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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wsbriggs
May 1, 2012 5:50 am

Mackay covered it in, “Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.” 1841. It’s full of wonderful examples of Group Think.

May 1, 2012 5:53 am

When a scientist falls in love with a theory, he is lost to science. He is now an advocate.
A whole roomful of scientists in love with a theory. I guess that’s groupthink.

May 1, 2012 6:06 am

Paul MacRae,
Well done post. Thank you.
I am impressed by the high quality of commenting it stimulated.
John

Bruce Cobb
May 1, 2012 6:08 am

Michael Whittemore says:
May 1, 2012 at 12:57 am
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.
Alarmist ideology has already done great harm to humanity, and would do even greater harm, if allowed to continue. Fortunately for humanity, Skeptics/Climate Realists, with the unwitting assistance of the great hubris and ego of Alarmists are winning. You can thank them now, or thank them later. Your choice.

Mickey Reno
May 1, 2012 6:14 am

Very informative article, thanks.
And just as a word of warning to my fellow skeptics. Groupthink can happen in every group. We skeptics must also evaluate our own thought processes and arguments, and try to avoid agreement that’s arrived at without compelling evidence. Be prepared to be comfortable with ambiguity when complex systems are poorly understood, and be willing to be open to new paradigms.
I think “Real” climate science’s groupthink has led to two of the biggest flaws in their collective work, 1) faith in unfalsifiable models and 2) either an outright embrace of, or at least a failure to recognize the infamous correlation/causation logical fallacy [If A then B, and B therefore A].

LazyTeenager
May 1, 2012 6:17 am

Dont believe a word of it. It’s a contrived and manipulative argument. Little more than propaganda based on pop psychology.

Coach Springer
May 1, 2012 6:29 am

The public / political dynamic is another dimension giving power to the groupthink effect. Get the media, the politicians and the educators sucked in and you’ve got yourself a mighty vortex. And hard to step back. Hence Michael Mann’s last book. A lot public figures have most of their credibilty now dependent on CAGW and can’t get back off the limb that is being sawed on.
Don’t mistake environmental activists for anything more than end users of climate groupthink, though. They have a separate groupthink for which they find Malthusian common ground with CAGW.

Bruce Cobb
May 1, 2012 6:43 am

LazyTeenager says:
May 1, 2012 at 6:17 am
Dont believe a word of it. It’s a contrived and manipulative argument. Little more than propaganda based on pop psychology.
Of course, you would feel that way, since it threatens your Alarmist ideology.

durango12
May 1, 2012 6:47 am

@Mickey Reno
“And just as a word of warning to my fellow skeptics. Groupthink can happen in every group. We skeptics must also evaluate our own thought processes and arguments, and try to avoid agreement that’s arrived at without compelling evidence.”
Exactly right, and therein lies the difference between the dogmatists and the skeptics: Skeptics acknowledge that Groupthink can happen.

Scott
May 1, 2012 7:31 am

Lest anyone think they are above groupthink open your wallet and look at the little pieces of green paper you and others happily accept as units of value. Modern fiat currency works because almost everyone has accepted the monetary system (which was very easy to implement) mainly because it is too painful to do otherwise (barter and gold/silver being alternatives). In fact, fiat money is the mother of all groupthinks, benefitting the issuers of the money, and far exceeding religions, politics, global warming, and various piddly industry/social groupthinks on the groupthink pyramid, even though history shows fiat money only has a lifetime of about 40 years before it self destructs. From the position of those in power, they’d say the world is basically built on groupthink, so what’s the big deal about a little more global warming groupthink? Why target global warming when there are so many other groupthinks being left alone? I’d say global warming is targeted because it’s case is very weak and a natural target.
Unfortunately once groupthink is established you can’t easily chip away at it via logic or meetings, as Challenger o-ring engineers discovered, groupthink is usually only destroyed in a sudden calamitous loss of confidence. In the historical cases of fiat money destruction, collapse was biding it’s time until it came quickly with some unforseen event precipitating a total loss of confidence in money. Although I appreciate this blog very much, in the groupthink case of global warming it is likely that only a sustained and painful period of cold weather will be enough to take global warming groupthink down IMO.

