Why climate science is a textbook example of groupthink

In groupthink, organizations value consensus more than free thought. The emphasis on consensus leads to group polarization, in which a group’s positions become more extreme than any individual would come up with. Alarmist climate science is a textbook example of groupthink in action.

Guest post by Paul MacRae

A while ago, I received an email from a friend who asked:

How can many, many respected, competitive, independent science folks be so wrong about [global warming] (if your [skeptical] premise is correct). I don’t think it could be a conspiracy, or incompetence. …  Has there ever been another case when so many ‘leading’ scientific minds got it so wrong?

The answer to the second part of my friend’s question—“Has there ever been another case where so many ‘leading’ scientific minds got it so wrong?”—is easy. Yes, there are many such cases, both within and outside climate science. In fact, the graveyard of science is littered with the bones of theories that were once thought “certain” (e.g., that the continents can’t “drift,” that Newton’s laws were immutable, and hundreds if not thousands of others).

Science progresses by the overturning of theories once thought “certain.”

And so, Carl Sagan has written:

“Even a succession of professional scientists—including famous astronomers who had made other discoveries that are confirmed and now justly celebrated—can make serious, even profound errors in pattern recognition.”[1]

There is no reason to believe that climate scientists (alarmist or skeptic) are exempt from this possibility.

That leaves the first question, which is how so many “respected, competitive, independent science folks [could] be so wrong” about the causes and dangers of global warming, assuming they are wrong. And here, I confess that after five years of research into climate fears, this question still baffles me.

Climate certainty is baffling

It is not baffling that so many scientists believe humanity might be to blame for global warming. If carbon dioxide causes warming, additional CO2 should produce additional warming. But it’s baffling that alarmist climate scientists are so certain that additional carbon dioxide will produce a climate disaster, even though there is little empirical evidence to support this view, and much evidence against it, including a decade of non-warming. This dogmatism makes it clear, at least to those outside the alarmist climate paradigm, that something is very wrong with the state of “consensus” climate science.

There are many possible reasons for this scientific blindness, including sheer financial and career self-interest: scientists who don’t accept the alarmist paradigm will lose research grants and career doors will be closed to them. But one psychological diagnosis fits alarmist climate science like a glove: groupthink. With groupthink, we get the best explanation of “how can many, many respected, competitive, independent science folks be so wrong.”

Groupthink was extensively studied by Yale psychologist Irving L. Janis and described in his 1982 book Groupthink: Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and Fiascoes.

Janis was curious about how teams of highly intelligent and motivated people—the “best and the brightest” as David Halberstam called them in his 1972 book of the same name—could have come up with political policy disasters like the Vietnam War, Watergate, Pearl Harbor and the Bay of Pigs. Similarly, in 2008 and 2009, we saw the best and brightest in the world’s financial sphere crash thanks to some incredibly stupid decisions, such as allowing sub-prime mortgages to people on the verge of bankruptcy.

In other words, Janis studied why and how groups of highly intelligent professional bureaucrats and, yes, even scientists, screw up, sometimes disastrously and almost always unnecessarily. The reason, Janis believed, was “groupthink.” He quotes Nietzsche’s observation that “madness is the exception in individuals but the rule in groups,” and notes that groupthink occurs when “subtle constraints … prevent a [group] member from fully exercising his critical powers and from openly expressing doubts when most others in the group appear to have reached a consensus.”[2]

Janis found that even if the group leader expresses an openness to new ideas, group members value consensus more than critical thinking; groups are thus led astray by excessive “concurrence-seeking behavior.”[3] Therefore, Janis wrote, groupthink is “a model of thinking that people engage in when they are deeply involved in a cohesive in-group, when the members’ strivings for unanimity override their motivation to realistically appraise alternative courses of action.”[4]

The groupthink syndrome

The result is what Janis calls “the groupthink syndrome.” This consists of three main categories of symptoms:

