
Theories that can be easily tested should have a high degree of consensus among researchers. Those involving chaotic and less testable questions – climate change or economic growth, physiology or financial markets – ought to have a greater level of scientific disagreement. Yet this is hardly the case for climate science. In the Paradox of Consensus, we illustrate that the greater the level of consensus for certain classes of hypotheses (those that are difficult to test) the less truth we should assign to them.
Guest Essay By D. RYAN BRUMBERG and MATTHEW BRUMBERG
The moon is not made of cheese, the earth is not flat, and lightning may strike the same place twice. We believe these claims to be true, yet it is unlikely that most readers have personally confirmed each of them. Because it would be nigh impossible for anyone to verify all they take as true, most individuals arrive at their worldview by following the beliefs of others (often “experts”). While there can be good reason to accept an idea based on its popularity, this consensus heuristic must be used with care. There must be a sufficient number of others who did arrive (and continue to arrive) at the same conclusion through independent verification and testing. When this condition is not met, the results can be catastrophic (recall the Challenger disaster). Instead of independent observers arriving at the same conclusion, we risk an information cascade. This failing goes by many names—argumentum ad populum, groupthink, the “bandwagon effect”—but its function is the same: increasing numbers of people will buy into an idea simply because many others already believe it.
Consensus, in and of itself, is not necessarily a bad thing. The more easily testable and verifiable a theory, the less debate we would expect. There is little disagreement, for example, about the sum of one plus one or the average distance of the earth from the sun. But as a question becomes more complex and less testable, we would expect an increasing level of disagreement and a lessening of the consensus—think: the existence of god, the best band since the Beatles, or the grand unified theory of physics. On such topics, independent minds can—and should—differ.
We can use a simple formula to express how an idea’s popularity correlates with its verifiability. Let us introduce the K/C ratio—the ratio of “knowability,” a broad term loosely encapsulating how possible it is to reduce uncertainty about an idea’s correctness, to “consensus,” a measure of the idea’s popularity and general acceptance. Topics that are easily knowable (K ~ 1) should have a high degree of consensus (C ~ 1), whereas those that are impossible to verify (K ~ 0) should have a low degree of consensus (C ~ 0). When the ratio deviates too far from the perfect ratio of 1, either from too much consensus or too little, there is a mispricing of knowledge. Indeed, in cases of extreme deviations from the perfect ratio, additional support for a concept with such a lopsided K/C ratio increasingly subtracts from its potential veracity. This occurs because ideas exist not simply at a single temporal point, but rather evolve over the sweep of time. At the upper reaches of consensus, there is less updating of views to account for new information—so much so that supporters of the status quo tend to suppress new facts and hypothesis. Government agencies deny funding to ‘sham’ scientists, tenure boards dissuade young researchers from pursuing ‘the wrong’ track, and the establishment quashes heretical ideas.
Consider the belief that the sun, moon, and stars circle the earth—a reasonable initial proposition. Yet, as additional facts became available (Copernicus, Brahe, Galileo), the dogmatic believers of the consensus condemned these observations as heresy. A world with a less skewed K/C ratio (lower level of consensus given low knowability) would have advanced to the heliocentric model sooner. Given that we know not the evolutionary stage for any current theory, we arrive thus at the unexpected conclusion that when knowability is low, as the level of consensus increases (without a commensurate increase in knowability), there should be a decrease in the probability assigned to the truth of the matter. While not always clear why the K/C ratio can become highly skewed, one interpretation is that more than just the search for knowledge is at play.
To see how this works in practice, we turn to the evergreen topic of climate change. Notwithstanding the underlying ecological threat of climate change itself, the debate about how to confront human-caused global warming has spawned unprecedented financial, political, and social risks of its own. Entire industries face extinction as the world’s governments seek to impose trillions of dollars of taxes on carbon emissions. The New York Times’s Thomas Friedman approvingly writes that Australian politicians—not to mention public figures through the world—now risk “political suicide” if they deny climate change. But if carbon dioxide turns out not to be the boogey-man that climate scientists have made it out to be, tens of trillions will be wasted in unneeded remediation. Much of the world—billions of humans—will endure a severely diminished quality of life with nothing to show for it. The growth trajectory of the world in the twenty-first century may well depend more on the “truth” of climate change ex ante than ex post.
With climate change, as in many areas of scientific complexity, we can (and do) use models to understand the world. But models have their problems. This is particularly true when dealing with complex, non-linear systems with a multitude of recursive feedback loops, in which small variations produce massive shifts in the long-term outcome. Pioneered by the mathematicians Edward Lorenz and Benoit Mandelbrot, chaos theory helped explain the intractability of certain problems. Readers of pop science will be familiar with the term the “butterfly effect,” in which “the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set[s] off a tornado in Texas.” The earth’s climate is one such dynamic, chaotic system and it is within the whirling, turbulent vortex of unpredictability that the modern climate scientists must tread.