May 1, 2012 7:38 am

I do not wish to take credit away from Paul’s excellent exposition. However, I will draw attention to the article on Groupthink I published at CanadaFreePress a couple of years ago on groupthink.
I also add a more recent article on the progress of corruption at the CRU.
IPCC/CRU Self-Deception Through Groupthink
March 2010, Dr Timothy Ball
Few understand the extent of corrupted science produced by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Data was altered, or completely ignored and research deliberately directed to prove their claim that human’s were causing global warming. A.W.Montford’s book The Hockey Stick Illusion: Climategate and the Corruption of Science is a litany of refusals to disclose information. They all work to prevent other scientists carrying out the most basic test namely, replication of results.
In his report on the hockey stick debacle for the US House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee Professor Wegman wrote; Sharing of research materials, data, and results is haphazard and often grudgingly done. We were especially struck by Dr. Mann’s insistence that the code he developed was his intellectual property and that he could legally hold it personally without disclosing it to peers. When code and data are not shared and methodology is not fully disclosed, peers do not have the ability to replicate the work and thus independent verification is impossible.
People identified in the leaked emails of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) were primarily responsible through the Physical Science Basis Report of Working Group I of the IPCC and the Summary for Policymakers (SPM). Politics is clearly the motive for some scientists like James Hansen, Stephen Schneider and others, but this is not so clear for most at the CRU. Which begs the question how and why supposedly intelligent people became involved and continued to participate in such corruption?
The Group
Irving Janis developed the concept of Groupthink, which requires unanimity at the expense of quality decisions. “Groups affected by groupthink ignore alternatives and tend to take irrational actions that dehumanize other groups. A group is especially vulnerable to groupthink when its members are similar in background, when the group is insulated from outside opinions, and when there are no clear rules for decision-making.”
http://www.psysr.org/about/pubs_resources/groupthink overview.htm
The CRU/IPCC pattern is a classic example.
Groupthink
Here’s a list of some symptoms of groupthink with examples from CRU/IPCC emails and actions.
http://www.abacon.com/commstudies/groups/groupthink.html
• Having an illusion of invulnerability. Content of the emails has many examples of arrogant invulnerability. In a backhanded way Overpeck provides support for this position because he advised them on Sep 9, 2009 to “Please write all emails as though they will be made public.” They didn’t listen because they believed they were invulnerable. Others within the general community reinforced CRU invulnerability. On October 2003 Ray Bradley, who had published the original hockey stick with Michael Mann, wrote. “Because of the complexity of the arguments involved, to an uniformed observer it all might be viewed as just scientific nit-picking by “for” and “against” global warming proponents. However, if an “independent group” such as you guys at CRU could make a statement as to whether the M&M (McIntyre and McKitrick) effort is truly an “audit”, and if they sis it right, I think would go a long way to defusing the issue. If you are willing, a quick and forceful statement from The Distinguished CRU Boys would help quash further arguments, although here, at least, it is already quite out of control.”
• Rationalizing poor decisions. Jones rationalized the decision to withhold Freedom of Information (FOI) to the University of East Anglia staff on December 3, 2008 as follows, “Once they became aware of the types of people we were dealing with, everyone at UEA (in the registry and in the Environmental Sciences school – the head of school and a few others) became very supportive.”
• Believing in the group’s morality. The entire body of emails supports this claim. Rob Wilson wrote on 21 February 2006 “I need to diplomatically word all this. I never wanted to criticise Mike’s work in any way. It was for that reason that I made little mention to it initially.” On 6 May 1999 Mann wrote to Phil Jones, “Trust that I’m certainly on board w/you that we’re all working towards a common goal” and later “I trust that history will give us all proper credit for what we’re doing here.” So do I!
Conversely, Keith Briffa, who I believe was the whistleblower, battled with Mann and became increasingly alienated from the group.
http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/18232
On 17 June 2002 he wrote, “I have just read this letter and I think it is crap. I am sick to death of Mann stating his reconstruction represents the tropical area just because it contains a few (poorly temperature representative) tropical series.”
• Sharing stereotypes which guide the decision. This takes the form of unethical comments of practice going without challenge because they were all doing it. On 19 September 1996 Funkhouser wrote, “I really wish I could be more positive about the Kyrgyzstan material, but I swear I pulled every trick out of my sleeve trying to milk something out of that.”
