Bethlehem and the rat-hole problem

rat, mousetrap and cheese

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

In the closing minutes of the final plenary of the U.N.’s Doha climate summit, when no one else had anything further to add, I spent a few seconds telling the delegates something that the bad scientists and the malicious media have done their level best to conceal. There has been no global warming for 16 years.

In the real world, this surely welcome news would have been greeted with cheers of relief and delight. Since the beginning of 1997, despite the wailing and gnashing of dentures among the classe politique, despite the regulations, the taxations, the carbon trades, the windmills, the interminable, earnestly flatulent U.N. conferences, the CO2 concentration that they had declared to be Public Enemy No. 1 has not stabilized. It has grown by one-twelfth.

Yet this startling growth has not produced so much as a twentieth of a Celsius degree of global warming. Any warming below the measurement uncertainty of 0.05 Cº in the global-temperature datasets is statistically indistinguishable from zero.

The much-vaunted “consensus” of the much-touted “ensembles” of the much-heralded “models” has been proven wrong. The much-feted “modelers” had written in 2008 that their much-cited “simulations” ruled out, to 95% confidence, intervals of 15 years or more without global warming. To them, 16 years without warming were as near impossible as makes no difference.

Yet those impossible years happened. However, you would never have known that surely not uninteresting piece of good news from reading the newspapers or watching ABC, BBC, CBC, NBC, et hoc genus omne. The media are not in the business of giving the facts or telling the truth any more.

Precisely because journalists no longer bother to provide the inconvenient truth to their audiences, and because they are no longer willing even to provide the people with the straightforward facts without which democracy itself cannot function, the depressingly ill-informed and scientifically-illiterate delegates in Doha can be forgiven for not having known that global warming stopped a long while back.

That is why they should have been excited and delighted when they heard the news – nearly all of them for the very first time.

But this was the alternative reality that is the corrupt, self-serving U.N. Howls, hoots and hollers of dismay and fury greeted my short, polite announcement. This absurdly inappropriate reaction raises a fascinating question.

How are we to dig a rat-hole wide enough to allow the useful idiots and true-believers to escape as each passing year makes it more and more obvious that their fatuous credo has all the plausibility of the now somewhat discredited notion that the world was to be snuffed out at this year’s winter solstice?

Every student of the arts of diplomacy in the civil-service and staff colleges of the U.K. hears much about the rat-hole problem. How does one let the other side off some hook on which they have imprudently impaled themselves, while minimizing their loss of face?

A cornered rat will fight savagely, even against overwhelming odds, because it has no alternative. Give the rat a way out and it will instinctively take it.

The first step in digging a diplomatic rat-hole is to show that one understands how one’s opponents came to make their mistake. One might make a point of agreeing with their premise – in the present instance, the long-proven fact that adding a greenhouse gas to an atmosphere such as ours can be expected, ceteris paribus, to cause some warming.

Then one tries to find justifications for their standpoint. There are five good reasons why the global warming that they – and we – might have expected has not occurred for 16 years: natural variability in general; the appreciable decline in solar activity since the Grand Maximum that peaked in 1960; the current 30-year cooling phase of the ocean oscillations, which began late in 2001 with the transition from the warming phase that had begun in 1976; the recent double-dip la Niña; and the frequency with which supra-decadal periods without warming have occurred in the instrumental record since 1850.

The next trick is to help them, sympathetically, to focus the blame for their error on as few of their number as possible. Here, the target is obvious. The models are to blame for the mess the true-believers are in.

We must help them to understand why the models got it so very wrong. This will not be easy, because nearly all of our opponents have no science or math at all.

We can start our deconstruction of the models by pointing out that – given the five good reasons why global warming might not occur for 15 years or more at a time – the modelers’ ruling out periods of 15 years or more without warming shows they have given insufficient weight to the influence of natural variability. We can poke gentle fun at their description of CO2 as “ the tuning-knob of the climate”, and help them to put things into perspective by reminding them that Man has so far altered only 1/10,000 of the atmosphere, and may alter 1/3000 of it by 2100.

We cannot altogether avoid the math. But we can put it all in plain English, and we can use logic, which is more accessible to the layman than climatological physics. Here goes.

The fundamental equation of climate sensitivity says temperature change is the product of a forcing and a climate-sensitivity parameter.

The modellers’ definition of forcing is illogical; their assumptions about the value of the climate-sensitivity parameter are not Popper-falsifiable; and their claims of reliability for their long-term predictions are empirically disproven and theoretically insupportable. Let us explain.

The IPCC defines a forcing as the net down-minus-up flux of radiation at the tropopause, holding surface temperature fixed. Yet forcings change that temperature. A proposition and its converse cannot simultaneously be true. That is the fundamental postulate of logic, and the models’ definition of forcing manifestly offends against it.

