How the profiteers who market Thermageddon offend against the principles of formal logic
Guest post by Monckton of Brenchley
LOGIC is the heartbeat of all true learning – the soul of the Classics, the Sciences and Religion. Once everyone studied the Classics, to know that in logic there is a difference between true and false; the Sciences, to discern where it lies; and Religion, to appreciate why it matters. Today, few study all three empires of the mind. Fewer study the ordered beauty of the logic at their heart.
Is Private Fraser’s proposition that “We’re a’ doomed!” logical? I say No. G.K. Chesterton once wrote: “When men have ceased to believe in Christianity, it is not that they will believe in nothing. They will believe in anything.” The belief that Thermageddon will arise from our altering 1/3000th of the atmosphere in a century is in-your-face illogical, rooted in a dozen fallacies marked out by Aristotle as the commonest in human discourse.
“Consensus” is the New Religion’s central fallacy. Arguing blindly from consensus is the head-count fallacy, the argumentum ad populum. Al-Haytham, founder of the scientific method, wrote: “The seeker after truth does not put his faith in any mere consensus. Instead, he checks.”
Two surveys have purported to show 97% of climate scientists supporting the supposed “consensus”. In both, 97% agreed little more than that the world has warmed since 1950. So what? One involved just 79 scientists, hardly a scientific sample size. Neither was selected to eliminate bias. Neither asked whether manmade global warming was at all likely to prove catastrophic – a question expecting the answer “No.”
Claiming that the “consensus” is one of revered experts is the argumentum ad verecundiam, the fallacy of appeal to authority. T.H. Huxley said in 1860, “The improver of natural knowledge absolutely refuses to acknowledge authority, as such. For him, scepticism is the highest of duties: blind faith the one unpardonable sin.”
Believers talk of a “consensus of evidence”. Yet evidence cannot hold opinions. Besides, there has been no global warming for 18 years; sea level has risen for eight years at just 1.3 in/century; notwithstanding Sandy, hurricane activity is at its least in the 33-year satellite record; ocean heat content is rising four and a half times more slowly than predicted; global sea-ice extent has changed little; Himalayan glaciers have not lost ice; and the U.N.’s 2005 prediction of 50 million “climate refugees” by 2010 was absurd. The evidence does not support catastrophism.
Believers say: “Only if we include a strong warming effect from CO2 can we explain the past 60 years’ warming. We know of no other reason.” This is the argumentum ad ignorantiam, the fundamental fallacy of argument from ignorance. Besides, natural variability is reason enough.
They say: “Global warming is accelerating, so we are to blame.” Even if warming were accelerating, this non sequitur is an instance of the argumentum ad causam falsam, the fallacy of arguing from a false cause. They go on to say: “CO2 concentration has risen; warming has occurred; the former caused the latter.” This is the post hoc ergo propter hoc sub-species of the same fallacy.
They say: “What about the cuddly polar bears?” This is the argumentum ad misericordiam, the fallacy of needless pity. There are five times as many polar bears as there were in the 1940s – hardly, as you may think, the profile of a species at imminent threat of extinction. No need to pity the bears, and they are not cuddly.
They say: “We tell the models there will be strong CO2- driven warming. And, yes, the models predict it.” This is the fallacy of arguing in circles, the argumentum ad petitionem principii, where the premise is the conclusion.
They say: “Global warming caused extra-tropical storm Sandy.” This inappropriate argument from the general to the particular is the argumentum a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid, the fallacy of accident. Individual extreme events cannot be ascribed to global warming.
They say: “Melting Arctic sea ice is a symptom of global warming.” This unsound argument from the particular to the general is the argumentum a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, the fallacy of converse accident. Arctic sea ice is melting, but the Antarctic has cooled for 30 years and the sea ice there is growing, so the decline in Arctic sea ice does not indicate a global problem.
They say: “Monckton says he’s a member of the House of Lords, but the Clerk says he isn’t, so he’s not credible.” This is the argumentum ad hominem, a shoddy sub- species of ignoratio elenchi, the fundamental red-herring fallacy of ignorance of how a true argument is conducted.
They say: “We don’t care what the truth is. We want more power, tax and regulation. Global warming is our pretext. If you disagree, we will haul you before the International Climate Court.” This is the nastiest of all logical fallacies: the argumentum ad baculum, the argument of force.
These numerous in-your-face illogicalities provoke four questions: Has the Earth warmed as predicted? If not, why not? What if I am wrong? And what if I am right?
