Lewandowsky's bear-baiting behavior

Skeptic Baiting and Academic Misconduct

Guest post by Tom Fuller, writing at The Lukewarmer’s Way

I see here at Watts Up With That that Australian professor Stephan Lewandowsky has teamed up with other climate activists to publish a paper designed to make skeptics look like flat-earth mouth breathers unfit for polite society. As I know from personal experience that this is not true for the majority of skeptics I have met in person or online, I feel a response is in order.

A 17th century engraving on bear-baiting
A 17th century engraving on bear-baiting (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I encountered Professor Lewandowsky last year when he used a horribly constructed push poll to gather opinions from skeptics about their belief in various conspiracies. Unfortunately, the opinions he received were from climate activists, many recruited from his current co-author John Cook’s weblog Skeptical Science, who took the poll while pretending to be skeptics and posted fraudulent responses. As Professor Lewandowsky discussed the poll with potential respondents while it was still active, it’s possible that he effectively encouraged fraudulent responses and hence may be guilty of academic misconduct.

Sadly, much of Lewandowsky et al’s current paper references that project and a paper that details it. The paper is described as ‘in press.’ Perhaps a more accurate description is dead and buried, never to see the light of day.

Other than a confession of sloppy science and unethical behavior, I fail to see what that project could have produced in the way of furthering human understanding of the mind, human nature or any other form of science.

As a non-skeptic I feel the strong desires to a) defend skeptics as not fitting Lewandowsky’s description and b) slap him across the face for contributing to the cheapening of the already debased nature of climate conversations. So we’ll put Matt Ridley’s remaining six questions on hold for a moment while we discuss this.

The paper is titled “Recursive fury: Conspiracist ideation in the blogosphere in response to research on conspiracist ideation”.  It is published in a journal titled Frontiers in Personality Science and Individual Differences, a publication I had not heard of prior to this morning. The paper is 57 pages long, so my comments are based on a cursory reading. Lewandowsky was joined by John Cook, principal contributor to the climate activist weblog Skeptical Science and Klaus Oberauer, who has collaborated with Lewandowsky frequently.

Lewandowsky maintains a weblog here. As I mentioned above, I have prior experience with him. In 2012 he published a series of posts on conspiracy ideation. When I criticized his methodology he deleted about 50 comments I made. Perhaps I’ll discuss that episode further–Steve McIntyre blogged about the incident here.

Again, this paper is a description of the reaction of bloggers and commenters to the flawed project I described above. He seems to think it noteworthy that its flaws were pointed out to him on various weblogs, including his own. He actually writes that pointing out his shoddy work is evidence of conspiracist ideation.

His first ‘error’ in describing his previous project in his current paper occurs on page 7 of this paper. He is describing the methodology of how he conducted the poll meant to uncover conspiracy thinking on the part of skeptics. He writes,

“Lewandowsky et al. placed links to their study on a number of climate blogs with a pro-science orientation but a diverse audience of readers, including a notable proportion of climate \skeptics. The survey queried people’s belief in the free market (which previous research had identi ed as an important predictor of the rejection of climate science; Heath & Gi ord, 2006), their acceptance of climate science, their acceptance of other scienti c propositions such as the link between HIV and AIDS, and most important in the present context, conspiracist ideation.”

That is not true. Links to his survey were published on climate activist weblogs. Far from having diverse audiences, those blogs are frequented almost exclusively by other climate activists. Both Lewandowsky and the blog administrators discussed the purpose of the survey and conveyed with a nudge and a wink that it would be great fun for activists to pretend to be skeptics and sign up for all the outlandish theories they could.

As the survey methodology was so clumsily constructed there was no way of preventing or even monitoring this–and that may have been intentional, given Professor Lewandowsky’s lengthy experience in the field, having published 140 papers.

Worse yet, respondents from different weblogs were shown different versions of the questionnaire and no attempt was made to stratify the data by source. It really is very poor research design to have labored so mightily and bring forth a mouse.

