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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GP Hanner
April 21, 2012 8:29 am

If you Google Erin Delman Union College you will find several articles on that young woman. Her only qualifications for holding an opinion on AGW stem from her having come from an environmentally conscious family in Los Angeles.

Billy Liar
April 21, 2012 8:36 am

Jan P Perlwitz:
Do you know the difference between ‘morals’ and ‘morale’?
If it was a typo, I think you may be projecting (in psychological terms).

Billy Liar
April 21, 2012 8:40 am

Hugh Pepper says:
April 21, 2012 at 8:16 am
Their work describes a deeply troubled planet, whose life-giving systems are severly challenged.
We’re doing our best to get as much life-giving CO2 into the atmosphere as possible, I hope you’re doing your bit too.

Ray
April 21, 2012 8:46 am

“Logic is the begining of wisdom not the end” (Spock to Valeris STII)
“Logic is a little bird tweeting in meadow; logic is a wreath of pretty flowers which … smell bad…” (Spock – I Mudd)
“Not even Vulcans can know the un-known.” (Spock – Immunity syndrome)
“If I drop a wrench on a planet with a positive gravity field, I need not see it fall, nor hear it hit the ground, to know that it has in fact fallen.” (Spock – Court Martial)
C’mon Lord Monckton, how can you argue with that?
/sarc.

Patrick
April 21, 2012 8:47 am

I think “daddy” paid for al those teeth!

Jan P. Perlwitz
April 21, 2012 9:07 am

Robert E. Phelan wrote:
“Perlwitz, this is meant in the kindest possible way”
What? No announcement from you of violence against my health and life this time, just for doing my science? Shall I be grateful?
“everyone on this blog knows you are a modeler working for GISS”
And what exactly is the relevance of this information so that you emphasize this here, particularly if everyone knew this anyway? And what exactly is the relevance that everyone here knew this as you declare? Appeal to majority? The million-flies argument?
“You will also notice that Lord Monckton is not discussing science per se but rather epistemological issues using examples from “climate science” as illustrations.”
Using alleged examples. Alleged examples w/o proof of source for the alleged quotes or arguments. I suspect most of the alleged examples are just made up by Monckton, misrepresentations of what really was said or what the real argument is, which would make his examples just a list of strawman arguments, i.e., logically fallacious arguments, applied by Monckton himself.

April 21, 2012 9:13 am

You know Christopher, if they could think clearly, they’d be more dangerous opponents …
Pointman

Tim Minchin
April 21, 2012 9:17 am

All Alarmist arguments can be shown false using Reductio ad absurdum

April 21, 2012 9:17 am

Hugh Pepper says:
April 21, 2012 at 8:16 am
Mr Monckton is a master of rhetoric. He misses the point, however.

Nice try at changing the subject — which is that AGW adherents depend on lies, strident denunciation, and logical fallacies in an attempt to control the discussion.
“Consensus” in science occurs when the discussion stops.
Is that why AGW True Believers keep saying “There’s no necessity for debate”?
This is not, as he well knows, a political concept, where truth depends on having more proponents than opponents.
Consensus *is* solely a political concept, not a scientific one, and the truth never depends on the number of its proponents.

April 21, 2012 9:25 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. Indeed, that is why modern science is founded upon observation, not reason (the latter merely drives philosophy, which has been a general failure in the age of science).”
And yet, when your observations are followed by conclusions that can not stand up to logic, it’s no longer science. Science is Observations + Logical Deduction to arrive at a Theory. Observation + Irrational Handwaving != Theory
Climate Science is not science in any real sense of the term. Individual branches of science may be, until they add the obligatory unfounded CliSci propoganda at the end of their papers.

April 21, 2012 9:27 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
April 21, 2012 at 9:07 am
Using alleged examples. Alleged examples w/o proof of source for the alleged quotes or arguments. I suspect most of the alleged examples are just made up by Monckton, misrepresentations of what really was said or what the real argument is, which would make his examples just a list of strawman arguments, i.e., logically fallacious arguments, applied by Monckton himself.

If you’re unfamiliar with the examples Lord Monckton used to illustrate the fallacies, then you’re guilty of argumentum ad ignorantiam — you’re personally unfamiliar with the references, so therefore they must be wrong.
On the flip side, if you *are* familiar with his references — which you should be, given your background and place of employment — then you’re just being a troll.

Hoser
April 21, 2012 9:32 am

Pamela Gray says:
April 21, 2012 at 6:10 am
I love Latin. It is so affixive.