Q1. Has the Earth warmed as predicted? In 1990 the IPCC predicted that the world would now be warming at 0.3 Cº/decade, and that by now more than 0.6 Cº warming would have occurred. The outturn was less than half that: just 0.14 Cº/decade and 0.3 Cº in all.
In 2008 leading modellers wrote:
“The simulations rule out (at the 95% level) zero trends for intervals of 15 years or more, suggesting that an absence of warming of this duration is needed to create a discrepancy with the observed warming rate.”
Yet the linear trend on the Hadley/CRU monthly global temperature anomalies for the 18 years 1995-2012 shows no statistically-significant warming, even though the partial pressure of CO2 rose by about a tenth in that time.
The modellers’ own explicit criterion proves their scary predictions exaggerated. Their vaunted “consensus” was wrong. Global warming that was predicted for tomorrow but has not occurred for 18 years until today cannot have caused Sandy or Bopha yesterday, now, can it?
Q2: Why was the “consensus” wrong? Why do the models exaggerate? The climate-sensitivity equation says warming is the product of a forcing and a sensitivity parameter. Three problems: the modellers’ definition of forcing is illogical; their assumptions about the sensitivity parameter are not falsifiable; and their claims that their long-term predictions of doom are reliable are not only empirically disproven but theoretically insupportable.
Modellers define forcing as the net down-minus-up flux of radiation at the tropopause, with surface temperature fixed. Yet forcings change surface temperature. So the definition offends against the fundamental postulate of logic that a proposition and its converse cannot coexist. 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.
Direct warming is little more than 1 Cº per CO2 doubling, well within natural variability. It is not a crisis. So the modellers introduce amplifying or “positive” temperature feedbacks, which, they hope, triple the direct warming from CO2. Yet this dubious hypothesis is not Popper- falsifiable, so it is not logic and not science. Not one of the imagined feedbacks is either empirically measurable or theoretically determinable by any reliable method. As an expert reviewer for the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report, I have justifiably excoriated its net-positive feedbacks as guesswork – uneducated guesswork at that.
For there is a very powerful theoretical reason why the modellers’ guess that feedbacks triple direct warming is erroneous. The closed-loop feedback gain implicit in the IPCC’s climate-sensitivity interval 3.3[2.0, 4.5] Cº per CO2 doubling falls on the interval 0.62[0.42, 0.74]. However, process engineers building electronic circuits, who invented feedback mathematics, tell us any loop gain much above zero is far too near the singularity – at a loop gain of 1 – in the feedback-amplification function.
At high gain, 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 inconsistent with a loop gain anywhere near as close to the singularity as modellers’ estimates imply.
Surface temperature changes little, for homoeostatic conditions prevail. The atmosphere’s lower bound, the ocean, is a vast heat-sink 1100 times denser than the air: one reason why 3000 bathythermographs deployed in 2006 have detected no significant ocean warming. The atmosphere’s upper bound is outer space, to which any excess heat radiates harmlessly away. Homoeostasis, then, is what we should expect, and it is what we get. Thus the climatic loop gain cannot much exceed zero, so the warming at CO2 doubling will be a harmless 1 Cº.
Yet the overriding difficulty in trying to model the climate is that it behaves as a chaotic object. We can never measure 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 the evolution of all objects that behave chaotically. Therefore, reliable, very-long-term modelling of future climate states is unattainable a priori.
The IPCC tries to overcome this actually insuperable Lorenz constraint on modelling by estimating climate sensitivity via a probability-density function. Yet PDFs require more, not less, information than simple estimates flanked by error-whiskers, and are still less likely to be reliable. The modellers are guessing. Their guesses have been proven wrong. Yet they continue to demand our acquiescence in an imagined (and imaginary) consensus.
Q3: What if I am wrong? If so, we must travel from physics to 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 cost of failing to prevent warming of that order this century will be about 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 typical CO2-mitigation schemes as cost-ineffective as Australia’s carbon tax would be 48 times greater than the cost of later adaptation. At a zero discount rate, the cost of acting now exceeds that of adapting in the future 36 times over.
How so? Australia emits just 1.2% of Man’s CO2, of which Ms. Gillard aims to cut 5% this decade, abating 0.06% of global emissions by 2020. Then CO2 concentration will fall from a predicted 410 μatm to 409.988 μatm. In turn predicted temperature will fall by 0.00006 Cº. But the cost will be $130 billion ($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 thus be ineffective: measures expensive enough to be effective will be unaffordable. Since the premium vastly exceeds the cost of the risk, don’t insure. That is a precautionary principle worthy of the name.
