The illogic of climate hysteria

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

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

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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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April 21, 2012 1:44 pm

I for one would like to encourage WUWT to post more of these logic and philosophy-based articles. The environment of lying is the big problem, not merely the accumulation of data, and we need to turn back to real philosophy to depose it.
Also, Andrew,
I appreciate you trying to see specific, modern forms of mass fallacies. Keep it up.

April 21, 2012 1:46 pm

I think the Latin for “moving the goal post” is postus creepus. But I might be wrong.
It does remind me though of what a local seafood restaurant had painted on the side of their building, “Free Crabs Tomorrow!”

April 21, 2012 1:49 pm

Mike Jowsey says:
“I hope I have occasion to use that – argumentum ad petitionem principii, the circular-argument fallacy.”
Most of the Team’s pal reviewed papers fall under that fallacy.

Somebody
April 21, 2012 1:53 pm

“It’s a logical fallacy to conclude from the temperature curve above that there “has been no global warming” for the last 15 years”
Of course it is a logical fallacy to conclude that – or ‘heating’ for any time period – even for a real temperature curve, unless you know the system very well, and know for example that inside there are no chemical reactions and/or latent heats at work (newsflash: on Earth, both of them are present, and not only those), or if they are present, you must take those into account, the sole temperature evolution is not enough to know if the system was cooled or heated (I’m talking here about the real, physical heat, not the pseudo-scientifical one). The real problem is that the pseudo-scientists not only do not have such a simple system, but they do not have a temperature curve. The average temperature is no temperature, and Earth does not have a temperature. Did not have. Never ever. Will not have one, for a very, very long time, hopefully. A temperature can be defined only for systems at thermodynamic equilibrium (cvasiequilibrium for local temperature only, a ‘global temperature’ is a non-physical value for systems that are not at equilibrium). Those pseudo-scientists should really, really look into the definition of temperature. And heat. Heat is not ‘increasing global temperature’.

Billy
April 21, 2012 2:06 pm

One who proposes a hypotheis must prove it by rational method and observation.
A sckeptic who points out the falacy of an incorrectly proven hypothesis is not held to a standard. The burden of proof lies completely on the proponent of the hypothesis. Reference to a web page is not a scientific proof.
Lord Monckton is not obliged to prove anything.

Philemon
April 21, 2012 2:07 pm

“‘Gentlemen, you are now about to embark on a course of studies which will occupy you for two years. Together, they form a noble adventure. But I would like to remind you of an important point. Nothing that you will learn in the course of your studies will be of the slightest possible use to you in after life, save only this, that if you work hard and intelligently you should be able to detect when a man is talking rot, and that, in my view, is the main, if not the sole, purpose of education.’
“Those are the words of John Alexander Smith, a professor of moral philosophy at Oxford. When he spoke them, in 1914, to the equivalent of an entering freshman class, he neither outraged nor astonished his hearers. It was little more than common wisdom in those days.”
-Richard Mitchell, The Underground Grammarian, Vol. 9, No.1, Feb. 1985.
http://www.sourcetext.com/grammarian/

Brendan H
April 21, 2012 2:07 pm

Jan P. Perlwitz: “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.”
This is correct, and strongly undermines Monckton’s argument, which is: “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.”
The post contains a number of assertions about what “believers” say, but does not offer any evidence that climate scientists or their supporters actually make these assertions.
It is not the task of the reader to validate Monckton’s claims. He has assumed the burden of proof, so he needs to supply the evidence to support his assertions.
Interestingly, Monckton is himself not above peddling the odd fallacy or two. The ad hominen that begins this post has already been noted, and the previous post about this event contained both a consensus argument and a rather blatant appeal to pity.

Werner Brozek
April 21, 2012 2:14 pm

The Poems of Our Climate says:
April 21, 2012 at 1:44 pm
The environment of lying is the big problem

The following is interesting, titled “How we know they know they are lying”
See http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/lying.htm

kim
April 21, 2012 2:24 pm

More geometry and theology.
==========

Bruce Cobb
April 21, 2012 2:45 pm

Those such as Brendan above claiming that the opening line “But there’s a CONSENSUS!” shrieked the bossy environmentalist with the messy blonde hair” is an ad hominem simply don’t understand what an ad hominem argument is. His description is humorous, and yes mildly insulting, but it is not being used to negate her “consensus” argument. No, the “consensus” argument falls no matter who is making it, how bossy they are, or how messy their hair is.

Philemon
April 21, 2012 3:05 pm

If someone has messy hair, and they are shrill, and they commit a logical fallacy ad populum, it is not an ad hominem to point any of that out.