• Exercising direct pressure on others. On 24 April 2003 Wigley wrote, “One approach is to go direct to the publishers and point out the fact that their journal is perceived as being a medium for disseminating misinformation under the guise of refereed work. I use the word ‘perceived’ here, since whether it is true or not is not what the publishers care about — it is how the journal is seen by the community that counts.” They also got James Saiers, editor of Geophysical Research Letters, fired.
• Not expressing your true feelings. On the 14 October 2009 Trenberth expresses something to Tom Wigley that none of them ever dared say in public. How come you do not agree with a statement that says we are nowhere close to knowing where energy is going or whether clouds are changing to make the planet brighter. We are not close to balancing the energy budget. The fact that we can not account for what is happening in the climate system makes any consideration of geoengineering quite hopeless as we will never be able to tell if it is successful or not! It is a travesty!”
• Maintaining an illusion of unanimity. Briffa struggles to maintain the illusion when he writes to Mann on 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.”
• Using mindguards to protect the group from negative information. “The idea is that we working climate scientists should have a place where we can mount a rapid response to supposedly ‘bombshell’ papers that are doing the rounds and give more context to climate related stories or events.” This was Mann’s comment to the group about establishment of Realclimate to act as “mindguards”.
Some of the negative outcomes of groupthink also fit the actions of the CRU/IPCC group.
• Examining few alternatives. They narrowed the options by the definition of climate change to only those caused by human activities. Of the three greenhouse gases almost all the focus is on CO2.
• Not being critical of each other’s ideas. Not only were they not critical, but they peer reviewed each others work and controlled who they recommended to editors for reviewers. Mann to Jones 4 June 2003 “I’d like to tentatively propose to pass this along to Phil as the “official keeper” of the draft to finalize and submit IF it isn’t in satisfactory shape by the time I have to leave.” On August 5, 2009 Jones wrote to Grant Foster in response to his request for reviewers for an article, “I’d go for one of Tom Peterson or Dave Easterling. To get a spread, I’d go with 3 US, One Australian and one in Europe. So Neville Nicholls and David Parker. All of them know the sorts of things to say – about our comment and the awful original, without any prompting.”
• Not examining early alternatives. There was a graph of temperatures drawn by Lamb showing the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) and used in the first IPCC Report. It was correct but contradicted their claim of modern warming. As Mann said to Jones on 4 June 2003, “it would be nice to try to “contain” the putative “MWP”, even if we don’t yet have a hemispheric mean reconstruction available that far back.” They chose to rewrite history.
• Not seeking expert opinion. Professor Wegman spoke directly to this problem in his report for the US Senate on the infamous hockey stick graph. “It is important to note the isolation of the paleoclimate community; even though they rely heavily on statistical methods they do not seem to be interacting with the statistical community.”
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~rmckitri/research/WegmanReport.pdf
• Being highly selective in gathering information. Apart from only looking at human causes, the CRU emails have many examples of data selected to prove their point. Tim Osborn to the group on 5 October1999 speaks of the issue McIntyre identified of truncated records.
http://holocene.meteo.psu.edu/shared/articles/MBH98-corrigendum04.pdf
They go from 1402 to 1995, although we usually stop the series in 1960 because of the recent non-temperature signal that is superimposed on the tree-ring data that we use. On the 19 March 2009 Santer wrote to Jones about the Royal Meteorological Society (RMS) asking for data used for a publication. “If the RMS is going to require authors to make ALL data available – raw data PLUS results from all intermediate calculations – I will not submit any further papers to RMS journals.” On 27 September 2009 Tom Wigley wrote to Phil Jones about a problem with Sea Surface Temperatures (SST), “So, if we could reduce the ocean blip by, say, 0.15 deg C, then this would be significant for the global mean – but we’d still have to explain the land blip.”
• Not having contingency plans. They never expected they would be exposed. Maybe Benjamin Santer’s comment on April 25 counts. I looked at some of the stuff on the Climate Audit web site. I’d really like to talk to a few of these “Auditors” in a dark alley.
But they were exposed. Now most can’t believe scientists could ignore or deliberately manipulate data, distort procedures and not have more of them speak out. As Janis explains groupthink, “occurs when a group makes faulty decisions because group pressures lead to a deterioration of “mental efficiency, reality testing, and moral judgment.” The relatively small group involved with the machinations of proving fossil fuels was producing CO2 that was causing warming or climate change appears to be a classic example of Groupthink. Professor Wegman in his report identified 43 people all linked in various ways, but especially publishing together and apparently peer-reviewing each other’s work that apparently constituted this group. They controlled the CRU, the critical roles of the IPCC and therefore world climate science and the resulting policies.
————————
A more recent article on Gradualism is found here;
http://drtimball.com/2011/gradualism-creeping-corruption-of-climate-science-and-society/