Q4: What if I am right? When I am proven right, the Climate Change Department will be swept away; Britain’s annual deficit will fall by a fifth; the bat-blatting, bird- blending windmills that scar our green and pleasant land will go; the world will refocus on real environmental problems like deforestation on land, overfishing at sea and pollution of the air; the U.N.’s ambition to turn itself into a grim, global dictatorship with overriding powers of taxation and economic and environmental intervention will be thwarted; and the aim of science to supplant true religion as the world’s new, dismal, cheerless credo will be deservedly, decisively, definitively defeated.
Any who say “I believe” are not scientists, for true scientists say “I wonder”. We require – nay, we demand – more awe and greater curiosity from our scientists, and less political “correctness” and co-ordinated credulity.
To the global classe politique, the placemen, bureaucrats, academics, scientists, journalists and enviros who have profiteered at our expense by peddling Thermageddon, I say this. The science is in; the truth is out; Al Gore is through; the game is up; and the scare is over.
To those scientists who aim to end the Age of Reason and Enlightenment, I say this. Logic stands implacable in your path. We will never let you have your new Dark Age.
To men of goodwill, lovers of logic, I say this. It is our faculty of reason, the greatest of the soul’s three powers, that marks us out from the beasts and brings us closest in likeness to our Creator, the Lord of Life and Light. We will never let the light of Reason be snuffed out.
Do not go gentle to that last goodnight – Rage, rage against the dying of the light!
“Modellers define forcing as the net down-minus-up flux of radiation at the tropopause, with surface temperature fixed. Yet forcings change surface temperature.”
In some alternative universe, they define forcing as net down-minus-up flux of radiation after surface temperatures have equilibrated. Since once temperatures have equilibrated, the radiation budget will be in balance, down flux = up flux, the forcing under this definition is always zero. Yes, zero solar forcing, zero cosmic ray forcing, and a big fat zero CO2 forcing. Surely a place where Monckton could feel at home. Of course, changing the definition of forcing to make it useless, does not affect the physics of reality…
Poems of Our Climate says:
January 6, 2013 at 2:13 pm
Buuckner8, that’s more reasonable than the average statement about religion but I’d have to say: still incomplete. There are theists of many sorts, some are superstitious, others may know things you don’t. You have no proof whatsoever that others don’t have knowledge in a way that you would consider implausible.
There are many people that know things I don’t; that doesn’t make their thoughts on theism any more or less valid about ANYTHING, so what’s your point? My point is very simple: What is their proof re: their Theism? Why do they believe in said Theism? If their proof meets the Scientific Method, then I’d be a fool to deny, right?
From here, we can “philosophize” about the merits of keeping secrets (even if said secrets are 100% science, only known to that single person!) Does the scientific method require independent verification? Not specifically. We humans have added that requirement after the fact, because we are inherently skeptical. The secret holder might have many scientific truths in their head, but what good are those thoughts if not shared with humanity?
“For greed all nature is too little” – Seneca
Most powerful when combined with pride.
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Bruckner8,
Atheism is trite theological terminology and the secular man should reject. I do. Forget Atheism. I think religion is not natural based on a rational assessment thus I have logically identified it as mere supernaturalism and superstition. It is irrelevant to the merely secular man. I am that merely secular man.
I think your statement that someone like me is religious means you endorse a false and irrational philosophical position like the following which you share with richardscourtney:
Has a supernatural being informed you that all of his children, secular or religious, believe in supernaturalism? Please explain the source of your omniscience claim that everyman profoundly believes in or has faith in the supernatural.
I am sincerely interested in the source of your views.
John
Christopher Monckton,
In an earlier comment to you on this thread I addressed almost total agreement on the secular part of your post. Your secular focused discourse was eloquent.
The religious (supernatural) focused part of your post lacks internally consistent logic and it misidentifies the metaphysical/epistemological status of supernaturalism. However, your most self-refuting aspect of your religious statement is that it is merely irrelevant to professional and objective scientific pursuit and achievement, per se.
Why is irrelevancy the most grievous part of your and any religious statements wrt science? It has to do with the purity of integration needed in the reasoning process required by the scientific process. To introduce the prima fascia irrelevancy of supernaturalism into the scientific process weakens its epistemological integrity (its pure integrated-ness).
