
I was sent this today by Roger Cohen, a respected fellow of the APS. He writes:
Dear Anthony,
Since you have previously carried items relating to the American Physical Society, I thought you might be interested in the attached. It concerns my experience with the Society over the past three years. The “Recollection” document explains the context of the letter of resignation from the Executive Committee of the new APS climate activity, the “Topical Group on the Physics of Climate.” The bottom line is that we cannot have science if only one view is heard. That is authority, not science.
On Saturday I sent the attached to some 150 of our supporters. Thus far more than two dozen have told me that they have resigned or will resign from the APS climate activity. A few may resign from the APS though I have discouraged that.
– Roger Cohen
The American Physical Society and the Global Warming Question
A Personal Recollection
“It is in the admission of ignorance and the admission of uncertainty that there is a hope for the continuous motion of human beings in some direction that doesn’t get confined, permanently blocked, as it has so many times before in various periods in the history of man.” – Richard Feynman
The accompanying open letter concerns an episode in the ongoing debate over the largest scientific question of our age – anthropogenic global warming. But the debate is really about the conduct of science itself, and the scientific process that has been put together by important thinkers and practitioners over the centuries.
The scientific process relies on the collection of observational evidence and the development, verification, and falsification of predictive theories. It also relies on free inquiry and free exchange of information between scientists, and on the freedom to debate the scientific evidence. Without these freedoms, science can become as corrupt as the worst of human institutions. It can be bureaucratic, engage in the suppression of dissent, attempt to speak with the authority of a single voice, and, perhaps worst of all, become the willing tool of political interests in exchange for the promise of support, just like any other special interest. Trofim Lysenko’s hijacking and corruption of biology in the old Soviet Union and the eugenics experience of the 20th century are warnings of how science can “go rogue.”
With this backdrop, it is understandable that one of the most discouraging developments to emerge from the global warming question has been the co-opting of some American scientific societies, and indeed the National Academy of Sciences, by those intent on broadcasting climate alarm and on suppressing the dissemination of opposing scientific evidence. The American Geophysical Union and the American Meteorological Society have shed their traditional roles as supporters of science inquiry in favor of out and out advocacy. It is also widely known that scientists seeking to publish opposing scientific evidence experience great difficulty getting papers published in journals sponsored by these societies and others.
However the American Physical Society (APS) – the second largest society of physicists in the world, and my “home society” – had stopped short of this level of shrill advocacy and bias. Physicists, perhaps more broadly trained in their relatively mature field and having a somewhat broader perspective than some other science practitioners, might be expected to adopt a more hands off stance when it comes declaring a complex and difficult science question “settled.” And indeed this was the case…until the 2007 Statement on Climate Change was issued.
So the story leading to the letter begins with the development and approval of the APS Statement. There is evidence that the process itself that produced the Statement was at least highly questionable if not downright illegitimate. It is known that a small group of individuals, not satisfied with the degree of alarm contained in the original draft produced by the officially charged committee, acted unilaterally and without authority to raise the level of alarm. A senior APS professional confides in writing that
“This [the original draft] was unfortunately changed ‘on the fly, over lunch’ by several [APS] Council members who were not pleased with the ‘mild tone’ of the drafted statement. Then the modified statement was voted on at the end of the Council meeting (probably as people were leaving to catch planes) [parentheses original].”
The overwritten Statement was far more radical, containing the antiscientific phrase that angered many members and provided a focal point for member opposition: “The science is incontrovertible.” The nature of science is such that nothing is incontrovertible; and indeed its history is replete with examples of how deeply held conviction was overturned by subsequent developments. Science pioneer, inventor, and Royal Society president Sir Humphry Davy put it as follows:
“Nothing is so dangerous to the progress of the human mind than to assume that our views of science are ultimate, that there are no mysteries in nature, that our triumphs are complete and that there are no new worlds to conquer.”
Driven by concern over the Statement, in 2009 I joined a small team of APS members. We collected and submitted a petition signed by nearly 300 physicists calling for the Statement to be moderated. The signatures were gathered one-by-one and included nearly 100 Fellows of major scientific societies, 17 members of national academies, and two Nobel Laureates. A number had published major research on the global warming issue, authored books on the issue, or worked in contiguous areas of meteorology and climate. Nearly all had backgrounds in key science areas that underlie the global warming issue.
