other person’s claim.
Appeal to Tradition: It has always been done this way, so this way is right.
Argument from Ignorance: Accepting circumstantial evidence.
Assertion: What I say is true.
Attack the Person: Distracting them from their argument.
Begging the Question: Circular reasoning to prove assumed premise.
Complex Question: two questions, one answer allowed.
Composition: Generalizing from a few to the whole set.
Conspiracy Theory: Reframe refutation as further proof.
Denying the Antecedent: If A then B. A is false, so B is false.
Division: Assuming the parts have the characteristics of the whole.
Equivocation: A single word with more than one meaning.
Excluded Middle: Only extreme views are valid.
False Analogy: X has property Y. Z is like X. So Z has property Y.
False Cause: A causes B (but no proof).
False Compromise: Extreme views are wrong. The middle way is right.
False Effect: A is assumed to cause B. B is proven wrong, so A is wrong.
False Dilemma: Choice is A or B. Rejecting A is selecting B.
Four Terms: All A is B. All C is D. So all A is D.
Gambler’s Fallacy: Chance can be predicted.
Hasty Generalization: Generalizing from too-small a sample.
Illicit Major: All X is Y. No P (which is a subset of Y) is X. Therefore no P is Y.
Illicit Minor: All X are Y. All X are P. Therefore all P are Y.
In a Certain Respect and Simply: Extending assumed boundaries too far.
Insignificance: Making a minor cause seem major.
Many Questions: overloading them with lots of questions.
Missing the Point: Drawing the wrong conclusion.
Personal Inconsistency: Past words or deeds do not match claim.
Poisoning the Well: Discrediting the person before they speak.
Post Hoc: X follows Y. Therefore X is caused by Y.
Red Herring: Distracting with an irrelevancy.
Reification: Treating a concept as concrete reality.
Repetition: Repeating something makes it more true.
Slippery Slope: Loosely connected statements with ridiculous conclusion.
Social Conformance: Agree with me or be socially isolated.
Strawman: Attack a weak argument used by the other person.
Style over Substance: An attractive presentation makes it more right.
Undistributed Middle: All A is B. All C is B. Therefore all C is A.
Unrepresentative Sample: What is true about any sample is also true about the population.
Wishful Thinking: A is true because I want it to be true.

Unattorney
April 21, 2012 7:51 am

Why be so many climate alarmists also believe in remedial measures that make no sense,like ethanol or wind turbines?

April 21, 2012 7:57 am

Unattorney says:
April 21, 2012 at 7:51 am
Why be so many climate alarmists also believe in remedial measures that make no sense,like ethanol or wind turbines?
>>>>>>>>>>>
Because subsidized industries are incredibly profitable and so are heavily promoted. (This says nothing about the beliefs of the promoters of course).

Werner Brozek
April 21, 2012 8:07 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
April 21, 2012 at 5:54 am
Monckton has published an opinion piece in an opinion blog w/o any proof of source for any quote or scientific reference for the assertions he makes about climate change.

Which specific statement do you want a source for?
Monckton said: “There has been no global warming for a decade and a half”
See the graphs below that show zero slope for RSS for 15 years and 5 months and zero slope for sea surface temperatures for 15 years.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from:1995/plot/rss/from:1996.8/trend/plot/hadsst2gl/from:1995/plot/hadsst2gl/from:1997.08/trend
Monckton said: “global sea-ice extent has hardly changed in that time”
According to the latest numbers, the northern hemisphere sea ice anomaly is down by 0.142 million square kilometers, but the southern hemisphere sea ice anomaly is up by 0.665 million square kilometers. So the net effect is that global sea ice is UP by 0.523 million square kilometers. (This can be verified at the WUWT site on sea ice.)
I am not going to go through all statements and provide proof for them. But was there something else in particular you disagree with and want proof for?

Bruce Cobb
April 21, 2012 8:14 am

Logic is the Achilles’ heel of the climate bedwetters. All they really have is emotion. They are, after all, of the ilk that signs a petition against dihydrogen monoxide.
Keep up the good fight, Lord Monckton, and, may you live long and prosper.

Hugh Pepper
April 21, 2012 8:16 am

Mr Monckton is a master of rhetoric. He misses the point, however. “Consensus” in science occurs when the discussion stops. This is not, as he well knows, a political concept, where truth depends on having more proponents than opponents. SCientific truth has got nothing to do with “belief”. The facts of climate science have been (and continue to be) well researched by thousands of scientists from all over the world. Their work describes a deeply troubled planet, whose life-giving systems are severly challenged. This is not “hysteria” as you assert; it is simply unadorned fact.
I would like to be wrong, and I would like you to be right, but you have to make your case with much more than mere words. DO some research and reference your assertions to accepted research.
REPLY: LOL! Hey Pepper, look at the latest post, let’s hear you defend McKibben then. Go ahead, make my day. 😉 Anthony

Ray
April 21, 2012 8:20 am

Mr. Spock got (or will get-in the future) a PhD from Starfleet Academy. Therefore, Dr. Spock must be right… and he always called out the rot in Human logic.

Eric in NC
April 21, 2012 8:23 am

Harry D Huffman said, in part:
“…The rhetoricians–like Mr. Monckton–will always be with us, pretending to be masters of science. Science is a higher estate, and while I am a total denier of the climate consensus, I identify with true science, not rhetoric. This is just another angry, fevered rant, misleadingly couched as condescending pedantry, though it is well-intended, and I regret the need for it, for fever is the enemy of true reason. But I know the climate “debate” is really a political, fighting war, waged with words. Just don’t fool yourselves that it has advanced, or will advance, true science one whit…”.
Monckton, to my knowledge, does not claim to be a scientist. He uses facts and logic to explain the real science of our changing climate, as opposed to the often-fallacious science presented by the CAGW cult. Excuse me, but how will the results of any scientific discipline be explained to non-scientists without the use of rhetoric? (Rhetoric is the art of discourse, an art that aims to improve the facility of speakers or writers who attempt to inform, persuade, or motivate particular audiences in specific situations.) The general public neither understands the scientific process, nor its tools of physics, chemistry, mathematics and statistics, etc. The above stated separation of rhetoric and science, rather haughtily put, is surely a prescription for the continued misunderstanding and mistrust of science.

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