Lewandowsky refused to report on inconvenient data. One of the conspiracies he asked about was the Iraq invasion by the U.S., asking if there were additional motives beyond the stated ones for the attack. When it was pointed out that the U.S. Congress, the UN and several other august bodies shared the same opinions as those he wanted to label as conspiracy theorists, the question and its answers disappeared from the results. Nor does he mention that for many of the conspiracy theories, more respondents who honestly identified themselves as firm supporters of the climate consensus believed in conspiracy than did skeptics, both in gross numbers and in some cases percentages.

Lewandowsky et al’s current paper then focuses on blog reaction to his study. Again, he uses sloppy methodology and finds the results that confirm his bias. Using his methodology, my written reactions to his research project would have qualified as conspiracist ideation. I wrote a guest post on skeptic weblog Watts Up With That where I detailed my objections to his research design, the execution of the survey and what he wrote on his weblog regarding results.

As a professional market researcher my objections were to sloppy work, ill-conceived design choices and blatant confirmation bias. I am not a skeptic. I don’t hold much with conspiracy theories. I just hate to see self-aggrandizing hacks cheapen the reputation and further utility of public opinion polling.

One conspiracy theory he holds as evidence of the looniness of skeptics is belief that Climategate was real and that scientists conspired to conceal evidence. Lewandowsky writes,

“Concerning climate denial, a case in point is the response to events surrounding the illegal hacking of personal emails by climate scientists, mainly at the University of East Anglia, in 2009.

Selected content of those emails was used to support the theory that climate scientists conspired to conceal evidence against climate change or manipulated the data (see, e.g., Montford, 2010; Sussman, 2010). After the scientists in question were exonerated by 9 investigations in 2 countries, including various parliamentary and government committees in the U.S. and U. K., those exonerations were re-branded as a \whitewash” (see, e.g., U.S. Representative Rohrabacher’s speech in Congress on 8 December 2011), thereby broadening the presumed involvement of people and institutions in the alleged conspiracy.”

As the author of a book on Climategate I will tell you right now that some skeptics regard it as a conspiracy. I don’t believe that that makes them conspiracy theorists. Here’s why:

  1. Scientists have admitted manipulating data presented to policy makers in AR4. Specifically they hid the decline in tree ring data to allow them to claim confidence in their statistical findings. This confidence was unwarranted. They discussed this openly in the revealed Climategate emails.
  2. None of the five investigations into Climategate investigated the scientific issues. Science was specifically excluded from the remit of four of the investigations and the fifth looked at the research record of the institution involved, reviewing papers submitted for review by the institution itself, none of which formed part of the controversy.
  3. Nobody has come up with a non-conspiratorial explanation for this email from Phil Jones to Michael Mann:

“Mike, Can you delete any emails you may have had with Keith re AR4? Keith will do likewise… Can you also email Gene [Wahl] and get him to do the same? I don’t have his new email address. We will be getting Caspar [Ammann] to do likewise. Cheers, Phil”

Now, I know that some skeptics are in fact believers in conspiracy theories, as are some climate activists. Just as some skeptics, politically conservative, are possessed of the lunatic notion that Obama was born in Kenya or on the moon, some climate activists are equally gripped by the fatal peril posed by vaccines or GMOs.  There are real kooks out there.

But as we wrote regarding Climategate, we found no evidence of a conspiracy to change the science–what we found was the more normal and grubby practice of working together to push ‘their’ theory to the top and push others’ theories down, using poor practice and judgment. It was a mundane example of what happens when people chase fame and glory. They justified their behavior because they felt their cause was just.

But what Lewandowsky et al have produced here is the equivalent of bear-baiting in London in the 18th Century. It is a sport designed from cruel motives, aimed at eroding sympathy and legitimizing further cruelty.

I get that Lewandowsky is a committed climate activist and regards skeptics as a mortal threat to his belief system. What I don’t get is why a publication would allow his personal therapy to appear on its pages.