1. Overestimate of the group’s power and morality, including “an unquestioned belief in the group’s inherent morality, inclining the members to ignore the ethical or moral consequences of their actions.” [emphasis added]

2. Closed-mindedness, including a refusal to consider alternative explanations and stereotyped negative views of those who aren’t part of the group’s consensus. The group takes on a “win-lose fighting stance” toward alternative views.[5]

3. Pressure toward uniformity, including “a shared illusion of unanimity concerning judgments conforming to the majority view”; “direct pressure on any member who expresses strong arguments against any of the group’s stereotypes”; and “the emergence of self-appointed mind-guards … who protect the group from adverse information that might shatter their shared complacency about the effectiveness and morality of their decisions.”[6]

It’s obvious that alarmist climate science—as explicitly and extensively revealed in the Climatic Research Unit’s “Climategate” emails—shares all of these defects of groupthink, including a huge emphasis on maintaining consensus, a sense that because they are saving the world, alarmist climate scientists are beyond the normal moral constraints of scientific honesty (“overestimation of the group’s power and morality”), and vilification of those (“deniers”) who don’t share the consensus.

For example, regarding Symptom 1, overestimation of the group’s power and morality: leading consensus climate spokespeople like Al Gore, James Hansen, and Stephen Schneider have stated outright that they feel it’s acceptable and even moral to exaggerate global-warming claims to gain public support, even if they have to violate the broader scientific principle of adherence to truth at all costs (http://www.paulmacrae.com/?p=51 has examples.) Consensus climate science also overestimates the power of humanity to override climate change, whether human-caused or natural, just as government planners overestimated the U.S.’s ability to win the Vietnam War.

Regarding Symptom 2, closed-mindedness, there are many cases of the alarmist climate paradigm ignoring or suppressing evidence that challenges the AGW hypothesis. The Climategate emails, for example, discuss refusing publication to known skeptics and even firing an editor favorable to skeptics.

Regarding Symptom 3, pressure toward uniformity: within alarmist climate science there is a “shared illusion of unanimity” (i.e., a belief in total consensus) about the majority view when this total or near-total consensus has no basis in reality. For example, the Oregon Petition against the anthropogenic warming theory has 31,000 signatories, over 9,000 of them with PhDs.

Climate scientists who dare to deviate from the consensus are censured as “deniers”—a choice of terminology that can only be described as odious. And the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change explicitly aims for “consensus” in its reports—it does not publish minority reports, and yet it is impossible that its alleged more than “2,000 scientists” could completely agree on a subject as complicated as climate.

Group polarization

Janis notes one other form of dysfunctional group dynamic that arises out of groupthink and that, in turn, helps create even more groupthink:

The tendency for the collective judgments arising out of group discussions to become polarized, sometimes shifting toward extreme conservatism and sometimes toward riskier forms of action than the individual members would otherwise be prepared to take.[7]

This dynamic is commonly referred to as “group polarization.”

As a process, “when like-minded people find themselves speaking only with one another, they get into a cycle of ideological reinforcement where they end up endorsing positions far more extreme than the ones they started with.”[8] [emphasis added]

And because these positions are so extreme, they are held with extreme ferocity against all criticisms.

Examples of alarmist climate groupthink

Groupthink is common in academic disciplines. For example, philosopher Walter Kaufmann, a world-renowned editor of Nietzsche’s works, identifies groupthink in his discipline as follows:

There is a deep reluctance to stick out one’s neck: there is safety in numbers, in belonging to a group, in employing a common method, and in not developing a position of one’s own that would bring one into open conflict with more people than would be likely to be pleased.[9]

Similarly, in the 2009 Climategate emails, CRU director Phil Jones shows this “deep reluctance to stick out one’s neck” in writing (July 5, 2005):

“The scientific community would come down on me in no uncertain terms if I said the world had cooled from 1998.”