I think you sense this introduction of the supernaturally irrelevant provokes the secular members of this forum, and I think you do so intentionally. I significantly disrespect you for that.
John
Anthony, please don’t ban Rat Pavisio, She is so out there its almost painfully funny to read. But I will not grace her site with the traffic she so desperately trolls for here.
And you might admit that occasional exposure of her kind of extremism is as useful to the case for reason, as the public lunacy of Mann.
rgb, every statement requires proof, even “an absence of belief.” In fact, that is a lingual copout and nothing more. The mere act of DECIDING that you have an absence of belief, means that you DO NOT BELIEVE, and thus must prove why you don’t believe. The word “belief” itself should be enough to make that clear.
Say these two phrases out loud, if you must:
1) “I do not know.”
2) “I have an absence of belief.”
Which sounds logically skeptical to you?
Pat Ravasio says:
January 6, 2013 at 10:45 am
“After all your rambling, you still do not answer the most basic of questions: Why is it not a good thing to develop alternative energies? What is the harm in cleaning up the environment?”
You, Pat Ravasio are clearly the one to lead us in the path of righteousness.
Excellent article. I really love the miriad connections to the classic logical fallacies.
By the way, tapped maple trees today. Excellent flow and decent sugar content at 2.5%. So far the global warming predictions of declining maple syrup production aren’t holding true either.
The basis for modellers is to get a job and get paid.
The only ones on the marked with the funds are the UNFCCC conform nations?
Michael Palmer says:
January 6, 2013 at 2:12 pm
@FrankK
“… ‘thermageddon’ is not empirical science but model gymnastics …”
—
Models are not useless per se. Only if they are formulated in an overly general manner, so that they are compatible with all possible experimental outcomes, do they become useless. This is the criterion of falsifiability.
———————————————————————————————————————
Did I say (all) models are useless? No I am simply stating climate model manipulation is invalid and flawed/fudged. Please note that my bread and butter was for the last 40 years based on developing and running models in another discipline of earth sciences.
How rare it is today to see a renaissance man in action.
And on a point of pedantry …
davidmhoffer says:
January 6, 2013 at 11:33 am
That is the problem we face today. People believe in magic. With apologies to Arthur C Clarke, any sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from science.
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Almost! It’s the wrong way round.
“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”
James Abbott sez: January 6, 2013 at 12:35 pm
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Something de la Willis:
“A particularly ignorant comment from Monckton: ”
*********************************************
James Abbot then vomits a flood of ignorance:
“CFCs and HCFCs are even more trace constituents of our atmosphere, but their impact has been very significant in depleting ozone, particularly at high latitudes”
No, not “particularly at high latitudes”, but over the poles and nowhere else. The depletion is due to the intense cold of the polar winter, not to CFCs or HCFCs. The intense cold creates the complex, imperfectly understood conditions for depletion of ozone at the dawn of polar spring. The role of CFCs and HCFCs is subordinate to the intense cold. This depletion is entirely replenished in a few weeks as stratospheric circulation is restored by warming of the polar atmosphere. Nowhere else is ozone depletion detected, even though CFCs and HCFCs are found everywhere.
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“Trace metals in the human body are also essential – without them we die.”
Wrong again, typical irrelevance by an alarmist who confuses the atmosphere with the human body and confuses irrelevance with science.
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“CO2 is a natural greenhouse gas at trace levels, but without any CO2 in the atmosphere not only would the biosphere be in trouble but in terms of climate the Earth would be in a permanent ice-age, all other things being equal.”
Congratulations, you are only half ignorant this time, but that half is the worst yet. Have you never seen the CO2 lag from the ice cores?
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“Anyway, Moncktons qualifications to make these sweeping assumptions are … ?”
He does not have warming on the brain, a dangerous and debilitating condition that obliterates the intellect.
Regards, mpainter
Actually the main reason for a depletion of O3 over the poles late in their winters is that there has been no sun to split up O2 to make any . With or without CFCs O3 has a very finite half life .
So, PT has not been read in detail and with understanding, or Jaynes is being disputed. Yep, a “binary”! Taleb makes much of the professorate “teaching birds to fly.”
davidmhoffer:
In response to my plea that everybody should ignore the several attempts to distract this thread by use of the ‘red herring’ of atheists promoting their religion, your post at January 6, 2013 at 2:36 pm says I am “wrong” and addresses me with
I was NOT ‘taking sides’.