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E.M.Smith
Editor
February 5, 2013 11:13 pm

“Conspiracist” – such a strange word. I wonder how I spent so many decades having never ever seen it before. I also wonder if Mr. Lew. has a fixation… a compulsion… and obsessive ideation on conspiracies?…. Does he feel compelled to check under his bed an night? To be sure he isn’t being hunted haunted by conspirators? Is that where his unholy fixation originates?

markx
February 5, 2013 11:14 pm

In the article ….”..Lewandowsky maintains a weblog here. ..”
I very strongly recommend that no-one goes there …. my experience there is extreme censoring , deletions then banning…
To date his latest article has only 7 comments, mainly the inmates giggling amongst themselves at their cleverness at partaking in this episode of baiting .. John Cook and Eli Rabbet put in appearances…
I suggest that if we leave them alone they will run out of giggles and it will soon fizzle out.

markx
February 5, 2013 11:19 pm

I find good counter to anyone interested in Lewandowsky (and you will not find many, it is mainly us keeping him publicized) is to forward links to his two youtube videos, stating I disagree with him, “but he is a riveting and convincing speaker” …
I don’t hear back from the recipients, who I presume watch the clips and then go off to have a long shower, and go away silently, scarred for life…
(…and no one has ever agreed with the statement of his speaking ability).

markx
February 5, 2013 11:36 pm

Lewandowsky says in his blog:
The article also generated data. Data, because for social scientists, public statements and publically-expressed ideas constitute data for further research. Cognitive scientists sometimes apply something called “narrative analysis” to understand how people, groups, or societies are organized and how they think.
Data? A long, long rambling convoluted discourse on what each web site says about him, and a total of TWO tables appear in the paper:
And Fig 1 is simply a list of websites, while Fig 2 is “Summary of impact of peer-reviewed psychological articles on conspiracist ideation published in 2012”
He has not advanced the science much at all beyond the vague status his own words below reveal:
“Conspiracist ideation has been repeatedly implicated in the rejection of scientific propositions, although empirical evidence to date has been sparse. ……the overall pattern of the blogosphere’s response to LOG12 illustrates the possible role of conspiracist ideation in the rejection of science, although alternative scholarly interpretations may be advanced in the future…”
Oh, it is a tragedy that in this world today men get paid for feeble works such as this.

Philip Bradley
February 6, 2013 12:04 am

Apologies, the quote above should have been,
“The only conspiracies are those engaged in by conspiracy theorists.”
Lewandowsky’s personal green/climate credentials aren’t that great. His house backs onto a golf course. A game he presumably plays, because why else buy a house that backs onto a golf course. In a location where it doesn’t rain for 6 months of the year and vast amounts of water are required to keep the grass green. And if the alarmists are correct rainfall will dramatically reduce as (when?) AGW continues and water will be rationed.
In fact, our uber alarmist Flannery has predicted that Perth will have to be abandoned as the rains stop and the dams run dry.

Chuck Nolan
February 6, 2013 12:39 am

Conspiracy is real and we’ve all been part of one.
Think surprise birthday party.
A silly point?
Maybe, but proof we are all taught early that people do conspire and it’s normal.
Take that to adulthood and any doubt in a relationship, be it personal, with coworkers, in business or with one’s government and it is easy to believe in a conspiracy.
For example: major gains were made toward transparency in government with FOIA.
Government and academia are tearing it down and not being pushed by MSM.
Is that a conspiracy?
Are they conspiring to do that?
Are they acting independently in their own best interest by not being so free with information?
cn

richardscourtney
February 6, 2013 1:47 am

Steven Mosher:
At February 5, 2013 at 9:51 pm you say

I offered advice as i would do anywhere

Thankyou. Next time we want advice from you we will ask for it. Until then you are at liberty to keep it to yourself.
However, I can understand why you would want to offer your advice anywhere: everybody wants to unburden themselves of worthless baggage.
Richard

Mindert Eiting
February 6, 2013 3:41 am

As conspiracy theorist I cannot resist thinking that Lewandowsky is just very clever and joined a circle around Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont whose aim it was to test the quality of certain scientific journals like Social Text. The first article in their fake series was ‘Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity’.