Keith Briffa laments (Sept. 22, 1999):

“I know there is pressure to present a nice tidy story as regards ‘apparent unprecedented warming in a thousand years or more in the temperature proxy data’ but in reality the situation is not quite so simple. … I believe that the recent warmth was probably matched about 1,000 years ago.”

Elsewhere, Briffa notes (April 29, 2007):

“I tried hard to balance the needs of the science and the IPCC, which were not always the same. I worried that you might think I gave the impression of not supporting you well enough while trying to report on the issues and uncertainties.”

All of the above (there are many more examples in the Climategate emails) reveal scientific groupthink, which puts the needs and desires of a peer group—the desire for “consensus”—ahead of the scientific facts. We would, undoubtedly, find other examples of alarmist groupthink if we could examine the emails of other promoters of climate alarmism, like James Hansen’s Goddard Institute.

This groupthink isn’t at all surprising. After all, alarmist climate scientists attend several conferences a year with like-minded people (the views of outright “deniers” are not welcome, as the CRU emails clearly reveal). In the absence of real debate or dissent they easily persuade themselves that human beings are the main reason the planet is warming and it’s going to be a catastrophe. Why? Because everyone else seems to think so and, in groupthink, consensus is highly valued. The same principles operates strongly, of course, in religion.

The ‘hockey stick’ and groupthink

Climate alarmists will, of course, angrily dispute that climate science groupthink is as strong as claimed here. However, groupthink is clearly identified in the 2006 Wegman report into the Michael Mann hockey stick controversy.

As most WUWT readers will know, the Wegman report was commissioned by the U.S. House Science Committee after Mann refused to release all the data leading to the hockey stick conclusions, conclusions that eliminated the Medieval Warm Period and Little Ice Age in order to show today’s warming as unprecedented. In fact, as mathematician Steve McIntyre discovered after years of FOI requests, the calculations in Mann’s paper had not been checked by the paper’s peer reviewers and were, in fact, wrong.

The National Academy of Sciences committee, led by Dr. Edward Wegman, an expert on statistics, identified one of the reasons why Mann’s paper was so sloppily peer-reviewed as follows:

There is a tightly knit group of individuals who passionately believe in their thesis. However, our perception is that this group has a self-reinforcing feedback mechanism and, moreover, the work has been sufficiently politicized that they can hardly reassess their public positions without losing credibility.[10] [emphasis added]

Wegman noted that the Mann paper became prominent because it “fit some policy agendas.”[11]

The Wegman Report also observed:

As statisticians, we were struck by the isolation of communities such as the paleoclimate community that rely heavily on statistical methods, yet do not seem to be interacting with the mainstream statistical community. The public policy implications of this debate are financially staggering and yet apparently no independent statistical expertise was sought or used.[12] [emphasis added]

In other words, alarmist climate scientists are part of an exclusive group that talks mainly with itself and avoids groups that don’t share the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis and alarmist political agenda. Overall, Wegman is describing with great precision a science community whose conclusions have been distorted and polarized by groupthink.

Recognizing groupthink

After the Climategate emails, some consensus climate scientists began to recognize the dangers of groupthink within their discipline. So, Georgia Tech climatologist Judith Curry wrote in 2009:

In my opinion, there are two broader issues raised by these emails that are impeding the public credibility of climate research: lack of transparency in climate data, and “tribalism” in some segments of the climate research community that is impeding peer review and the assessment process.[13]

Similarly, IPCC contributor Mike Hulme wrote:

It is possible that climate science has become too partisan, too centralized. The tribalism that some of the leaked emails display is something more usually associated with social organization within primitive cultures; it is not attractive when we find it at work inside science.[14] [emphasis added]

In short, it is clear that groupthink—a later, more scientific word for “tribalism”—is strongly at work within alarmist climate science, however much the affected scientists refuse to recognize it. As a result of tribalism (groupthink), alarmist climate science makes assertions that are often extreme (polarized), including the explicit or implicit endorsement of claims that global warming will lead to “oblivion,” “thermageddon,” mass extinctions, and the like. Indeed, one of the ironies of climate science is that extremist AGW believers like Gore, Hansen and Schneider have succeeded in persuading the media and public that those who don’t make grandiose claims, the skeptics, are the extremists.