The evangelical atheists destroyed the recent thread at
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/12/25/bethlehem-and-the-rat-hole-problem/
where I tried to set an example by refusing to engage with them and near the end of the thread (at at January 3, 2013 at 6:29 pm) Lewis P Buckingham said he was unaware if I “had a religion”.
It is important that evangelism of atheism or any other religion NOT be permitted to destroy this thread in like manner.
Richard
@Soylent; hence the apologies to Arthur C. Clarke. The poster said what he meant.
I refer all to Humpty Dumpty’s dialogue with Alice on semantics and rhetoric:
“Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. “Of course you don’t—till I tell you. I meant ‘there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!’ ”
“But [it] doesn’t mean ‘a nice knock-down argument’,” Alice objected.
“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.”
“The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”
“The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master that’s all.”
John Whitman says:
January 6, 2013 at 3:13 pm
Bruckner8,
Atheism is trite theological terminology and the secular man should reject. I do. Forget Atheism. I think religion is not natural based on a rational assessment thus I have logically identified it as mere supernaturalism and superstition. It is irrelevant to the merely secular man. I am that merely secular man.
I think your statement that someone like me is religious means you endorse a false and irrational philosophical position
I’m way more simple than that. I don’t go off in metaphysical directions, nor do I care to study the theological mysticism or history. Atheism is nothing more than a logical NOT operator, ie, NOT THEISM. The definition of theism is clear, right? lol. Again, I don’t wish to get into supernatural causes/effects/affects. Heck, even the word “supernatural” removes science from the debate…it’s above nature.
This is purely logic for me…nothing more, nothing less. The source of one’s theism is not in question, unless the source is used as assumption in one’s argument.
On the other hand, if people are compelled to use their faith (Theism or Anti-Theism) to make OTHER arguments, then I’ll call them out, as I’ve done here.
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Doug Huffman,
The ‘demarcation problem’ publically stated by Popper in a lecture in 1953 can be considered the criterion for a demarking line between science and pseudo-science.
It has had some surprising critics. Some say it does not in practice achieve its goal of screening. Others say that it is incorrect about what the scientific process is and therefore it is moot. Others say it cannot logically be defended due to internal inconsistency about its claims. Others say it is tied with the falsity of Analytic philosophy and their progeny Logical Positivist philosophy. I am putting together a small summary of the critics that I have encountered. It is a slow work in progress. I will post it when it is done, hope sooner than later.
John
Michael Palmer says:
January 6, 2013 at 11:51 am
“This applies to logic also – on its own, logic alone does not allow us to mount a case against some contention of empirical science (such as “thermaggedon”). Only if such a contention could be shown to logically contradict itself would there be “a logical case” against it.”
Your two sentences contradict one another. Many a new theory contains an inconsistency in its several hypotheses. Logic alone can find those inconsistencies and rid us of them. At least one hypothesis is identified as a false hypothesis of empirical science.
The logician’s standard twist on Hamlet’s caution to Horatio reads: “What I fear, Horatio, is that there are more things in my philosophy than there are between heaven and earth.”
One simple inconsistency in a theory implies not only all things between heaven and earth but all things whatsoever.
Bravo!!!!!
http://marinas.com/view/inlet/1668_Beaufort_Harbor_Inlet_NC_United_States
Isn’t this pic from the Sea Serpent guy ? I see it up near the little sailboat.
Bruckner8,
Simple can work too.
A = one who has natural understanding of the nature that is one’s natural experience as exclusive basis of knowledge
B = one who has supernatural understanding of a supernatural realm/being as basis of knowledge
A=A yes. B=B yes. A=B no.
Now tell me the answer to my previous question to you. Where do you get your omniscience that all ‘A’ must be ‘B’. What possible ‘a priori’ do you say justifies in your conclusion?
John
@Doug Huffman says:
January 6, 2013 at 4:02 pm
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The answer is in the Rev. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson’s ‘Symbolic Logic’.
Apparently Queen Victoria, after reading Alice in Wonderland, asked for Lewis Carroll’s next book. The book he sent her was ‘The Condensation of Determinants, Being a New and Brief Method for Computing their Arithmetical Values’.
As to the question of GOD , many on this thread seem to hate the very mention of such . Who are they trying to convince ? Monckton of Benchley is eloquent as usual .
I was wrong in my spelling of Monckton of Brenchley , sorry no disrespect intended .