No surprise, then, that since 1995 the IPCC has had to cut its estimate of the CO2 forcing by 15%. The “consensus” disagrees with itself. Note in passing that the CO2 forcing function is logarithmic: each further molecule causes less warming than those before it. Diminishing returns apply.

We can remind our opponents that direct warming is little more than 1 Cº per doubling of CO2 concentration, well within natural variability. It is not a crisis. We can explain that the modelers have imaginatively introduced amplifying or “positive” temperature feedbacks, which, they hope, will triple the direct warming from CO2.

Yet this dubious hypothesis, not being Popper-falsifiable, is not logic and, therefore, not science. If a hypothesis cannot be checked by any empirical or theoretical method, it is not – stricto sensu – a hypothesis at all. It is of no interest to science.

Not one of the imagined feedbacks is empirically measurable or theoretically determinable to a sufficient precision by any method. As an expert reviewer for the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report, I have described its strongly net-positive feedback interval as guesswork – and that, in logic and therefore in science, is exactly what it is.

There is a powerful theoretical reason for suspecting that the modellers’ guess that feedbacks triple direct warming is erroneous. The climatic closed-loop feedback gain implicit in the IPCC’s climate-sensitivity estimate of 3.3[2.0, 4.5] Cº per CO2 doubling falls on the interval 0.62[0.42, 0.74], though you will find no mention of the crucial concept of loop gain either in the IPCC’s documents or – as far as I can discover – in any of the few papers that discuss the mathematics of temperature feedbacks in the climate object.

Process engineers building electronic circuits, who invented feedback mathematics, tell us any loop gain much above zero is too near the singularity – at a loop gain of 1 – in the feedback-amplification equation. At a gain as high as is implicit in the models’ climate-sensitivity estimates, the geological record would show violent oscillations between extremes of warming and cooling.

Yet for 64 million years the Earth’s surface temperature has fluctuated by only 3%, or 8 Cº, either side of the long-run mean. These fluctuations can give us an ice-planet at one moment and a hothouse Earth the next, but they are altogether too small to be consistent with a feedback loop gain anywhere near as close to the singularity as official estimates imply, for homeostatic conditions prevail.

The atmosphere’s lower bound, the ocean, is a vast heat-sink 1100 times denser than the air. Since 3000 bathythermographs were deployed in 2006 no significant ocean warming has been found.

The upper bound of the atmosphere is outer space, to which any excess heat radiates harmlessly away.

Homeostasis, then, is what we should expect, and it is what we get. Accordingly, the climatic loop gain – far from being as impossibly high as the IPCC’s central estimate of 0.62 – cannot much exceed zero, so the warming at CO2 doubling will scarcely exceed 1 Cº.

It is also worth explaining to our opponents the fundamental reason why models cannot do what the modelers claim for them. The overriding difficulty in attempting to model the climate is that it behaves as a chaotic object. We can never know the values of its millions of defining parameters at any chosen moment to a sufficient precision to permit reliable projection of the bifurcations, or Sandy-like departures from an apparently steady state, that are inherent in all objects that behave chaotically. Therefore, reliable, very-long-term prediction of future climate states is known a priori to be unavailable by any method.

The modelers have tried to overcome this constraint by saying that the models are all we have, so we must make the best of them. But it is self-evidently illogical to use models when reliable, very-long-term weather forecasting is not available by any method.

This fundamental limitation on the reliability of long-term predictions by the models – known as the Lorenz constraint, after the father of computerized or “numerical” weather forecasting, whose 1963 paper Deterministic Non-Periodic Flow founded chaos theory by examining the behavior of a five-variable mini-model of the climate constructed as a heuristic – tells us something more, and very important, about the climate.

Bifurcations (or, in our opponents’ intellectual baby-talk, “tipping-points”) in the evolution of the climate object over time are not a whit more likely to occur in a rapidly-warming climate than in a climate which – like our own – is not warming at all.

Sandy and Bopha, and the hot summer in the U.S., could not have been caused by global warming, for the blindingly obvious reason that for 16 years there has not been any.

However, there are many variables in the climate object other than CO2 concentration and surface temperature. Even the tiniest perturbation in any one of these millions of parameters is enough, in an object that behaves chaotically, to induce a bifurcation.

Nothing in the mathematics of chaos leads one to conclude that “tipping-points” are any more likely to occur in response to a large change in the value of one of the parameters (such as surface temperature) that describe an object than in response to an infinitesimal change.

The clincher, in most diplomatic discussions, is money. Once we have led our opponents to understand that there is simply no reason to place any credence whatsoever in the exaggerations that are now painfully self-evident in the models, we can turn their attention to climate economics.