You can use Latin for your dentures? How does that work?
;-D
Illegitimi non carborundum.

Jan P. Perlwitz
April 21, 2012 9:39 am

Werner Brozek wrote:
“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
This is one, good example for logical fallacies applied by Monckton and followers.
It’s a logical fallacy to conclude from the temperature curve above that there “has been no global warming” for the last 15 years. It’s a scientifically invalid conclusion, a non-sequitur. I equally could declare there hasn’t been any global warming since last year, or since the other day, because no signal can be seen in the temperature curve. It would be equally nonsense. The approach for producing the fallacy is to cherry pick the data in a way that the chosen time-scale is too short to see the signal emerging from the background noise that comes from natural variability, the largest source of which in the temperature curve presented by you is the variability due to El Nino/La Nina. You yourself had referenced the paper by Santer et al., JGR, (2011) (http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2011JD016263) who concluded from analyzing the data that it takes at least 17 years, currently, before a statistically significant signal can be diagnosed, because on shorter time scales the signal is masked by natural variability.
It also was the “last 15 years” used by the “skeptics” in 2010. It’s still about the “last 15 years”, and it likely will be “the last 15 years” (give or take a few years) in five or ten years from now. My prediction is, in 50 years from now, when Earth’s surface has become significantly warmer than today due to the anthropogenic greenhouse gas forcing, which has become the dominant climate driver in the second half of the 20th century, the “skeptics” crowd, the few that will be left by then, will still declare, “no global warming for the last 15 years” then, since natural variability will still mask the warming signal on such a short-time scale.

April 21, 2012 9:50 am

It is often said by some, not all of the AGW proponents, that the current global warming is unprecedented. Holocene epoch temperature reconstructions based on different proxies suggest that it is not so, but there is always problem of accuracy of interpreation.
I have added an independent proxy, not generated by the temperature change itself, but likely by the common cause, two branches of the same tree.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/GMF-7Kyr.htm
It correlates well with the previous reconstructions.

HankHenry
April 21, 2012 9:51 am

Can argumentum ad hominem work two ways?
1 Senator Bluster proclaims such-&-such. Senator Bluster is an ass, therefore such-&-such is assinine.
2 Senator Grey Eminence vouches such-&-such. Senator Eminence is truthful, therefore such-&-such is true.

Jan P. Perlwitz
April 21, 2012 9:52 am

Billy Liar wrote:
“Do you know the difference between ‘morals’ and ‘morale’?
If it was a typo, I think you may be projecting (in psychological terms).”
Thank you for pointing out my mistake and the difference between the meaning of the two words. I indeed meant morale. English isn’t my native language. I make mistakes sometimes. I admire you, if such a thing doesn’t happen to you when you use the other languages you have learnt in the course of your life in addition to your native language.

nc
April 21, 2012 9:56 am

I got the popcorn, now waiting for the Jan P. Perlwitz smack down.