April 21, 2012 3:33 pm

jim says April 21, 2012 at 10:33 am:
good article but too bad you start it out with an ad hominem attack on the young lady’s appearance and demeanor.
========
u.k.(us) says April 21, 2012 at 11:39 am:
+1, of course.

Oh please; verily she’s wearing the garb of a child while attempting to engage on a subject ‘in the big leagues’ and taken seriously! Whatever happened to proper grooming and dress appropriate-to-(the)-circumstances?
(I wasn’t going to make this comment, but this last has ‘pushed me over the edge’ …)
.

Greg House
April 21, 2012 3:37 pm

Monckton of Brenchley says:
April 21, 2012 at 9:56 am
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.
=======================================================
I wonder,Christopher, why you so easily agree on this “3.7 Watts per square CO2 radiative forcing”. This number comes from a 1978 climate model and I am pretty sure it was not measured, but calculated based on the assumption that the “greenhouse gasses” cause like 33 degree warming.
And now “climate scientists” calculate the CO2 climate sensitivity based on this figure that is based on the assumption of the CO2 climate sensitivity. You made the calculation, too, based on the “literature”, right? Aristotle would not have accept it.
I strongly recommend you check it.

Jurgen
April 21, 2012 3:44 pm

Christopher Monckton of Brenchley said:
As it is, what little logic our bossy environmentalists learn appears to come solely from Mr. Spock in Star Trek.
Dear Sir, they surely are not up to Spock’s Vulcan training in being able to expel emotion from argument and rational behavior, so even from Star Trek they didn’t learn. You are too kind.

clipe
April 21, 2012 3:50 pm

Since no one else has, I’d like to point out that the National/Financial Post is one of the few “broadsheets” in the English speaking world giving voice to alternative views on matters scientific.

rogerkni
April 21, 2012 4:03 pm

Smokey says:
April 21, 2012 at 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.)

On Intrade one can make bets about where the temperature per GISS will be in 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2019. (Also on Arctic ice.) I’ve put my money down.
https://www.intrade.com/v4/markets/

Greg House
April 21, 2012 4:04 pm

Monckton of Brenchley says:
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.
========================================================
Christopher, let me tell you first, that I agree with you on what you wrote about consensus fallacy. I also like your DDT example. I do not, however, like your Holocaust example, because it was not based on a scientific consensus, but it does not matter now. At the same time I do not think your argumentation on the issue of consensus is efficient. You need to understand, how ordinary people including politicians and journalists think and build their opinions. They do not look into issues. They listen to the others.
Now, you tell them, there are examples of wrong scientific consensus. In this case they think like that: “So what? In most cases, where there is a scientific consensus they are right. So even if there are some negative examples, the probability that the consensus is right is very high. So it is reasonable to follow the consensus”.
Logically you have only a choice between proving there is no consensus or scientifically proving that all of them are wrong. Just giving a few examples of wrong consensus is not enough.

Rhoda R
April 21, 2012 4:13 pm

Perhaps a bit late in the thread to bring this up but: Blaming Aristotle for the lack of scientific progress in the Middle Ages is wrong – the fault was with those who followed him – they fell into the “Appeal to Authority” trap. Similar to the “Consensus” trap of today.

rogerkni
April 21, 2012 4:50 pm

Here’s a warmist article posted a couple of days ago on Bloomberg. It contains some of the warmist claims Monckton criticized. There must be lots of similar claims made–we’ve all run into them. Monckton isn’t just creating strawmen.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-04-19/climate-change-has-nothing-to-do-with-al-gore.html