Pretend, ad argumentum, that the IPCC’s central estimate of 2.8 Cº warming by 2100 is true, and that Stern was right to say that the GDP cost of failing to prevent 3 Cº warming this century will be around 1.5% of GDP. Then, at the minimum 5% market inter-temporal discount rate, the cost of trying to abate this decade’s predicted warming of 0.15 Cº by topical, typical CO2-mitigation measures as cost-ineffective as, say, Australia’s carbon tax would be 48 times greater than the cost of later adaptation. At a zero discount rate, the cost of action will exceed the cost arising from inaction 36 times over.

How so? Australia emits just 1.2% of Man’s CO2, of which Ms. Gillard aims to cut 5% this decade. So Australia’s scheme, even if it worked, would cutting just 0.06% of global emissions by 2020. In turn, that would cut CO2 concentration from a predicted 410 μatm to 409.988 μatm. It is this infinitesimal change in CO2 concentration, characteristic of all measures intended – however piously – to mitigate future warming that is the chief reason why there is no economic case for spending any money at all on mitigation today.

The tiny drop in CO2 concentration would cut predicted temperature by 0.00006 Cº. This pathetic result would be achieved at a cost of $130 billion, which works out at $2 quadrillion/Cº. Abating the 0.15 Cº warming predicted for this decade would thus cost $317 trillion, or $45,000/head worldwide, or 59% of global GDP.

Mitigation measures inexpensive enough to be affordable will be ineffective: measures expensive enough to be effective will be unaffordable. Since the premium exceeds the cost of the risk, don’t insure. That is a precautionary principle worthy of the name.

When the child born in Bethlehem ~2012 years ago grew up, He told His audience the parable of the prodigal son, who had squandered his inheritance but was nevertheless welcomed by his father with a fatted calf when he returned and said he was sorry.

However vicious and cruel the true-believers in the global-warming fantasy have been to those few of us who have dared publicly to question their credo that has now been so thoroughly discredited by events, we should make sure that the rat-hole we dig for their escape from their lavish folly is as commodious as possible.

If all else fails, we can pray for them as He prayed looking down from the Cross on the world He had created.

Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.

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December 29, 2012 1:11 pm

John Whitman:
I am replying to your post at December 29, 2012 at 12:46 pm.
Please inform me what that has to do with the subject of this thread: i.e.
the proposals by Lord Monckton that
(a) a ‘rat hole’ be provided to allow AGW-alarmists to escape from their alarmism,
(b) the ‘rat hole’ could be the failure of climate models, and
(c) “we should make sure that the rat-hole we dig for their escape from their lavish folly is as commodious as possible”.
The religious references used by Lord Monckton were the parable of the ‘prodigal son’ as an illustration of how he thought we should be “commodious” and his clear statements of the religious philosophy which induces him to suggest being “commodious”.
You would be reasonably discussing the subject of the thread if you were pointing out that other religious philosophies do not concur with the suggestion I list as (c); e.g. primitive Judaism would require retribution not forgiveness. But you are wanting to promote your religion to the exclusion of the subject.
I repeat, how does anything in your post addressed to me have any relevance to the subject of this thread?
Richard

December 29, 2012 1:15 pm

farmerbraun:
re your posts addressed to me.
Please see my post at December 29, 2012 at 1:11 pm which is addressed to John Whitman.
I fail to see how your promotion of your religion has any relevance to the subject of this thread.
Richard

John Whitman
December 29, 2012 1:40 pm

richardscourtney says:
December 29, 2012 at 12:36 pm

John Whitman:
At December 29, 2012 at 12:20 pm you assert to me
The inclusion of religious versus science discussion forced us to those topics philosophies which are very relevant to the climate science dialog.

There is NO “versus”. They are different and complimentary but absolutely NOT mutually exclusive.
If you want to promote your religion then do it on an appropriate blog. There are several but WUWT is not one of them.
Richard

= = = = = = =
richardscourtney,
Thank you for maintain this thread’s dialog.
I think I identify your fundamental position wrt to religion. It looks to me that you are saying that it is a metaphysical precondition of human beings as such to be religious. To me you are saying ‘a priori’ that we are all religious by our nature; whether we recognize it or not. You imply that if one says one has no religious views then he is falsely rejecting his true metaphysical nature; you say not endorsing a religious view is a religion. N’est ce pas? What evidence do you have that we are all religious and maybe even by metaphysic necessity?
Although Monckton promoted (benignly) his religion in a solemn statement in the lead post, it does not exclude llikewise statements and discussions? It is up to Anthony and the moderators discretions and I respect their decisions.
“versus” means there is a reasonable question of there being a difference between science and religion . There is reasonable cause to compare and contrast. Science does not equal religion prima fascia. So we dialog on the differences so we entitle the argument “versus”. There is in the history of philosophy and the history of science an ample tradition in the discussion. Compatibility is part of dialog that is a reasonable topic; it also has a fine tradition.
I hope you are enjoying the holidays.
John