The APS response to the petition was the appointment of a committee that took months to review the 157-word Statement. Only one of the members was familiar with the climate science field, and more than one had a vested interest in continued climate alarm. The committee’s final report referred only to IPCC reports and its supporting material, and so we had the predictable outcome: not a single change to the original Statement. Thus, as is the practice of bureaucracies, a position once taken is rigidly adhered to, even when the process that produced it was flawed.
However, some 750 words were added to the Statement to try to explain what the original 157 words really meant. These explanatory words are included as the “Climate Change Commentary” of April 18, 2010 accessible at the link provided above. APS members were permitted to send in comments, but the comments were never made public. A survey was also conducted whose outcome we were told supported the Statement, but numerical results were never provided, and we know that a substantial fraction of the membership did not support it.
Disgusted with these developments, some APS members quietly resigned or let their memberships lapse. The most publicly visible of these resignations were Nobel Laureate Ivar Giaever http://www.ibtimes.com/nobel-laureate-ivar-giaever-quits-physics-group-over-stand-global-warming-313636 and distinguished APS Fellow Hal Lewis http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2010/1019/Climate-change-fraud-letter-a-Martin-Luther-moment-in-science-history .
Preferring to work within the Society to try to effect positive change, our group of petitioners and APS leaders of good will came to an agreement in 2010 to try to focus the discussion back where it belonged – on the science itself. Thus I joined an officially sanctioned committee to organize a new “topical group” within the APS. Bylaws were written and approved whose main characteristic was a declaration of focus on the science, and an avoidance of matters of policy, public opinion, or political views. Here is the key objective statement from the Bylaws:
“The objective of the GPC shall be to promote the advancement and diffusion of knowledge concerning the physics, measurement, and modeling of climate processes, within the domain of natural science and outside the domains of societal impact and policy, legislation and broader societal issues. The objective includes the integration of scientific knowledge and analysis methods across disciplines to address the dynamical complexities and uncertainties of climate physics.”
It was thus hoped that the disagreement among APS membership would be diverted from attack and defense of the Statement to a discussion and scientific debate of the science itself.
All well and good. But to achieve the objective, one cannot move to exclude scientists and their findings that do not support the contentions of the APS Statement. As the letter relates, that is exactly what has happened. One should not conclude from the letter that all the APS people I worked with were of the same mind and wanted to exclude scientists who do not conform to the doctrine. A few tried hard to make the process scientifically inclusive, but they were far outweighed by the dominant influence which saw no reason to be inclusive.
At the end of the day, science progress does rely on the free exchange of information between scientists who may look at what nature is telling us and interpret these revelations differently. The practical outcome of exposing all the relevant science is the determination of the path to future critical experiments and improved theories. Without the freedom to do this, we have only authority and advocacy.
As I reflect on my experience, I cannot avoid the question of whether we have passed the point of no return, whether the descent of once grand scientific societies into advocating bureaucracies and self-satisfied clubs lobbying for funds can be arrested, reversed, and integrity restored; or is what we have now a permanent feature of modern science – a postmodern distortion of the best values of the scientific tradition that has served humanity well for centuries. If it is permanent, the only alternative is the emergence of new alternative institutions that can recover what science once had. We shall see.
Roger W. Cohen
Fellow, American Physical Society
10-16-12
====================================
Dr. James G. Brasseur
Chairman, Topical Group on the Physics of Climate
American Physical Society
Dear Jim,
It has become clear that I can no longer contribute effectively to the progress of the Topical Group on the Physics of Climate (GPC) as it was originally envisioned. Therefore, I am tendering my resignation from the Topical Group and the Executive Committee.
The GPC Executive Committee has yielded to pressure from within, and from others involved in the development of GPC activities, to exclude discussion of science that does not conform to the doctrine of strong anthropogenic global warming. This disregards the desires of a substantial fraction of the membership to discuss all the relevant science. Furthermore, without having demonstrated that the fledgling GPC can actually achieve the inclusive science-focused objective set forth in the Bylaws, we are moving to explore joint activities with other societies which are completely invested in climate alarm and which will not support GPC’s objective. These developments indicate that the GPC has set a course to become yet another outlet for promoting the doctrine.
As demonstrated in the development of the inaugural GPC speakers program (to be presented in March 2013), we have effectively drawn a boundary around the science so as to substantially exclude peer-reviewed, published work that conflicts with the doctrine of strong anthropogenic global warming, regardless of a speaker’s credentials and distinguished research record. For example, one accomplished physicist, an expert on the key issue of solar variability effects on terrestrial climate, was shunted off to “back up speaker” status due to the intervention of an IPCC lead author with a demonstrable vested interest in the IPCC’s posture on the solar issue. Another proposed speaker’s peer-reviewed, published work on the integrity of the land temperature data was completely discounted because he had endorsed a public expression of religious faith and its connection with science.