Group polarization offers a rational explanation for extreme alarmist claims, given that the empirical scientific evidence is simply not strong enough to merit such confidence. It is likely that even intelligent, highly educated scientists have been caught in what has been called the “madness of crowds.” Indeed, writing in the Times Higher Education magazine, British philosopher Martin Cohen makes this connection explicit:

Is belief in global-warming science another example of the “madness of crowds”? That strange but powerful social phenomenon, first described by Charles Mackay in 1841, turns a widely shared prejudice into an irresistible “authority”. Could it [belief in human-caused, catastrophic global warming] indeed represent the final triumph of irrationality?[16]

There is strong psychological evidence that alarmist fears of climate change are far more the result of groupthink and the group polarization process than scientific evidence and, yes, this alarmist groupthink has indeed led to the triumph of irrationality over reason.

Paul MacRae is the author of False Alarm: Global Warming—Facts Versus Fears. His blog is at paulmacrae.com. More on this subject: http://www.paulmacrae.com/?p=51

Notes

1. Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark. New York: Ballantine Books, 1996, p. 49.

2. Irvin L. Janis, Groupthink: Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and Fiascoes. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1982, p. 3.

3. Janis, p. vii.

4. Janis, p. 9.

5. Janis, p. 247.

6. Janis, pp. 174-175.

7. Janis, p. 5.

8. Andrew Potter, “The newspaper is dying—hooray for democracy.” Maclean’s, April 7, 2008, p. 17.

9. Walter Kaufmann, Critique of Religion and Philosophy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press, 1990 (1958), p. 51.

10. Edward Wegman, et al., “Ad Hoc Committee Report on the ‘Hockey Stick’ Global Climate Reconstruction.” U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce, 2006, p. 65.

11. Wegman, et al., p. 29.

12. Wegman, et al., p. 51.

13. Judith Curry, “On the credibility of climate research.” Climate Audit blog, Nov. 22, 2009.

14. Andrew Revkin, “A climate scientist who engages skeptics.” Dot.Earth, Nov. 27, 2009.

15. Steve Fuller, Kuhn vs. Popper: The Struggle for the Soul of Science. Cambridge: Icon Books, 2006 (2003), p. 105.

16. Martin Cohen, “Beyond debate?” Times Higher Education, Dec. 10, 2009.

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Soren F
May 1, 2012 12:54 am

I read Paul’s friend as meaning roughly: what other examples are out there of whole fields marching 180 degrees wrong in unison? Firstly, the proper field for analyzing this is that of “veritistic” social epistemology, a part of Theory of Knowledge, how knowledge reaches laymen, as laid out by e.g. Alvin I. Goldman. In his book “Pathways to Knowledge. Private and Public.”, such community-wide behavior is exemplified from the mental health profession (referred to in footnote 23, p. 157). Maybe ask Alvin for updating on the latest news from this part of his field?

Michael Whittemore
May 1, 2012 12:57 am

The people explaining the chance of a huge 6 degrees celsius warming may be alarming but there is a chance of it happening. The people explaining that there might only be a 1 degree warming, may be alarming but there is a chance of it happening. The point is skeptics want to put everyone’s livelihoods at risk, while climate alarmists want to spend a little money to make sure it doesn’t happen. This is the real truth of the matter, we care about the possibility of great harm to humans and skeptics want to take a chance.

Brian H
May 1, 2012 1:14 am

Bill Parsons says:
April 30, 2012 at 9:48 pm

But what is there about Lysenko’s “vernalization” theory, or the willfullness of inheritable traits, that strikes a cord with Stalin and his cohort?