gnomish
December 29, 2012 1:42 pm

mr. courtenay has provided good definitions for the terms he’s using. it’s no problem to do logic with them. one may as well focus the argument on whether he’s speaking proper english or not- but that’s such a diversion from a simple topic.
as mr. whitman observed but did not make explicit, the terms are inventions that assume theism as the absolute and the negation of that is signified by the prefix attached ‘a-‘
it’s a common exploit to assert an agenda as an absolute in order to define skeptics as heretics.
but it’s also a lot of work to get anybody to learn an idiosyncratic form of a common language- for example, the word ‘theist’ could well be replaced by a term equivalent of ‘denier of objective causality’ by accepting reality as the absolute. why it hasn’t is because reality is not a parasite’s agenda, of course.
whitman, old boy- how about getting your site up and running? there are only a couple of individuals here who will be able to make sense of any discussion at this level. i’m not going to get any return on investment.

December 29, 2012 1:54 pm

gnomish:
Please stop your fatuous and off-topic posts. Your ridiculous post at December 29, 2012 at 1:09 pm is NOT a “revelation”: it is merely an expression of your lack of a religious experience.
Many people, including me, have such experience which we interpret to be religious. Does that fact give you a revelation? If not then ponder on why I think your post is ridiculous.
Richard

gnomish
December 29, 2012 2:54 pm

gee, mr. courtenay – can you please make up your mind?
a moment ago you were holding forth that atheism was a religious experience.
the supreme consolence of sublime ignorance is a fragile flower.
you really should not attempt to mix reason with faith – it trammels the bliss.
logic is a pollutant to faith. you must purify your mind.

December 29, 2012 3:18 pm

gnomish:
I repeat. Please desist from posting your ludicrous and off-topic nonsense. For example, your latest post (at December 29, 2012 at 2:54 pm ) is unmitigated twaddle that contains this gem of abject stupidity

logic is a pollutant to faith.

No! Logic is necessary to faith.
Superstition is a denial of logic as your posts demonstrate.
Richard

December 29, 2012 3:33 pm

John Whitman and Lewis P Buckingham:
I am replying to your two posts addressed to me at December 29, 2012 at 1:40 pm and December 29, 2012 at 2:40 pm. I intend no disrespect by addressing them both in this single reply but I am pressed for time and my answer to each of you is the same.
I appreciate that your posts do attempt a serious theological debate (which differs from some other recent posts in this thread). But, again, you are way off-topic.
The subject of this thread is important but has been completely usurped by people attempting to turn WUWT into a religious blog. There are appropriate places for such debates on the web but WUWT is not one of them. WUWT has an important function.
I am saddened that the important subject of this thread has been completely lost. And I consider it to be fortunate that I must now leave and will be unable to again get back to communications for about a week. Perhaps upon my return I shall then see some discussion of the thread’s subject has happened.
Richard

gnomish
December 29, 2012 4:23 pm

“Superstition is a denial of logic as your posts demonstrate.”
thanks! you’re making great progress! it was very courageous of you to make that concession.
only 11 more steps to go. good luck.

December 29, 2012 4:29 pm

richardscourtney says:
December 29, 2012 at 3:18 pm
gnomish:
I repeat. Please desist from posting your ludicrous and off-topic nonsense. For example, your latest post (at December 29, 2012 at 2:54 pm ) is unmitigated twaddle that contains this gem of abject stupidity
logic is a pollutant to faith.
No! Logic is necessary to faith.
Superstition is a denial of logic as your posts demonstrate.
Richard
=============
(I’m about at the limit of what my PC can handle on this thread.)
I quoteed this earlier:
“(Amplified Bible) 1Co 2:14 But the natural, nonspiritual man does not accept or welcome or admit into his heart the gifts and teachings and revelations of the Spirit of God, for they are folly (meaningless nonsense) to him; and he is incapable of knowing them [of progressively recognizing, understanding, and becoming better acquainted with them] because they are spiritually discerned and estimated and appreciated.”
Now I’ll quote this:
KJV Romans 6:11 Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.
The word “reckon” is the Greek word that means “to logically conclude”.
(I’m about to be “dumped on” and my PC’s slowness will make a response unlikely even if I was inclined to, but) Some just don’t want to know or don’t think they need to know.
“The image of God” is spirit. That’s what Adam lost, what “died”. Adam’s first son was in Adam’s image, not God’s. He had it on a conditional basis. Jesus the Christ came to make it available on an unconditional basis. The choice to accept is still up to us.

John Whitman
December 30, 2012 11:10 am

gnomish says:
December 29, 2012 at 1:42 pm
whitman, old boy- how about getting your site up and running?

– – – – – – –
gnomish,
Actually, the slowness in actively starting some posting and moderating of comments is caused by my lack of knowledge / experience with WP blog process and commands. Content of posts is not the critical path for getting my blog active.
At some point I may need to reach out for help from some experienced WP site bloggers / moderators who are very familiar with managing WP blogs . . . . .
John

John Whitman
December 30, 2012 11:26 am

richardscourtney says:
December 29, 2012 at 3:33 pm
John Whitman and Lewis P Buckingham:
I appreciate that your posts do attempt a serious theological debate (which differs from some other recent posts in this thread). But, again, you are way off-topic.