While skeptics’ public statements were considered evidence of bias, there were no qualms about applying a double standard that excused doctrine supporters from such considerations. One invited speaker has ventured into public environmental advocacy for reduced meat-eating, vegetarianism, and limiting natural offspring and airplane travel. Another invitee’s public statement of opinion on a supposed human contribution to a single hurricane (Katrina) was not judged grounds for questioning his objectivity. This double standard was no accident: one member of the committee charged with choosing speakers was quite explicit about skeptics’ participation when he warned against an “argument that winds up giving more effective weight to the ‘skeptics’ over the consensus viewpoint.”
None of the proposed speakers’ expressions of belief bear on their qualifications to speak on their scientific work in climate. The science must be considered in isolation – as science and only science. To do otherwise is to act as thought police. The selective application of these expressions of belief as a basis for excluding one kind of science is wrong and biases GPC activities toward support of the doctrine.
My participation in the GPC development process was the result of a grass roots petition signed by more than 200 APS members, most of whom eventually joined the GPC. I now feel compelled to inform these petitioners of the outcome so that they can make their own assessments. Also, since I have supported the GPC in public and private statements, I will be updating these statements in the future.
As you know the GPC was intended to channel strong APS member disagreement over the Society’s 2007 Statement on Climate Change into a productive scientific enterprise. But there was also a greater opportunity: to demonstrate that it is still possible to convene a forum that would present and discuss, as scientists, the broad body of climate science with all of its complexities, uncertainties, and interpretations. Alas, despite good faith efforts made by some, this opportunity appears to have been lost, and I fear that another may not come along soon.
Sincerely,
Roger W. Cohen
Fellow, APS
10-17-12
Howskepticalment;
That is a valid point about ‘single issue’ voters. However, I would turn your proposition around a bit and put it this way: if the leadership of the APS does not reflect the substantial majority view of its members on AGW, then the leadership would not last. They would be voted out.
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Well, if my point about “single issue” voters is valid, then you’ve falsified your own proposition.
Sigh… how can you not know what an ad hominem is when you have access to the internet?
fallacyfiles.org/adhomine.htm
Educate yourself.
davidmhoffer: this is a perfect example of why position statements are at best, anti-science. The average person does not have even a rudimentary understanding of the tools of science, e. g., basic logic (Howskepticalment as evidence), or math, let alone an understanding of the role of “professional” societies and how they actually function. The Hoi Palloi see these positions and assume, naturally, that everyone in said society must agree and that the positions must be true. It is the worst perversion of science.
It does not matter how many vote, until they can provide a testable hypothesis, it is junk.
Better, CTM? 😉
Mark
Reply: Yup, thanks. ~ ctm
It would appear that in post-normal maritime activity, the competent sailors abandon the sinking ship while the rats take it over.
It is some comfort to know that the takeover of the APS by AGW advocates was not quite as easy or seamless as it looked to observers on the outside.
It was good to read the words of Sir Humphry Davy, an early electrical pioneer (electrolysis), at this time. He said, “My greatest discovery was Michael Faraday.”
May all who had scientific and personal integrity lose here, a better where to find.
Sean says:
October 22, 2012 at 10:27 pm
Quick, everybody check your pockets, Peter Gleick has been here. Anybody missing any documents from their computer?
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After checking for missing documents, better check for new ones….
“They would be voted out.”
Only if enough members vote. As I noted, your experience with professional societies is obviously limited. Most members are like me, members only for the resume bullet and the magazines. I do get access to a rather vast library of technical literature, which I use rather often, but that’s it. Heck, the resume bullet doesn’t really even help anymore. Maybe if I applied for senior status… maybe other professions are more excited about the ability to join their super-secret clubs, like the UCS. Anthony, has it helped Kenji?
Mark
davidmhoffer says:
October 22, 2012 at 10:23 pm
By all means, support an open discussion followed by a fair voting process. But that means putting questions to the membership that reflect the issues in dispute. If all you want to ask is if there is a human component to forcing, then you may as well ask if gravity exists as well just to see if there is a level of dissent you didn’t know about on that issue as well. I’m guessing not.