February 6, 2013 4:59 am

Responding to Lewandowsky’s outpourings gives the impression he’s worth responding to. Damn, I’ve just wasted 10 seconds of my life pointing that out.

lurker passing through, laughing
February 6, 2013 5:04 am

The point of bear baiting was to kill the bear, terribly and publicly.
Lewandowsky is a fraud and a fool. But to the extent that skeptics rise to his bait, he is allowed to win.
The only response Lewandowsky and his klown karnival deserve is mocking and then only fleetingly.
If his peers accept his faux studies as legitimate science, it only shows poor judgement or worse.
Let him try his pathetic self-parody of science. I cannot think of a better spokesman for AGW kooks than Lewandowsky.
Do not interfere when your opponents are reduced to the sorts of things Lewandowsky, Gleick, Gore, etc. have decided to pursue.

Vince Causey
February 6, 2013 5:37 am

What is it with conspiracy theorists these days? It wasn’t long ago that conspiracy theorising was a noble and respected profession. Think of the excitement and mystery they generated around the JFK assassination, and all the books and films that followed. But nowdays they are pushed to the margins of society.
It is so bad, that a powerful tactic in debating is to try and force your opponent into a line of argument where you can back him into a corner with the words “so, you’re a conspiracy theorist then?” Game over. The debate is won and lost in that moment.
Just as opponents of same-sex marriage are accused of homophobia, so anyone arguing against the powerful interests of the climate change lobby, is accused of conspiracy theory “ideation.” The underlying premise of this attack, of course, is that anything involving a conspiracy is as mind blowingly ridiculous as fairies in the bottom of the garden.
Why this should be so is curious. Evidence suggests that conspiracies exist. What would you call the collusion of individuals in the banking industry to fix libor rates if not a conspiracy? What would you call the collusion between Chris Huhne and his former wife to pervert the course of justice if not a conspiracy?
One could go on, but the point is clear. There are conspiracies involving 2 individual. There are conspiracies involving whole industries. And yet, if you believe in conspiracy theories, you also believe in fairies at the bottom of the garden. Daft.

markx
February 6, 2013 6:35 am

lurker passing through, laughing says: February 6, 2013 at 5:04 am
“… I cannot think of a better spokesman for AGW kooks than Lewandowsky.
Do not interfere when your opponents are reduced to the sorts of things Lewandowsky, Gleick, Gore, etc. have decided to pursue…”

Well and wisely said.
“Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake”. Napoleon Bonaparte (1769 – 1821)

February 6, 2013 7:28 am

Thomas Fuller: “I am not a skeptic.”
Are you sure? Maybe you’re not a Skeptic, but it seems apparent you are a skeptic.

February 6, 2013 7:29 am

Lewandowsky: ““Concerning climate denial, a case in point is the response to events surrounding the illegal hacking of personal emails by climate scientists, mainly at the University of East Anglia, in 2009.”
Climate scientists hacked their own emails??

February 6, 2013 7:40 am

“implying “nafarious” (sic) intentions behind our comments.”
Come now, Reg, he IS an english major. /sarc

February 6, 2013 8:39 am

Jeff Alberts, no. I’m a Lukewarmer. I accept the physics that show CO2 as one of the causes of global warming. I accept that the globe has indeed warmed as we have indeed emitted large volumes of CO2.
However, I do not accept the model outcomes and calculations that purport to show a high sensitivity, or even much in the way of potentially high sensitivity, of the atmosphere to a doubling of concentrations of CO2.

Brandon Shollenberger
February 6, 2013 8:45 am

Maybe I’m just blind, but I can’t find a download link for this paper. Can anyone point it out to me?

February 6, 2013 8:57 am

The alphabet soup game idea of Steve’s can be fun.
M.I.C.K.E.Y. M.O.U.S.E.
Mosher’s Incidental Comments Keep Everyone Yawning
Mosher Opines Under Subjective Erudition
: )
What a fun pastime. Here we are fiddling around as lukewarming folk prepare to morph into luke-neutrality.
John

john robertson
February 6, 2013 9:09 am

So another Lew Paper, and?
To bear bait you need to annoy, hurt and corner the beast.
This bit of Lew-paper does nothing, except mildly revolt.
Nausea, at a fellow mans decent into madness is the best I can do.
This man and his fellow travellers need help.