– – – – – – – –
Richardscourtney,
Whether Christopher Monckton’s religious statements in his lead post were sufficient justification for follow-on comments on religion is the decision of Anthony and the moderators.
I differ to Anthony’s and the moderator’s decision.
I only note that the dialog was relatively civil as such discussions go.
John

gnomish
December 30, 2012 1:41 pm

J. Whitman:
it may be true that the hardest thing to do is something one’s never done before – but we’re talking about a glorified BBS!
swimming is easier once you jump in.

December 30, 2012 2:50 pm

One last thing. (Really!) Someone mentioned the genealogies in Matthew and Luke are different. They are. Luke is Joseph’s lineage. Matthew is Mary’s. The word translated “husband” in “the husband of Mary” is the Greek word aner. In the NT it is mostly translated as “man”. The implication is a man of note. It’s used of John the Baptist. Context determines how it should be translated. “Father” could be a proper translation, depending on the context. Since the next verse says there were 14 generations from the carrying away unto Babylon and the Christ and if aner is translated “husband” you’d only have 13, then “father” is more accurate. Mary married a man who happened to have the same name as her Dad. In the Aramaic the word is “gbra” and has a similar usage.
No contradiction unless you want one.

December 30, 2012 3:15 pm

Monckton of Brenchley says:
December 29, 2012 at 5:39 am
“Phil” says the model simulations that led their creators in 2008 to write that 15 years or more without warming would indicate a discrepancy between the models’ predictions and observed reality were adjusted to remove the effects of the El Nino Southern Oscillation.

Good grief didn’t you learn about commas?
So they were: but the paper also points out that removing ENSO increases the discrepancy between predictions and observed reality.
Actually what they said was:
“ENSO-adjusted warming in the three surface temperature datasets over the last 2–25 yr continually lies within the 90% range of all similar-length ENSO-adjusted temperature changes in these simulations (Fig. 2.8b).
He also quibbles about Newton’s birthday. However, by the Calendar Reform Act of 1751 (not 1750, since he is being picky about dates),
No, I pointed out the errors in your post concerning the ‘Calendar (New Style) Act 1750’ which as usual you don’t acknowledge!
The Act can be found in the National Archives: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/apgb/Geo2/24/23/contents
Its first implementation was in 1751 which may be what has confused you, as a result 1751 was 282 days long.
11 days were taken out of the calendar to conform with reforms that Catholic Europe had adopted a couple of centuries previously. Therefore Newton was not born on Christmas Day (though, at the time, his parents thought he was).
Since there is no provision in the Act to retroactively change the dates prior to the Act Newton was indeed born on Christmas day, and Christmas church services were held on the same day as his birthday. You’ll find that the Russian Revolution is referred to as the ‘October Revolution’ despite the fact that it took place on Nov 7th (NS).
And he quibbles about what happened at Goose Green. My account comes directly from the 2IC in question.
And you must have mis-remembered most of it since it bears little resemblance to what happened, except for the fact that he prayed before deciding what to do. The surrender at the ‘redoubt’ on Darwin Hill where H Jones was killed was occasioned by Corporal Abols direct hit on the command bunker with a 66mm rocket! Shortly thereafter the Argentine troops raised the white flag and surrendered, the speech you described didn’t take place since Keeble hadn’t even got there yet. The larger surrender at Goose Green the following day took place after the written ultimatum was delivered by Argentine PoWs.

gnomish
December 30, 2012 7:24 pm

heh- phil – you missed the motherlode of perfidy.
invite mr courtney to provide further guidance.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/aug/29/margaret-thatcher-undermine-miners-union
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/107817
a commodious rat hole should have purple velvet draperies and gold brocade…and a place to hang a bowler hat.