The prospect that the New Man, devoted to the collective, missing the Selfishness Gene, obedient to a fault, could be “evolved” in a single generation or two of intensive social shaping? Fear of the ineradicable self-interest implicit in Darwinism? Whether wishful thinking or expedient propagandizing was the main motivation, it was attractive either way.
BTW, I’d like to acknowledge the creator of a new neologism: “Hansenkoism“! Click the link …
😉

Shona
May 1, 2012 1:22 am

Have to agree on Evolutionary Theory. Very little of it is based on empirical data as far as I can see. And the holes are massive. when I first leant about it 35 years ago, I thought lots of it was just “affirmation” and I never got answers to my questions, just hand waves. As far as I can see, it’s still in the same state today. The aggressivity of its proponents speaks volumes to me.
It would be fun if Lamarck turned out to be right!
(Disclosure, Darwin is one of my heroes, I have read two of his books including Origin, hard going believe me!- and his some of his diaries from the Beagle, fascinating and fun).

phlogiston
May 1, 2012 1:49 am

Love the Nietzsche quote!:
“Madness is the exception in individuals but the rule in groups”.
Similarly, IPCC contributor Mike Hulme wrote:
It is possible that climate science has become too partisan, too centralized. The tribalism that some of the leaked emails display is something more usually associated with social organization within primitive cultures; it is not attractive when we find it at work inside science.

There are no “primitive” and “advanced” human cultures – this is 19th century cultural baggage. There are just human cultures. We are all the same.

Paul Mackey
May 1, 2012 1:53 am

Great Article, although I think there may be a factual error. having worked in a number of large investment banks for almost two decades, I am pretty sure that bankers are not “the best and brightest” just a wunch of people who are the greediest.

GogogoStopSTOP
May 1, 2012 2:26 am

Michael Whittemore says:
April 30, 2012 at 11:07 pm
“The people explaining the chance… climate alarmists want to spend a little money”… … … SPEND A LITTLE MONEY???
Are you kidding? When was the last time you saw a government entity SPEND A LITTLE MONEY? When did you see them GET SMALLER!? The world is papered with government spending… “all for the good of the children,” “to feed the poor,” “to warm the families who’s heating oil is too expensive,” “government food stamps,” “free cell phones for the poor,”…
“IT THEIR RIGHT, DON’T YOU KNOW!”
“What to buy a bridge?” “Which shell is the pea under?” “How about a Lil-3-Card-Monte?””Hold this bag of money, I’ll be right back…” I have 4 year old grandsons who’s wiser, more street smart than you Michael Wit… (Ooops, better hold that ad hominem…!) [ahem – just in time too ~ac]

MostlyHarmless
May 1, 2012 2:42 am

Groupthink led directly to the Challenger disaster in 1986. The “O-ring” seals in the boosters were considered to be “settled engineering” by managers, even as engineers reported partial leaking or even burn-through on occasion. The tight allocation of responsibilities allowed for little thinking “outside the box”, extending to the launch morning. Because no-one had been allocated specific responsibility for the key seals, no-one even thought about them, just about ice accumulation on shuttle and tower,
The exact opposite was true of the Apollo 13 incident. The astronauts, and those in mission control, were thinking “outside the box” because they’d been trained and encouraged to do so, and no-one was ridiculed for raising concerns before the mission, nor suggesting novel or even improbable causes or solutions during the crisis, Strong management (controller Gene Kranz), devolved responsibilities and reliance on individual’s expertise (e.g.. the seemingly suicidal but essential recommendation to shut down the fuel cells) prevailed throughout. It’s a little-known fact that the team used the Kepner Tregoe decision-making model to focus on and identify the cause, an exploding oxygen tank, and to identify solutions. The process all but eliminates groupthink by demanding discussion of, and jointly allocating probabilities (percentage or rating zero to 10) or weighting, to each symptom, factor.or possible cause, and likely solution.
It would be interesting to see Kepner Tregoe applied to the analysis and conclusions made in the IPCC and other UN reports, I’ve used it (it’s by definition a team tool) to make difficult decisions especially where options are very different, and may only partially (or not at all) overlap. Lateral thinking seems to be a natural by-product, with a group of individuals who’re not afraid to suggest seemingly improbable or even ridiculous solutions, or point out not-so-obvious problems or pitfalls. Every suggestion or criticism must be discussed before inclusion and weighting, or just junking. It’s one great strength of the method.
Slightly biased summary of the Kepner Tregoe decision-making procedure here:
http://www.decision-making-confidence.com/kepner-tregoe-decision-making.htm
and the home page here:
http://www.kepner-tregoe.com/theKTWay/OurProcesses-DA.cfm