I would be happy to start with your proposition that around 100% would support the proposition that there is human element in the forcings and take it from there in terms of fine-tuning the propositions.
I also agree that the competing propositions should be framed not from one perspective but in terms of competing perspectives.
Oops… put an l on the htm in the addy above, I.e., adhomine.html.
Mark
davidmhoffer says:
October 22, 2012 at 10:30 pm
Howskepticalment;
That is a valid point about ‘single issue’ voters. However, I would turn your proposition around a bit and put it this way: if the leadership of the APS does not reflect the substantial majority view of its members on AGW, then the leadership would not last. They would be voted out.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Well, if my point about “single issue” voters is valid, then you’ve falsified your own proposition.
To explicate, it is a valid consideration but not necessarily an over-riding consideration.
It is difficult to conceive of a situation where 99% of APS members would in the very, very broad, support AGW theory and also continue to support a leadership group which does not support AGW theory. Or vice versa.
Mark T says:
October 22, 2012 at 10:53 pm
“They would be voted out.”
Only if enough members vote.
I don’t know the APS constitution. I assume that regardless of how many members vote, there would still be a requirement for something like a simple majority of the votes cast.
A very well written letter.
Howskepticalment;
To explicate, it is a valid consideration but not necessarily an over-riding consideration.
It is difficult to conceive of a situation where 99% of APS members would in the very, very broad, support AGW theory and also continue to support a leadership group which does not support AGW theory. Or vice versa.
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You have now twice in succession accepted the point made about “single issue” voters and in the very next sentence proposed a position that is falsified by the point you just accepted!
Nope. It’s using the insult as though it counted as a rebuttal of the opponent’s argument, and/or using the insult as a way of diverting the argument off topic. Here’s the full and correct link , BTW: http://www.fallacyfiles.org/adhomine.html
Here’s an example of a true ad hom, from a thread posted a few days ago:
==================
Not with his judgment, but with his reasoning and conclusions. We’re not being told to accept those because of who his is. The article could have been posted by Mr. Anonymous.
Attempted equivocation (the deceptive or “switcheroo” use of a word, “judgment,” in two senses: first as a conclusion he’s reached, and second as his degree of sanity / rationality / common sense) & Ad hom.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/10/20/science-publisher-calls-for-better-communications-but-not-of-science/
“Peter Gleick says:”
that name alone makes me feel quite ill as it now represents the plethora of lies, misinformation, dishonesty and outright malfeasance that you have undertaken As with others, it sickens me that you have the bald faced cheek to even show your face after demonstrating that you are not worthy of the company of the honourable people on this forum, whose shoes you are not fit to shine.
Yet, after admitting to outright dishonesty, lying and stealing information, you appear to believe that your opinion actually matters or may even consider that you have any credence at all. Which you do not. Next thing we will be told is that you have something to do with ethics and one wonders how that is even possible. You may be the favoured hypocrite where you mostly hang out. But on this forum, you have absolutely no credibility whatsoever and it sickens me, like a few others before me, to even respond..
Ahh, someone has mentioned gravity. I like this comparison because of something I read possibly at JoNova a while ago which goes something like this: (short form, my paraphrase)
Gravity can be measure to at least 15 significant digits. Climate scientists don’t even know what the value of the first digit for climate sensitivity is . They aren’t even sure of the sign (negative or positive).
So next time the gravity comparison is used by a non-skeptic, use the better, more relevant comparison to climate science as shown above.
davidmhoffer says:
October 22, 2012 at 11:15 pm
Howskepticalment;
To explicate, it is a valid consideration but not necessarily an over-riding consideration.
It is difficult to conceive of a situation where 99% of APS members would in the very, very broad, support AGW theory and also continue to support a leadership group which does not support AGW theory. Or vice versa.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You have now twice in succession accepted the point made about “single issue” voters and in the very next sentence proposed a position that is falsified by the point you just accepted!
Accepting the point but not as an over-riding consideration is hardly accepting the point in a qualified way.
As an aside from a regular but otherwise silent WUWT reader…
Quoted from the above article:
“The scientific process relies on the collection of observational evidence and the development, verification, and falsification of predictive theories.”
I like to summarize the scientific process in a pithy mnemonic I thought up one quiet day in the office:
The four IFs and Ys – quantify, qualify, clarify, falsify.
Just thought you guys might appreciate that…
Roger Knights
On the ad hominem issue, I accept that I have misinterpreted Mark T’s various personal attacks as ad hominem attacks when I should, perhaps, have interpreted them simply as abusive and impolite.