December 31, 2012 2:51 am

“Phil” fails to understand the NOAA State of the Climate report. Once the influences of ENSO (which artificially warmed the world somewhat their period of study) are removed, the discrepancy between the models’ predictions and observed reality is still greater than when ENSO is not allowed for. What the authors said was: “The trend after removing ENSO … is 0.0 K … implying much greater disagreement with anticipated global temperature rise.”
“Phil” also continues to quibble about whether Newton was born on Christmas Day, December 25. His parents thought he was, but, astronomically speaking, they were wrong, as the subsequent correction to the calendar made clear. Whether or not the Act of 1751 that corrected the calendar applied the astronomically-correct dates retrospectively, they remain the astronomically-correct dates. Inferentially, this off-topic quibbling is intended to divert attention from the main point of the piece, which is that gloibal warming is not happening at the predicted rate and is not at all likely to do so, wherefore those who had previously believed in the New Religion will need to be let down as gently as possible.
Finally, he continues to quibble – again off-topic – about who surrendered to whom during a battle in the Falklands. I prefer to adhere to the account of the commander on the spot.
Mr. Oldberg wonders whether an “equilibrium” temperature has been found, but does not define “equilibrium”. In the climate models, “equilibrium” is taken to mean settlement of the climate following a forcing at a point in time where no further warming is likely to arise as a result of the forcing. Solomon et al. (2009) find that the time to equilibrium is 1000-3000 years, from which – if true – it would self-evidently follow that the equilibrium temperature in response to our forcing of the climate has not yet come to pass and cannot, therefore, have been observed.
The question arises, therefore, whether any of the temperature feedbacks which, in the models, account for the difference between the instantaneous climate-sensitivity parameter 0.3 Kelvin per Watt per square meter and the equilibrium parameter 0.9 Kelvin per Watt per square meter can themselves be either observed and measured directly or inferred to a sufficient precision by any theoretical method. However, not one of the feedbacks posited by the IPCC can be observed or measured directly, or reliably inferred by any theoretical method, or distinguished empirically either from any other feedback or from the forcing that triggered it, or – to take up a point mentioned by Professor Brown – established to a sufficient precision by the use of any probability theory, including Bayesian probabilities. For this reason, the feedbacks – and consequently the magnitude of equilibrium warming – are not Popper-falsifiable. Therefore, they are not logic, and they are not science. They are guesswork – and, as the head posting demonstrated, uneducated guesswork at that.
Without the feedbacks, there is no basis for any alarm about the climate. The adherents of the New Religion, realizing this, pin their hopes on the water-vapor feedback, which, they say, must be strongly net-positive because the Clausius-Clapeyron relation, one of the few proven results in the slippery physics of climatology, mandates that the space occupied by an atmosphere can carry near-exponentially more water vapor as it warms. However, merely because the atmosphere can carry more water vapor that is no proof that it does so. At present, precisely because water vapor is not a well-mixed greenhouse gas occurring at near-uniform partial pressures at all altitudes and latitudes (as CO2 is), we have no reliable method of measuring to what extent, if any, the partial pressure of water vapor in the atmosphere has increased. There is some evidence, for instance, to suggest that what evaporates up tends to precipitate down, and that what convects up tends to subside down. This last point is particularly important, since it is only in the upper troposphere that any accumulation of additional water vapor can cause warming: below the mid-troposphere, adding water vapor does not make much difference, since the principal absorption bands are close to saturation already. However, the upper troposphere would be expected to warm far less than the lower troposphere, and it is not clear that the models have correctly represented this altitudinal distinction.
In any event, the water vapor feedback cannot be measured; the mean atmospheric partial pressure of water vapor cannot be measured; and there is, therefore, no empirical method of establishing whether an atmosphere that can hold more water vapor as it warms actually does so. Yet again, therefore, the assumptions made by the models are not Popper-falsifiable. Again, they are guesswork. And guesswork is not logic; nor, therefore, is it science. Since it is only guesswork, if there were a “consensus” in support of it then that “consensus” would be assenting to a guess. Fortunately, there is no such “consensus”, or climate science would be in an even worse state than it is. And in any event, argument from consensus is the logical fallacy of the argumentum ad populum, the head-count fallacy, and any such argument is unscientific a priori.

December 31, 2012 8:30 am

Monckton of Brenchley (Dec. 31, 2012 at 2:51 am):
Well said! It follows from the lack of observability of the equilibrium temperature and from conclusions reached in information theory that knowing the change in the logarithm of the CO2 concentration provides a policy maker with no information about the change in the equilibrium temperature. The existence of the equilibrium climate sensitivity (TECS) implies that knowing the change in the logarithm of the CO2 concentration provides a policy maker with perfect information but knowing it provides him or her with no information. By implying the existence of TECS, global warming climatologists have fabricated 100% of the information that policy makers think they have for the purpose of making policy.

rgbatduke
December 31, 2012 9:33 am

Please stop your fatuous and off-topic posts. Your ridiculous post at December 29, 2012 at 1:09 pm is NOT a “revelation”: it is merely an expression of your lack of a religious experience.
I really was going to try to quit, but it is like crack cocaine — there is always the hope that the next time I try a bit of light will glimmer through.
The unequal distribution of religious experience among the human population is itself evidence that there is no such thing as a just God.
I’ve been watching the TV show Saving Grace rather avidly on Netflix over break. The thesis of the story is that a “Last Chance Angel” personally intervenes with Grace Hanadarko, a police lieutenant detective in the Oklahoma City police department. The angel “Earl” actually appears to Grace and a variety of others for whom he is a last chance angel, trying gently to turn Grace from her violent rejection of God (on the basis more of theodicy than simple lack of belief in God in the first place — she refuses to worship or ask for help from an apparently evil God who permits the horror she has lived and deals with in her job so that even having a manifestly real, verifiable angel isn’t enough to do the trick). On the good side, Earl is remarkably laid back about which God one worships — any of them will do — and even appears cool with honest atheism. On the bad side, some people get angels, some don’t, and even in this story there is the theme that one’s salvation is predestined and that some don’t make it.
Which is not just. Nor does it make the slightest bit of sense.
People do rationalize this in a wide variety of ways. None of the rationalizations really work, although the serial immortality of Hinduism or Buddhism has at least the possibility of being symmetrized, especially if one views it not as serial immortality but as simultaneous immortality, where you must live through every experience of life over all time (which amazingly enough, ends up being just).
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rgbatduke
December 31, 2012 10:07 am