February 6, 2013 9:29 am

Thomas Fuller,
“Accept the physics”??? You sound like the eminent tool Snerk on your own website. Anyone who accepts the physics does not understand Physics. Accept communion, accept a donation, accept a compliment, but never Accept the Physics! I still have my undergrad textbook if you would like to borrow it.

February 6, 2013 9:47 am

thomaswfuller2 on February 6, 2013 at 8:39 am
Jeff Alberts, no. I’m a Lukewarmer. I accept the physics that show CO2 as one of the causes of global warming. I accept that the globe has indeed warmed as we have indeed emitted large volumes of CO2.
However, I do not accept the model outcomes and calculations that purport to show a high sensitivity, or even much in the way of potentially high sensitivity, of the atmosphere to a doubling of concentrations of CO2.

– – – – – – – –
thomaswfuller2,
I think your conception of a position that you label ‘lukewarmer’ has at least one false hidden premise.
How to predetermine the unknown scientific knowledge in the future on the subject of the total earth-atmospheric system?
Lukewarmer labeling does just that. It presumes to know something that is at best a very very early work in progress.
The intellectually honest label for your ‘position’ would something like ‘Small AGW by CO2 Hypothesis Believers’.
At another level, I think your conception of the position you label ‘lukewarmer’ conflates a guess with a prediction. In either case, the first order of climate science business is to complete the scientific self-correction process of replacing the ideological driven AGW by CO2 myopia with an open and transparent balanced dialog of all the dynamic factors of the extremely complex earth-atmospheric system. Profound funding shifts are needed to reaffirm scientific objectivity is possible in climate research. Then we will see about your hypothesis belief; your ‘lukewarmer’ meme.
John

JunkPsychology
February 6, 2013 11:47 am

Ahh… should have noticed this earlier.
Frontiers in Psychology posts the identities of the “action editor” and the reviewers.
Received: 05 Nov 2012; Accepted: 02 Feb 2013.
Edited by: Viren Swami, University of Westminster, United Kingdom
Reviewed by: Viren Swami, University of Westminster, United Kingdom
Elaine McKewon, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia

It’s probably not a good idea, then, to submit any commentary or reply articles to FOP.

Quackademic
February 6, 2013 12:47 pm

“Perhaps a more accurate description is dead and buried, never to see the light of day.”
Or in press as the authors claim? What were you saying about your views on conspiracy theories further down? That you don’t hold with them? Evidently.
” I fail to see what that project could have produced in the way of furthering human understanding of the mind, human nature or any other form of science.”
To collect evidence regarding the mindset of conspiracy theorists – which the authors tell us. You say that you only scanned the article – clearly you weren’t lying.
“slap him across the face for contributing to the cheapening of the already debased nature of climate conversations.”
Firstly, I enjoyed the most likely unintended irony of this comment. Secondly, given your defence of individuals who make what I would consider libeous comments regarding professional scientists (you know, like charges of academic misconduct), one has to wonder if you have been paying attention to the ebb and flow of discourse.
“a publication I had not heard of prior to this morning.”
Yet you have taken the time to attack its reviewers and editors, not to mention contributors.
“The paper is 57 pages long, so my comments are based on a cursory reading.”
So, basically, you’re saying that your acidic criticisms aren’t actually based on a careful analysis of the paper’s content. So, really, one has to ask why you’ve penned this blog post? After all, you’ve just told us that you aren’t qualified to ‘review’ (if this hatchet job can be considered a review) it.
On that note, I’m not going to comment any further. I think you have done my work for me.

A. Scott
February 6, 2013 2:20 pm

Much of Lewandowsky’s work is based on previous work done by Viren Swami …

Sigmundb
February 6, 2013 3:15 pm

You should consider the possibility Lewandowsky & Cook are joking.
After a not to well conducted poll and the resulting paper by Lewandowsky in limbo he teams up with one of the premier gadflys from the AGW sphere and write a paper that looks like a joke: The title is an obvious provocation, the content a parody of postmodern text analysis where they pretend to prove a strong strain of paranoia in the sceptics response to the orignial paper.
If the purpose was to provoke sceptics and have a laugh at anyone taking this seriously it would have to look like this. Only thing that is missing is Gleick as coauthor.