April 21, 2012 5:01 pm

Mr. House seems intent on muddying the waters. Let us be clear: the argument from consensus is the headcount fallacy. Mr. House is wrong to say, “Logically you only have a choice between proving there is no consensus or scientifically proving that all of them [presumably the supporters of the imagined consensus] are wrong.” No. Logically, any conclusion to the effect that a proposition affirmed by a consensus (whether the consensus be real or imaginary) is true on the ground that the consensus affirms that proposition is a fallacy. And that is that.
Since there is in fact no consensus on the quantum of global warming that will occur in response to a doubling of CO2 concentration this century, neither I nor anyone else should be regarded as under any obligation to “prove” the supposed consensus wrong. Instead, it is necessary only to point out that the seven quantities upon which climate sensitivity itself depends are all unknown and unknowable; that climate sensitivity inferred from greenhouse-gas enrichment and warming since 1750 is low even if one assumes the IPCC’s current estimate of the CO2 radiative forcing is correct; and that the IPCC’s first attempt to predict the future evolution of planetary temperature, made a generation ago in 1990, has proven to be a wild exaggeration. Even the lower bound of the IPCC’s then projection is above the measured warming trend since 1990.
I had additionally explained that there cannot be any consensus as to how much warming a doubling of CO2 concentration over the next 90 years may cause because the answer depends on the values of seven key parameters not one of which can be determined with sufficient precision either by measurement or by theory.
I had explicitly stated that the first of these seven key unknown and unknowable parameters is the CO2 radiative forcing, and had also pointed out that the IPCC has itself reduced its estimate of the value of this parameter by 15%. Yet Mr. House, bizarrely, asks why I “so easily agree” with the IPCC’s current estimate. I did not say I agreed with it: on the contrary, I made it plain that there is no scientific basis for agreeing or disagreeing with it, because it is unknowable. The best we can say is that it may be in the right ballpark (though, in the light of real-world evidence of low climate sensitivity, it appears to be on the high side).
Attempts to blur the very clear logic of Aristotle as Mr. House has done are not helpful. As I pointed out in an earlier response, nearly all of the logical fallacies I mentioned in the head posting have been formally established to be fallacious by rigorous propositional calculus: these fallacies, therefore, are settled science and cannot be repealed (or even fudged away) by those true-believers in the New Superstition who find them inconvenient.
The plain truth is that very nearly all of the most frequently-deployed arguments advanced by the climate extremists are instances of one or another of Aristotle’s dozen logical fallacies, and no amount of fudging and mudging will alter that truth. In any previous generation, the climate fanatics would have been laughed off the stage. It is only because today’s “education” is so deficient (the French, for instance, have banned the teaching of logic in schools and universities) that the armor of sound and rigorous reasoning has been stripped from the populace by a governing class that requires us merely to acquiesce with unbecoming passivity in whatever absurdities and follies are currently fashionable in the corridors of impotence.

Goldie
April 21, 2012 5:02 pm

Please can Josh make a poster of these, I’ll gladly pay for it!

PaulH
April 21, 2012 5:13 pm

Come now, the shrieking blonde’s hair isn’t THAT messy. ;->

John S
April 21, 2012 5:19 pm

Lord Mockton –
Why not embrace the consensus theory?
Think about it because hey we could stop many issues by simply flipping this back on the warmists and their ilk.
One major example if I am not mistaken is the consensus that there is a god and that Jesus was his only begotten son.
But do not take my word for it asks the experts.
The Pope, Cardinals, Bishops, Priest, and all the other faiths clergy, (with the possible excpetion of some of those denier religions). Even Reverend Wright and President Obama believe in this basic consensus.
Maybe this argument has been made before but I thought I would mention it once again for fun.
Keep in mind the Bible, if I am not mistaken, says God will have the say as to the end of time and since we have a pretty large consensus particularly among the real experts listed above, all others should just fall in line and surrender their own beliefs in the whole AGW nonsense.
/sarc
PS think of how many other things we can dismiss by embracing the consensus mind set for example the theory of evolution, life starts at conceptions, etc. I am pretty sure the clergy listed above has an expert opinion on these issues also. Remeber we have to listen to the consensus especially when the are such noted experts like the Pope.

RACookPE1978
Editor
April 21, 2012 5:23 pm

In 1923, the “consensus” of all scientists – not just geographers and geologists and physicists would have disputed ANY theory about continental drift and volcanism. Despite this, the continents had been moving for 250 million years just all by themselves – DESPITE the consensus of every scientific body who printed hundreds of papers and books disputing the movement.
It was not until ONE person challenged the “consensus” of the world’s experts that we learned where to look, how to look, and what to look for that any advance was made. And the search did NOT succeed – even though the theory was correct! – until satellites and ocean research detected the mid-ocean ridges and slopes in the 1960’s.
In 1962, the “consensus” of all scientists – not just geographers and geologists and physicists would have disputed ANY theory about meteor impact and not volcanism on the moon. Despite this, the moon had been impacted continuously for 3.5 some-odd billion years just all by itself – DESPITE the consensus of every scientific body who declared volcanoes made the craters.
So, until Shoemaker began his research, made his ideas, and got time to explore when the lunar landings occurred …. the “consensus” you so highly value was dead wrong.
In fact, name ANY “consensus” of the world’s experts that has proven right.

April 21, 2012 5:50 pm

Unacceptably Logical Statement, “On the whole most blondes are brunette”.

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