Monckton of Brenchley
April 21, 2012 9:56 am

Many thanks to the kind commenters who have enjoyed by application of Aristotelian logic to some of the central arguments advanced by the climate extremists.
Mr. Huffman describes Aristotle’s contribution to the science of logic as mere “opinions”. However, in two short volumes, the Prior and Posterior Analytics, Aristotle brought forth what we understand today as the science of logic almost complete, like Pallas Athene springing fully-armed from the head of Zeus. No serious logician – including mathematical logicians – would decry Aristotle’s foundation of logic as a mere expression of opinion.
Nearly all of the dozen central fallacies of human discourse codified by Aristotle in his Sophistical Refutations and yet so heavily relied upon by the climate-extremist faction are formally demonstrable to be fallacies by the use of propositional calculus.
Mr. Manic Bean-Counter says sea level has been rising at a rate equivalent to 30 cm/century. In the 20th century it rose at about 20 cm/century, but in the past eight years, according to the Aviso Envisat satellite, sea level has been rising at just 3 cm (or 1.3 inches) per century. It is a shame that Envisat has gone offline, because it provided real-time data calling into question the far more rapid rate of sea-level rise found by the Topex and Jason I satellites.
Professor Nils-Axel Moerner, who has written more papers on sea level than anyone else, was told in 2004 by one of the sea-level team at the University of Colorado, where the Jason/Topex results are processed, that the output graph from the satellites had been tilted to show a sea-level rise of 30 cm/century. When he asked why the Colorado team had done this, he was told it was because otherwise the satellite data did not show the rate of sea-level rise that the policy-makers required.
Mr. Pepper says “consensus” in science occurs when the discussion stops. However, there is no basis in the philosophy of science for any such proposition. The founder of the scientific method was Abu Ali Ibn al-Haytham, an astronomer, mathematician and philosopher of science in 11th-century Iraq. He wrote: “The seeker after truth does not place his faith in any mere consensus: instead, he subjects what he has learned of it to checking, checking, and checking again. The road to the truth is long and hard, but that is the road we must follow.”
Likewise T.H. Huxley, who defeated Bishop Soapy Sam Wilberforce in the debate about evolution in 1860, said: “The improver of natural knowledge absolutely refuses to acknowledge authority, as such. For him, skepticism is the highest of duties: blind faith the one unpardonable sin.” Again, no place for consensus.
Karl Popper, who codified the scientific method as we understand it and use it today in his celebrated paper of 1934, described the scientific method as an iterative algorithm which relies upon skepticism, not consensus, to reach the truth.
There is no consensus about how much global warming the doubling of atmospheric CO2 concentration this century will cause. There are two very good reasons why there is no consensus. First, as the IPCC itself admitted in its 2001 report, the climate is a coupled, non-linear, chaotic object, so that “the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible”. This limitation on the predictive ability of climate models is known as the “Lorenz constraint”, after the late Edward N. Lorenz, the father of numerical weather forecasting by computer. His paper on Deterministic Non-periodic Flow, published in the Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences in 1963, founded chaos theory.
Secondly, the amount of warming that may occur as a result of our doubling the atmospheric concentration of CO2 – called the “climate sensitivity” – depends upon seven key parameters, not one of which can be directly measured or indirectly inferred by theoretical methods. For this reason, even the IPCC’s attempts to circumvent the Lorenz constraint by the use of probability distributions is doomed to fail.
The seven parameters are the CO2 radiative forcing (whose value the IPCC has already had to reduce by 15%); the Planck parameter (whose value for Earth is now in doubt because the Lunar Diviner mission has shown the equivalent value for the Moon to have been overstated by 40%); and the five most significant temperature feedbacks (none of which can be measured or even distinguished observationally from the forcings that cause the direct warming that is supposed to trigger them).
There is now growing evidence in the literature that feedbacks are net-negative, not net-positive: in other words, that they attenuate rather than amplifying the direct warming of perhaps 1 Celsius degree per CO2 doubling.
The most reliable (and cheapest) way to reach an approximation to climate sensitivity, therefore, is to wait and see. The fairest summation of the climate sensitivity question is that there is simply no scientific basis for the IPCC’s assumption that climate sensitivity is as high as 3.3 Celsius degrees per CO2 doubling, precisely because the seven necessary quantities are all not only unknown but unknowable.
In that event, can it be demonstrated that climate sensitivity is low? Yes, it can. We have been adding CO2 and other greenhouse gases to the atmosphere in appreciable quantities since 1750, and the radiative forcing we have caused since that date is about 3.1 Watts per square meter – a forcing equivalent to five-sixths of the 3.7 Watts per square meter that is the IPCC’s current estimate of the CO2 radiative forcing. Yet global warming since 1750 is only 0.9 Celsius degrees, of which some fraction is attributable to a natural recovery of global temperatures after the Little Ice Age. Even if all of the warming since 1750 were our fault, climate sensitivity would be little more than 1 Celsius degree per CO2 doubling, implying zero or somewhat net-negative feedbacks.
Unless one were to try to claim that today’s global temperature is the best possible temperature in the best of all possible worlds, the 1 Celsius degree of warming that we may expect over the next 90 years (there has been none since the century began) is certainly not catastrophic and will more likely to prove beneficial.
For these reasons, it is inappropriate to assert that there is a scientitic “consensus” that climate sensitivity will be high.
However, those who decry, defy, or deny the philosophical tradition from Aristotle via Al-Haytham and Huxley to Popper and prefer to do science by mere head-count among “experts” should know that the economic peer-reviewed literature is near-unanimous in finding that it is more cost-effective to do nothing about global warming today than to spend trillions on doomed attempts to make it go away.