GogogoStopSTOP
Reply to  MostlyHarmless
May 1, 2012 5:15 am

To MostlyHarmless… I’m a huge fan of a couple of things:
1.) The Second Law of Thermodynamics,
2.) Kepner-Tregoe and,
3.) Phil Crosby’s, “Quality is Free.”
Any combination of 2 out of 3 of these will lead any good engineer or scientist to honest products or conclusions. I enjoyed your post.

MostlyHarmless
May 1, 2012 2:46 am

Oops – my mouse technique is lacking, that link should have been:
http://www.decision-making-confidence.com/kepner-tregoe-decision-making.html

Don Keiller
May 1, 2012 2:50 am

Brilliant deconstruction of the question “How can many, many respected, competitive, independent science folks be so wrong (about Global warming)?”
Mix in funding, power and politics and it ticks all the boxes.
The question now is how can this groupthink be broken?

Michael J. McFadden
May 1, 2012 3:14 am

Excellent thinking all around here! I particularly liked Doug Proctor’s analysis of how groupthink fails.
This question caught my eye: “…Has there ever been another case when so many ‘leading’ scientific minds got it so wrong?”
I really only know the surface features of the global warming argument on both sides. I would normally have been one of the “alarmists” by background, but my recent research in another area over the last 20 years or so opened me up to an awareness of the sort of problems you’ve seen in the global warming movement. While I won’t actually present any argument in support of my beliefs in this forum for fear of hijacking the main subject, I’ll simply off the thought that readers consider the case of secondhand and thirdhand smoke as regards the question above. In my opinion the evidence of error in that area is even stronger than in global warming, and the defense of the “alarmists” is even weaker, BUT the “consensus of ‘leading’ scientific minds is perhaps even more unified.
Michael J. McFadden
Author of “Dissecting Antismokers’ Brains”

May 1, 2012 3:15 am

“Paul Bahlin says:
April 30, 2012 at 5:03 pm
40 years ago I was on a station responsible for a massive electronic navigation system with hundreds of vacuum tubes and dozens of drawers of circuitry. We had a 99.95% up time goal and when we went to back ups due to an online failure all hell broke loose. The entire duty section was called out to trouble shoot.
Group think always took over until exhaustion set in. Then I could work on the system alone and usually fix it while the exhausted took a coffee break. It was fascinating to see the consensus negotiations that took the group think further and further from the problem.
I don’t work well with others I guess.”
One of the criteria for jobs these days is to be a “Team Player”. To me that means going with the concensus. Groupthink is alive and well in many areas of the workplace. As in the above story I was a troubleshooter and had to deal with ‘groupthink’ and the stupid ideas the group would come up with.

Ryan
May 1, 2012 3:31 am

It is interesting that in the field of climatology the word “consensus” was originally used to describe the state of affairs where 97% of the scientists were 60% sure that the balance of evidence indicated that AGW was real. This seems to then have been turned on its head by climate activists to mean 97% of scientists were 100% sure that AGW was real. The scientists then seem to have fallen in behind the new meaning of the word as created by FoE, WWF, Greenpeas and others.
I have noticed that this seems to be the way “groupthink” happens. You start off with an open-minded group but it usually takes some outside agent to firm up opinions – management pressure in the case of a corporation, public opinion or the media in the case of politicians. Perhaps activist groups are deliberately using this to their advantage.