May 1, 2012 7:43 am

Ian H says:
April 30, 2012 at 10:12 pm
I think many people are searching for meaning and purpose in life, and for a community to belong to. What bigger meaning or purpose could there be than in committing yourself to fight to save the world against destruction. What better than the fellowship of fellow crusaders fighting the good fight against the forces of evil.

And . . .

Jon says:
May 1, 2012 at 3:42 am
Groupthink is one of many effects of the natural “human factor”?

– – – – – –
Ian H & Jon,
I think you are onto the more fundamental concepts upon which the groupthink syndrome derives its explanatory powers of such irrational phenomena as CAGWism (IPCCism).
Why does groupthink tend to often reoccur in mankind’s history at the slightest spurious nudge from within any human society? Groupthink is the easiest intellectual path for each individual human to take to escape his feeling of loneliness from his own individuality; all irrationality also requires the exact same slightest spurious nudge that groupthink requires. Rationality is at the other extreme; because it is the most difficult of all the aspects of our human nature to achieve and it can only be done individually; that is done only alone and with great effort by the individual.
The group cannot think. Only an individual can think. Thinking is hard work. For the individual’s thinking to be rational and objective then it requires the loneliness of an individual’s strict concentration on reality and a lonely individual intellectual honesty that is a “bending over backwards” to not fool oneself. {thanks Feynman for the bending over backwards thought}
John

May 1, 2012 7:54 am

Dear Moderator – thanks for fixing my screwed up blockquote commands. I owe you . . . . again.
John

May 1, 2012 7:59 am

Bruce Cobb says:
May 1, 2012 at 6:43 am
LazyTeenager says: “Dont believe a word of it. It’s a contrived and manipulative argument. Little more than propaganda based on pop psychology.”
Of course, you would feel that way, since it threatens your Alarmist ideology.
Whoa, hold on there, Bruce, don’t be so hard on the thirty-something “boy.” Perhaps he’s talking about CAGW, you know. Perhaps his mommy finally found and confiscated the bong and he’s in the blissful throes of mental clarity for the first time in this century.

Steve Oregon
May 1, 2012 8:09 am

The groupthink syndrome (shortest version)
1. Pompousness
2. Arrogance
3. Tyranny

May 1, 2012 8:23 am

Group-think has already been institutionalized by our schools, as kids are now herded into clumps of tables, facing each other and are forced…er, “encouraged”… to “cooperate” as “teams-members.” They are supposed to discuss and reach a consensus. After the novelty wears off and the teachers become lazy or unable to control the noisy mess, this model merely creates gangs led by the group’s bully who immediately lines up his flunkies who help to enforce compliance and selects the sacrificial goats who will be picked on and humiliated to help raise the bully’s status and build “group solidarity.” The teachers, typically 20-something nose-ringed geese, are oblivious to the dynamics, as they run from group to group providing “positive feedback” to the bullies, who are experts at playing the teachers like cheap violins. Parents with kids should take a few minutes to see the dynamic…a few minutes is actually enough. Providing the final straw in convincing a parent to sacrifice and spend money on private school is the only beneficial outcome of this model.