And you must have mis-remembered most of it since it bears little resemblance to what happened, except for the fact that he prayed before deciding what to do.
In addition, this is not valid evidence of divine intervention. Indeed, it suggests that God is on the side of Englishmen — not the Argentines — as usual in countries with a nominal state religion. Do you think that the Argentinians failed to pray and that’s why they lost? Do you think that one side or the other has some sort of divinely sanctioned right to the Falklands (one of the things I hate most about religion is this ludicrous notion that God has given this group or that group some plot of land to the exclusion of all others)? Do you think that the Jews failed to pray for deliverance from Hitler? Do you think that the Iraqis of both sides failed to pray to Allah? Do you think that Oliver Cromwell failed to pray to God before he lost his head?
Or is it just no true scotsman — they didn’t really pray properly, because if they had it would have worked. This was used to brutal effect when my sister-in-law was dying of breast cancer at the age of 45, leaving behind two small children. Some of her most Christian of friends literally accused her of not having enough faith since her affliction was not going away.
To provide even weak evidence of intervention, one would have to perform double blind, placebo controlled experiments and observe some sort of statistical correlation between prayer and outcome not in the past (where the survivors write the history books and can always attribute their past success to God(s)) but in the future in specific circumstances. When such studies have been conducted by the medical profession in true double blind fashion (eliminating the placebo effect) they have consistently produced a null result.
I don’t have to remind you of the dangers of cherry picking and confirmation bias when looking at a favored solution to any hypothesis or question. God doesn’t get an ontological pass. Or rather he is often given one by those that wish to use cherrypicking and confirmation bias or appeal to personal experience (a.k.a. anecdotal evidence), usually of a purely mental and utterly non-verifiable sort, but It should not be given one. We don’t have two sets of rules for deciding probable truth — one for religion/god and one for matters of fact, not if one wishes to consider god a matter of fact as opposed to metaphor.
I am very fond of the notion of God as a mythopoeic metaphor, and view most religious scripture as such. Some of the metaphor is good, because it is embedded in entertaining teaching tales that convey some moral lesson. Saving Grace is wonderful in that regard. Earl the angel becomes a visible manifestation of an interior monologue (one that works a continuous string of improbable miracles, but that’s part of the “magic” of a story as opposed to reality where this never happens), working out the religious philosophy the authors of the show wish to convey, which is actually a surprisingly lovely one.
I can write this stuff too — The Book of Lilith is precisely such a religious/philosophical mythopoeic extended metaphor. In it God(dess) is presented essentially as Brahman, or the unifying sentient spirit of all things that is common to monist religions or monist interpretations of nominally non-monist religions. If there is a sentient Universal God, this is really the only thing that makes sense. This isn’t quite a solution to the problem of theodicy, but it comes as close as one can get — if nothing else God is every suffering being ane experiences first hand all the joy and pain of every additional life, and even cruelty becomes a single Dog biting its own tail.
It leaves a serious question as to why the Dog bites its own tail given that it presumably hurts. I attempt to answer that question, both in The Book of Lilith and in Lulea (linked above).
That doesn’t mean that I believe that even my own “explanations” in these metaphors is true — I can actually distinguish between probable truth and metaphor, even when I write the latter myself. I start the book out with the usual “This is a work of fiction, and all people and gods portrayed are strictly imaginary”. It doesn’t work! I still get people asking me if this part or that part is true. Many people want to believe so very much that they blur the cognitive line between fantasy and reality; myth, metaphor, magic and reality. Lying, lunacy and lordship are confused, the possibility of legend is ignored.
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rgbatduke
December 31, 2012 10:31 am