May 1, 2012 3:39 am

Perhaps using the Vietnam war as an example in the broader sense is not best to do. True, groupthink did lead to the limitation of the war (whereas bombing Hanoi might have proven useful).
But even the leader of the North Vietnamese forces (Vo Nguyen Giap) felt that the North Vietnamese had lost after the 1968 TET offensive (which was a total disaster for North Vietnam) and recommended to the political leadership to make peace. However, the North Vietnamese leadership were looking at the political situation in the states and felt that, even though they had lost militarily, they could win politically.
So the problem wasn’t in whether or not the war could be won (it could and easily, too), but whether or not the rules of engagement made it an inevitable fail. If the total war scenario used by the U.S. in WWII had been used, North Vietnam would have been beaten into submission in a matter of months. Instead, Johnson (as well as Kennedy) tried a war of attrition. Republics will win wars, but don’t do attrition well.
On a side note of irony, if Nixon had won in 1960, likely there wouldn’t have been a Vietnam war. And if there had been a war, it would probably have been similar to the Desert Storm wars under both of the Bushs.

cRR Kampen
May 1, 2012 3:39 am

Soft example. Worst groupthink is to be found in mathematics and logic.

Jon
May 1, 2012 3:42 am

Groupthink is one of many effects of the natural “human factor”?

David H.
May 1, 2012 3:51 am

I have just finished re-reading Lee Smolin’s 2006 book “The trouble with Physics”. He outlines the history of theoretical physics and the failure of string theory to be a theory at all, let alone the fundamental theory of unified physics, even though it has been the dominant area of research for over 30 years, without leading to one single predictable phenomenon. The final part of the book is entitled “Learning from experience” with chapters on “How do you fight sociology?” and “What is science?” in which he draws on the concept of groupthink to explain why a group of really bright and talented people rely so much on consensus to operate and yet ignore the wider picture.
This is a scientific area without the political overtones of climate research, yet groupthink was and is alive and well and in full flight.

Jimbo
May 1, 2012 4:12 am

Group think is why when Warmist debaters lock horns with Lord Monckton they usually lose. They are not used to dissent, debate or examining doubt and have been given an easy ride by the media and politicians. Plus an endless flow of funding.
IF, over time, they are shown to be clearly wrong about climbing global mean temperature (per the IPCC projections / scenarios all being equal) there will be much denial and speculations about returning warmth in the pipeline without acknowledging that AGW theory is in the dust.
The belief in man made global warming has the hallmarks of a religion.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8468233.stm
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/blog/2009/nov/03/tim-nicholson-climate-change-beliefs
http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/04/the_religion_of_global_warming.html

Chris Wright
May 1, 2012 4:23 am

This is an excellent article. Not surprisingly, I largely agree with it, as it is precisely what I have thought for some years.
.
Group think can be very useful, for example if you’re running an army, building the first atom bomb or putting the first men on the moon. But if you’re trying to arrive at an important scientific truth, group think can be utterly destructive. Climate science is a perfect example.
Several years ago New Scientist ran an article about group think. They specifically mentioned that the IPCC had not been affected by group think. If you believe that….
.
A combination of group think and self interest is a particularly toxic mix. A particularly good example of this is the MP’s expenses scandal in the UK. It turned out that more than half of them were regularly stealing money from the tax payer. It’s unlikely that most of them happened to be thieves. But the combination of group think and self interest explains this sorry chapter all too easily. As it does the climate change fraud….
Chris

May 1, 2012 5:04 am

Very good analysis! It is sad to see it happening, but as others have noted. it is simply human nature.