Vince Causey
May 1, 2012 8:24 am

LazyTeenager says:
May 1, 2012 at 6:17 am
“Dont believe a word of it. It’s a contrived and manipulative argument. Little more than propaganda based on pop psychology.”
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha, ha ha ha.
Oh wait. . . ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.

Michael Whittemore
May 1, 2012 9:10 am

GogogoStopSTOP says:
May 1, 2012 at 2:26 am
“When was the last time you saw a government entity SPEND A LITTLE MONEY?”
The government makes money off a carbon tax, they don’t spend money. You and I pay the little money. A carbon tax puts up your bills, not the governments bills. Scientists which you think are making up man made global warming, are telling us to be concerned about CO2. You can scream conspiracy at them or pay a little bit extra for your electricity bills. To be honest I cant even make my mum believe in anthropogenic climate change, the people she listens to say the sun is warming the planet, CO2 is coming from the oceans and that scientists are making up the data to get extra funding. All a rational person can say to someone like that is your taking a chance on mainly disproved science and conspiracy theories.
Henry Clark says:
May 1, 2012 at 5:14 am
“Hardly”
The IPCC says it can very easily go up to 4.5 degrees Celsius, 6 is not an over statement. Something I assume you know is that CO2 will not cause this 6 Celsius warming, its nature that will do it. Most skeptics think that there will be a 1 degree Celsius warming, but the simple fact is, if there is going to be any warming then its hard to know how much, or how the earth is going to react to this warming.
This comes back to my point, if there is only 1 degree warming, then it wont be too bad, but if its 3 or 6, it will be bad. So you say we take a chance and hope the couple of scientists that have published work on climate sensitivity which say there will not be much warming, are right.
The “fix” might have to be geoengineering, but scientists don’t like messing with the earth, and would rather a carbon tax. Put it this way, solar molten salt power stations which work during the night and day, is only a little bit more expensive than coal power. But with a carbon tax, coal power will go up in costs and solar molten salt power stations will become a cheaper option.
Over some years the mass production of this green technology will make it cheaper and at the same time will reduce the need to buy expensive coal. So at the end you get cheaper and cleaner electricity, like I said, pay a little to mitigate the risks, and reduce the chance of a 3 or even 6 degree warming and get sustainable renewable cheaper electricity. 🙂

Brian
May 1, 2012 9:14 am

“LazyTeenager says:
May 1, 2012 at 6:17 am
Dont believe a word of it. It’s a contrived and manipulative argument. Little more than propaganda based on pop psychology.”
There probably is some merit to it. People involved in groupthink become jaded toward outside views. I’ve seen it happen. I’ve done it… Being a film fan I used to run for the critics Consensus and sooner or later that started to dictate what I like and didn’t like. People like you try and bully others for simply suggesting something other than the consensus. After all, these guys are the experts and are never wrong. Even though Hansen and the bunch HAVE been wrong so different things. James Hansen has basically become god to the young left types.
What you guys don’t understand is that the bullying tactics the true believers push does NOTHING to change peoples mind. So you basically end up shooting yourself in the foot. So even if your intentions are good, you have no understanding of how to present them in a manner that is helpful to anything. Including your own argument.

May 1, 2012 9:19 am

johanna says:
April 30, 2012 at 4:19 pm
While many of the points you make are valid, I think it is a pity that you conflated scientific groupthink with political examples. ….

But as has been pointed out for years here and in other places, climate science has become highly political. It should, rightly, be grouped with other political events. More than that, climate science and environmentalism has become a quasi religion. Thus making it all the more eligible for this groupthink analysis.
All too sadly, this has been predicted by many. Jonathan Swift, George Orwell, Ayn Rand. The climate science community of today is eerily like “The State Science Institute” in Atlas Shrugged. We are all being told that Reardon Metal is dangerous. All scientists agree. (They all agree that it would be in their best interest to not depart the party line on this issue.)

kMc2
May 1, 2012 9:19 am

Morton Thompson’s book on Ignaz Semmelweiss, titled THE CRY AND THE COVENANT, early alerted me to the perils of a consensus hardened around self interested untruth. And the more recent struggles of Barry Marshall to introduce helicobactor pylori to the discussion of gut issues, in face of the costly losses to purveyors of consensus palliatives. It has ever been so. Rigorously applied scientific methodology has been such a boon to humankind; it is tragic to witness its corruption by the pseudo-scientific political climate team.