You seem to have misread me. I do not dispute one’s ability to observe a temperature or to average temperatures observed at varying locations or times. I do dispute one’s ability to observe an equilibrium temperature. If you believe an equilibrium surface air temperature has been observed, please share with me a citation to this result.
But this isn’t the relevant quantity, since the Earth is a non-equilibrium (open dynamical) chaotic system. It has an instantaneous state, as I pointed out, and various state variables — such as albedo, average surface temperature, lower tropospheric temperature, are observable and computable with statistical precision from measured data given a clear definition. Within the stochastic ordinary integrodifferential equations that describe the time evolution of this state (which is not an equilibrium as it is constantly moving around!) there are feedback terms. Your specific claim to which I took exception is that climate feedbacks are unknowable or not falsifiable, and this is not true. The lack of an observable equilibrium is irrelevant and obvious.
To put it in a way that you may or may not understand, we can measure/compute the instantaneous (and coarse grained averaged) values of a variety of climate state variables with meaningful error estimates. We can hypothesize dynamical systems of equations that produce, from a non-Markovian past history of those variable plus physics-based dynamical hypotheses. Those dynamical systems can produce (stochastic, because our knowledge of state and dynamics is imperfect) the local potential and by differentiation the forces that move the climate state variables around. The physical parameters of many of these dynamical open models include “feedbacks” from one aspect of state acting on another in a nonlinear manner.
In many cases those equations, in a mean field approximation, will have a corresponding global potential with minima along projections onto a state variable that can be interpreted as “equilbrium” of that variable, but since the shape of that surface is a nonlinear function of the state variables in toto, this is at best associated with a partial derivative in that variable and at worst as one changes that variable globally the entire hypersurface shifts. Plus noise!
Climate is a difficult problem. But not an “unknowable” or “unsolvable/unfalsifiable” one, provided that one is sufficiently precise in how one formulates the solution attempts that must be compared to future experience. A good, plausible climate model can be judge by the same criterion we use to judge any other similar stochastic integrodifferential system in physics — if it has modest predictive value (withing the bounds dictated by noise in the stochastic portions of the equations) then it isn’t verified or falsified, but it is plausible and reasonable and useful. The less predictive it is within these bounds, the more likely it is that some aspect of the model is incorrect. What is irrational or unscientific about that?
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[As the math becomes more and more involved, would they not evolve into twisted spirally “integrowdifferential” equations? 8<) Mod]

December 31, 2012 12:03 pm

rgbatduke:
In the record of this thread, I do not find a claim made by me that “climate feedbacks are unknowable or not falsifiable” and I do not believe such a claim to be true. I do claim that “The IPCC suggestion of 3.3 deg C per doubling has the additional shortcoming of being non-falsifiable. This conclusion follows from the non-observability of the equilibrium temperature.” I gather that we agree on the non-observability of the equilibrium temperature. I gather, then, that the source of disagreement is my claim that “This conclusion follows…”
If the “3.3 deg C” were an instantaneous or average temperature, then my conclusion would not follow from the non-observability of the equilibrium temperature; that the 3.3 deg C is an instantaneous or average temperature seems to be what you think. However, the IPCC defines the climate sensitivity (aka the equilibrium climate sensitivity) as “the equilibrium global mean surface temperature change following a doubling of atmospheric CO2 concentration” ( http://ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch8s8-6.html ). “3.3. C” is the change in the equilibrium temperature NOT the change in the instantaneous or average temperature ( http://ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch10s10-5.html#box-10-2 ). Thus, my claim that “This conclusion follows…” is true and your counterclaim is false.

December 31, 2012 1:27 pm

Professor Brown, in his continuing, spectacularly muddled and rather tendentious campaign against Christianity, misinterprets my telling of the story of the British commander who prayed and then telephoned the Argentinians he was facing and invited them to surrender, which they did. The point of the story had nothing whatsoever to do with the “divine intervention” mentioned by the Professor: it was that one can win battles by diplomacy rather than by brute force, and diplomacy sometimes works. The point of the head posting was that we must let down the true-believers in the New Religion of global warming gently now that their credo has been proven defective.

Greg House
December 31, 2012 3:33 pm

Monckton of Brenchley says, December 31, 2012 at 1:27 pm: “Professor Brown, in his continuing, spectacularly muddled and rather tendentious campaign against Christianity, misinterprets my telling of the story of the British commander who prayed and then telephoned the Argentinians he was facing and invited them to surrender, which they did. The point of the story had nothing whatsoever to do with the “divine intervention” mentioned by the Professor: it was that one can win battles by diplomacy rather than by brute force, and diplomacy sometimes works….”
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But Christopher, you clearly did imply “divine intervention”. Not everyone has a short memory. This is what you told us on this thread (December 25, 2012 at 11:40 am):
“His no. 2 found himself unexpectedly in command and decided to pray. (Did I say it was Christmas?) The answer came to him at once and he told his sparky to patch him through to the Argentinian commander.
“Now, look here, old boy,” he said in his most authoritative, cut-glass, public-school-and-Sandhurst drawl, “We both know how this is going to end. So what I’m going to suggest is this. You all lay down your arms like good chaps …”

December 31, 2012 5:03 pm

Diplomacy is not a bad option when you’re outnumbered, low on ammo, haven’t slept for 60 hrs etc. worked spectacularly in that case!

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