Howskepticalment:
I write to answer the question you ask at October 22, 2012 at 10:11 pm; viz
No, crossing out fingers would also not work; it would only have the same effect on climate as reducing anthropogenic CO2 emissions.
Richard
The APS like many other scientific societies has succumbed to the mass hypnosis of ‘back radiation’, needed to purport that the Earth emits IR as if it were an isolated black body in a vacuum, a claim no properly educated professional scientist or engineer accepts as valid.
Yet many academics do believe it. it comes from a failure in experimental physics originating in meteorology, now back-filling mainstream science. Recent graduates fail to question how an instrument measures a scientific parameter because unlike me for example, they have never made one from components and basic physical principles.
‘Back radiation’ doesn’t exist except as the artefact of pyrometry, of which pyrgeometers used in their 1000s in climate science are a subset. The most basis axiom in radiation physics is Poynting’s Theorem [1884]; net radiative energy flux is the vector sum of all the Poynting Vectors arriving at a point in space.
A pyrometer measures temperature by having a shield such that it only intercepts radiation from a specific viewing angle. In the case of the atmosphere at lower temperature than the adjacent Earth’s surface, all that notional energy flux is annihilated at the Earth’s surface.
You prove this by a simple thought experiment. place two pyrgeometers back to back in zero atmospheric temperature gradient: the net signal is zero. Take one away and the signal jumps to a measure of temperature convolved with emissivity, yet there is zero net energy flux.
The result of this failure plus an equally bad failure at TOA is to claim ~5 times higher IR absorption than reality, a perpetual motion machine. it’s offset by imaginary cloud albedo in the hind-casting process. The positive feedback, exaggerated ocean evaporation in ‘sunlit zones’, doesn’t exist. No such climate model can predict climate.
To overcome this monumental mistake in mainstream science attitudes and associated hatred, accusing unbelievers of heresy, ‘deniers’, I propose a solution similar to the ‘Peace and Reconciliation’ process in post Apartheid South Africa.
Starting with APS executives, senior people must stand up in public and admit they were wrong and apologise for misleading others. This reconciliation will ricochet through science. The teaching of fake physics in climate and meteorology will come under intense scrutiny. Once you correct the physics, true CO2-AGW is vanishingly small [it self-absorbs by ~200 ppmV] and this potentially devastating religious cult whose aim is to destroy Western economies will die.
As a follow-up to the above, this is the official APS description of the heat transfer in the IPCC climate models: http://www.aps.org/units/fps/newsletters/200807/hafemeister.cfm
Perhaps to maintain their professionalism, the authors point out that the claim of unit emissivity for the Earth’s surface and the lower atmosphere requires an increase of energy input by ~80 W/m^2 [they assume the Earth’s surface is at an average 14 °C, the error is 94.5 W/m^2 for 16 °C as in the 2009 Trenberth et al Energy Budget] and they show using Eq 14 how to calculate the emissivity of the lower atmosphere that would give an energy balance: it’s 0.76.
However, there is an infinite number of solutions to this problem all involving changes in the Earth’s and the lower Atmosphere emissivity. You can’t have a perpetual motion machine but you can’t fix this model because it’s fundamentally wrong
To fix it you junk ‘back radiation’ also DOWN TOA emissivity = zero. Then the convection and radiation at the Earth’s surface are coupled and at equilibrium must equal SW energy input. This has been 30 years of wasted effort put together by people who hadn’t a clue about the real physics. In total there are 6 mistakes, 3 so trivial as to make a professional cringe with embarrassment, 3 more subtle. The work needs to be re-started under new leadership.
Dr Gleick. Thank you for your reply to my points, I have no problem with CO2 as a greenhouse gas, what I do have a problem with is that the concentration in the Earth’s atmosphere is insufficient to cause temperature changes that will cause global warming. a change from 0.038% to 0.039% is, in my view negligible. Common sense tells me that very little of CO2’s greenhouse effect is going to occur, because an extra 10 molecules are present in the other 999,610 molecules of the other atmospheric gases. I firmly believe that this concentration is insufficient to melt the polar caps and cause the other disasters that we are told we will be subjected to.
Girls will be boys and boys will be girls
It’s a mixed up muddled up shook up world except for Lola [Kinks]
Interesting
Post-modern science: Post-modern Church:
Appeal to authority Reject authority
Trust experience [Gleick] Trust experience