Luther Wu
May 1, 2012 9:22 am

Alexander Feht says:
April 30, 2012 at 7:05 pm
gcapologist:
You realize, of course, that your one +1 is worth more than $10,000 to me.
____________________
I’d do it for only $5K.
No, I wouldn’t. I definitely would not
Alexander Feht says:
April 30, 2012 at 5:18 pm
Some of us are born and/or brought up as gentlemen, the others are “cattle farm intellectuals,” and the latter never learn.
_________________
I stopped right there.

May 1, 2012 9:31 am

Luther Wu,
You stopped long ago.

Larry Ledwick (hotrod)
May 1, 2012 9:40 am

Peter Kovachev says:
May 1, 2012 at 8:23 am
Group-think has already been institutionalized by our schools, as kids are now herded into clumps of tables, facing each other and are forced…er, “encouraged”… to “cooperate” as “teams-members.” They are supposed to discuss and reach a consensus. After the novelty wears off and the teachers become lazy or unable to control the noisy mess, this model merely creates gangs led by the group’s bully who immediately lines up his flunkies who help to enforce compliance and selects the sacrificial goats who will be picked on and humiliated to help raise the bully’s status and build “group solidarity.” The teachers, typically 20-something nose-ringed geese, are oblivious to the dynamics, as they run from group to group providing “positive feedback” to the bullies, who are experts at playing the teachers like cheap violins. Parents with kids should take a few minutes to see the dynamic…a few minutes is actually enough. Providing the final straw in convincing a parent to sacrifice and spend money on private school is the only beneficial outcome of this model.

You see exactly the same dynamic in many professional development courses in industry and government. The now young adults are herded into a conference room, given a pep talk by some “authoritative person” then are broken up into “work groups” with a table and an whiteboard or paper tablet and marker and told to come to a group solution to some fragment of the problem.
Everyone at the table stares at each other until the strong personalities figure out who is a follower and who is a leader. Then the one or two and very rarely 3 personalities contend with each other to herd their work group into their corner (much like a bull elk gathering cows during the rut). After a few minutes of jousting these leaders settle on who is in charge and everyone obediently falls in line, and joins in to pretty up the leaders ideas with some window dressing so they appear to be a group conclusion.
Studies have shown that the output of those work groups and the quality of their output is almost entirely a product of the strength of personality and IQ of the chosen leader in the area of expertise needed to solve the assignment. It is really fun to watch this process as a fly on the wall. Occasionally a work group will end up with 3 or 4 strong personalities and they will have a devil of a time agreeing on any thing. Yet when a spokesmen is chose by the seminar leader he will get up and assert they came to a consensus then give his/her view of the solution and to avoid embarrassment the whole table will nod their head in agreement just to show a united front.
In other groups occasionally you get a table of 6-10 herd animals and no leader — then the work group just flounders around like a fish out of water because no one knows how or is willing to lead the group to a conclusion, and no one is willing to stick their neck out to suggest a solution.
The group think indoctrination of the schools has already reached well into mid level management and has taken root in almost all organizations who do not actively encourage devils advocates and “what’s wrong with this” questions.
Larry

Jim Masterson
May 1, 2012 10:06 am

>>
Michael Whittemore says:
April 30, 2012 at 11:07 pm
<<
I see you managed to slip the d-word past the moderators.
>>
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. 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.
<<
You’re invoking the precautionary principle. This is one of the more insidious concepts pushed by alarmists. Alarmists assume guilt in the same manner as the lawyer who asks a witness if he’s stopped beating his wife yet.
In truth, the chance of minor warming causing problems is about the same as all the air in the room deciding to collect in one of the ceiling corners. It’s not zero, but it’s not likely to happen either. I wouldn’t waste a dime on trying to prevent either occurrence from happening–even if it were possible.
Jim