John Whitman
April 21, 2012 10:08 am

Christopher Monckton of Brenchley,
I enjoyed your efforts to bring a broader philosophical context with epistemology and logic into perspectives on the multitude of fundamentally irrational CAGW arguments. Thankfully, you have exposed some of the key false arguments of the high profiled IPCC centric activists who are masquerading as objective scientists.
Ultimately, those advocating CAGWism via the IPCC will be forced simply to deny the validity of rational thought in their ongoing climate discourse. As they do so then they will be totally in the realm of Jerome Revetz’s Post-Normal Science where it is the subjective mores of politics and society that mandate the findings of scientific research in climate as assessed by the IPCC. The IPCC centric CAGWists will be strictly in that world were policy/ideology advises science.
The primary philosophical root of Post-Normal Science is Hegel with his adoption of Kantian metaphysics/epistemology. It is in the universities that are dominated by those philosophers that opposing intellectual discussions are needed to re-establish the knowledge that is objective in the Aristotelian original sense.
John

April 21, 2012 10:09 am

Perlwitz makes a prediction for 50 years in the future, thus assuring that he cannot be proven wrong regarding that particular prediction. But of course, Perlwitz is easy to debunk. Because he also says that although 15 years is too short a time to draw conclusions, he also admits that 17 years will be decisive. [For the record, I expect that he will move the goal posts as usual, if the planet does not obey his prediction.]
If present trends continue, I call on Perlwitz to man up and admit that his entire premise and purported understanding of the subject is fatally flawed. Will Perlwitz acknowledge that he was wrong, if current trends continue for two more years? I doubt it. Because that would require real character, and honesty, which is universally lacking in the clique of charlatans riding the taxpayer-funded climate alarmist gravy train.
It is easy for Perlwitz to prove me wrong. He can state right here and now that if there is no statistically significant warming in the next 24 months, that his CO2=CAGW conjecture is falsified. Perlwitz is the one making the 17 year claim. Now we will see if his words mean anything, or if they are just the usual bluster coming from the self-serving climate charlatan cult.

Jan P. Perlwitz
April 21, 2012 10:10 am

Bill Tuttle wrote:
“If you’re unfamiliar with the examples Lord Monckton used to illustrate the fallacies, then you’re guilty of argumentum ad ignorantiam — you’re personally unfamiliar with the references, so therefore they must be wrong.”
And here we have an example for a strawman argumentation, where an argument is made against a statement that wasn’t made, but which is only a misrepresentation of the statement that was actually made. I didn’t not say the references were wrong. Monckton just did not provide any proof of source or any references for the alleged quotes or alleged arguments.
Declaring that I would have to know the references, even if they aren’t provided, and declaring the request for the proof of source or for the references was an “argumentum ad ignorantiam” is just an example for applying the fait-accompli fallacy.
In summary, all of this serves the purpose to free Monckton from the burden of proof for his own assertions.

April 21, 2012 10:10 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
April 21, 2012 at 9:39 am
Werner Brozek wrote:
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. [link to SST graph from woodfortrees-dot-org]
This is one, good example for logical fallacies applied by Monckton and followers.
It’s a logical fallacy to conclude from the temperature curve above that there “has been no global warming” for the last 15 years. It’s a scientifically invalid conclusion, a non-sequitur.

There *is* no curve — both HadSST2gl from 1995 and from 1997-98 are flatlined. For global warming to be happening, the SST also has to be rising — and it isn’t.
You yourself had referenced the paper by Santer et al., JGR, (2011) (http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2011JD016263) who concluded from analyzing the data that it takes at least 17 years, currently, before a statistically significant signal can be diagnosed.
Santer originally said it would take 15 years — it was only after he saw 15 years of no change that he moved the goalposts to 17 years. BTW, it’s now been 17 years since HadSST2gl 1995 — is Santer’s next call going to be “19 years before a significant signal emerges”?

Rastech
April 21, 2012 10:10 am

{You know Christopher, if they could think clearly, they’d be more dangerous opponents …}
{ }
{Pointman }
Not forgetting, of course, if they could think clearly, then they wouldn’t be opponents, at all . . . .
😛
Hi Pointman, hope you keeping well.
Ras

Jan P. Perlwitz
April 21, 2012 10:16 am

Smokey wrote:
“Perlwitz is easy to debunk. Because he says that although 15 years is too short a time to draw conclusions, he also admits that 17 years will be decisive.”
Do you understand what you read? Or are you just making things up at will? I did not say such a thing.

April 21, 2012 10:23 am

As Bill Tuttle points out, Perlwitz cited the Santer statement: “…analyzing the data that it takes at least 17 years, currently, before a statistically significant signal can be diagnosed.”
Perlwitz didn’t make the statement, but he used Santer’s statement in his appeal to authority in an attempt to buttress his argument. The obvious meaning is that 15 years is too short a time frame, but 17 years will be long enough to decide the question.
Perlwitz is already trying to move the goal posts.

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