Henry Clark
May 1, 2012 5:14 am

Michael Whittemore says:
May 1, 2012 at 12:57 am
The people explaining the chance of a huge 6 degrees celsius warming may be alarming but there is a chance of it happening.
Hardly. Besides, although one could get into pages of discussion why a 6 degrees rise is impossible, your side would oppose like crazy the only countermeasure actually stopping it if matters were otherwise: Just as there are compounds thousands of times more radiative forcing than CO2 in warming effect per ton (the IPCC itself saying that about such as SF6), there are ones orders of magnitude more effective in cooling per ton (namely sub-micron size reflective dust if dispersed from aircraft at stratospheric altitude where the residence time is months and the amount of sunlight reflection to neutralize CO2 doubling on the order of merely 1-2% or less even under the IPCC’s inflated figures for CO2 effect).
(Different but semi-related: http://reason.com/archives/1997/11/01/climate-controls/singlepage ).
But one of the turning points that led me to further investigation and finally skepticism was when I realized in experience arguing that the typical environmentalist of the CAGW movement did not *want* geoengineering to work for a minuscule fraction of the cost of ineffective CO2 rationing measures like the many billions going to be spent on pumping CO2 underground for little net effect (except some negatives to plant growth), would not want anything that didn’t maximize restructuring of society.
CAGW is mostly an excuse for what they want anyway.
Michael Whittemore says:
May 1, 2012 at 12:57 am
The people explaining that there might only be a 1 degree warming, may be alarming but there is a chance of it happening.
“Global” warming is mostly arctic and near-arctic warming actually (climate4you.com graphs for instance). Such latitudes being warmer in prior warm periods like the Holocene Climate Optimum led to beneficially greater biomass and vegetation seen in the fossil record. Even the polar bears survived such fine.
The risk is high of a dystopia through a regime of international law becoming eventually like a twisted super-E.U. (only worse and formed on a foundation of dishonesty), with huge harm to human prosperity and reduced likelihood of being a species continuing to advance, eventually expand into space, and survive in the long term. The kind of groups which are utterly dishonest on other topics too like nuclear power and radiation are not the kind which deserve power. The risk of net harm from a 1 degree Celsius rise in itself is nil, in fact with such already experienced in human history, of net benefit, in the Holocene Climate Optimum. Actually, it’d be only a fraction of a degree average over the world, but that’s another topic.

May 1, 2012 5:27 am

“So, what are those signs? Invariably the first one is the experts don’t feel they have to address any flaws pointed out to them by others. Indeed, they’re nearly insulted at anyone having the temerity to raise such awkward points. Word gets around pretty fast too. Soon, people stop voicing any concerns publically although that certainly doesn’t prevent them from doing so in private. Rumour control is lost but the seriously harmful thing happening here is the enterprise has lost that ability to identify and therefore address problems; it is no longer self-correcting. This is lethal.”
http://thepointman.wordpress.com/2011/08/04/i%e2%80%99m-not-a-scientist-but-%e2%80%a6/
The groupthink always goes on to produce “thug management”.
Pointman

GogogoStopSTOP
May 1, 2012 5:32 am

My most recent “non-groupthink” hero is Steve Jobs. His biography is a methodical presentation of a fixated, creative, maniacal, focused, unpredictable entrepreneur. Watch, the Left will end up hating him. The Lame Stream Press, the nyt, is already crucifying Apple for taxes, worker abuse by a contractor, excessive profits… I love it!

May 1, 2012 5:40 am

Climategate Email 4693.txt
I hope I have not offended anyone in this message — it is of course
a personal opinion. Maybe it is an illusion or prejudice on my part,
but somehow I am not convinced that the “truth” is always worth
reaching if it is at the cost of damaged personal relationships
….

Michael Reed
May 1, 2012 5:44 am

I have long grappled with the question, “Why do so many people NEED to believe that this CAGW crap is true?” This article has helped clarify things for me, as far as the insular climate science community goes. But how did this little group madness infect the larger civilization as it has? CAGW strikes me as an outgrowth of the whole environmental madness begun by Rachel Carson’s delusions, yet I still can’t quite grasp why so many believe it, or rather, absolutely NEED to believe it. It’s the need for this malarkey to be true to bothers me. I’m missing something here.