And boldly have they stepped into the breach. The scope of agreement achieved by the world’s climate scientists is breathtaking. To first approximation, around 97% agree that human activity, particularly carbon dioxide emissions, causes global warming. So impressed was the Norwegian Nobel Committee by the work of the Inter-governmental Committee on Climate Change and Al Gore “for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change” that it awarded them the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. So many great minds cannot possibly be wrong, right?
Yet something nags us about this self-congratulatory consensus. Our intuition is that this narrow distribution of opinions yields a knowability to consensus ratio far removed from the perfect ratio of 1. To reach their conclusions, climate scientists have to (a) uncover the (historical) drivers of climate, (b) project the future path of these inputs and others that may arise, and (c) predict how recursive feedback loops interact over multi-decadal time horizons, all without being able to test their hypotheses against reality. When evaluating the causes of past climate shifts, for example, scientists cannot simply re-run history to test the impact of changing different variables. Similarly, although climate scientists can make testable hypotheses about the future, their short-term predictions have an embarrassing record (think post-Katrina predictions of a massive surge in US hurricanes or the failed attempts to forecast temperature changes for the 2000s), while the debate will be moot by the time we can test their long-term forecasts in the year 2100.
We would, therefore, expect this limit on empirical verifiability to birth widely divergent views on the path, causes, and consequences of earth’s future climate. In other arenas, only after a theory has been empirically verified has the scientific community coalesced around it. Even then, scientists continue to subject such theories to rigorous testing and debate. For example, consider the current state of theoretical physics: quantum physics, loop quantum gravity, string theory, super-symmetry, and M-theory, among others, all vie for acceptance. Albert Einstein’s general relativity itself did not begin to garner widespread support until four years after its publication, when Arthur Eddington verified its predictions during a 1919 solar eclipse. Even so, as illustrated by the rash of headlines in late 2011 announcing the (false) discovery of faster-than-light neutrinos, scientists continue to try to poke holes in Einstein’s theory.
Yet the expectation of a rich debate among scientists about climate change does not reconcile easily with the widely endorsed shibboleth that human activity will warm the globe dramatically and dangerously over the next one hundred years. As climate scientists are themselves fond of repeating, the vast majority have arrived at the exact same conclusions about both past warming and future trends. Any discussion that doubts the fundamental premises of climate change is dismissed by the mainstream media and climate scientists as pseudo-science conducted by quacks or ideologues. Thus, questions about observational biases in the location of temperature stations, changes in the earth’s albedo, the cooling effect of dust particles, shifting ocean cycles, fluctuating solar activity, correlation v. causation of historical warm periods and carbon dioxide, catastrophic model failure caused by chaotic interactions, and innumerable other theories—most of which are presumably wrong—are never properly mooted in the public debate.
In our view, the fact that so many scientists agree so closely about the earth’s warming is, itself, evidence of a lack of evidence for global warming. Does this mean that climate change is not happening? Not necessarily. But it does mean that we should be wary of the meretricious arguments mustered in its defense. When evaluating complex questions—from climate change to economic growth, physiology to financial markets—it is worse than naïve to judge the veracity of an idea merely from the strength of consensus. The condemnation of Galileo Galilei meant one man served a sentence of life imprisonment. His ecumenical accusers at least acknowledged a force greater than science drove their decision. The modern priests of climate change endanger the lives of billions as they wield their fallacy that consensus is truth.
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posts made of ignorance are just sad — please, authors, up your game:
“Increases in greenhouse forcing inferred from the outgoing longwave radiation spectra of the Earth in 1970 and 1997,” J.E. Harries et al, Nature 410, 355-357 (15 March 2001).
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v410/n6826/abs/410355a0.html
“Comparison of spectrally resolved outgoing longwave data between 1970 and present,” J.A. Griggs et al, Proc SPIE 164, 5543 (2004). http://spiedigitallibrary.org/proceedings/resource/2/psisdg/5543/1/164_1
“Spectral signatures of climate change in the Earth’s infrared spectrum between 1970 and 2006,” Chen et al, (2007) http://www.eumetsat.int/Home/Main/Publications/Conference_and_Workshop_Proceedings/groups/cps/documents/document/pdf_conf_p50_s9_01_harries_v.pdf
“Radiative forcing – measured at Earth’s surface – corroborate the increasing greenhouse effect,” R. Phillipona et al, Geo Res Letters, v31 L03202 (2004)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2003GL018765/abstract
“Measurements of the Radiative Surface Forcing of Climate,” W.F.J. Evans, Jan 2006
https://ams.confex.com/ams/Annual2006/techprogram/paper_100737.htm
Ryan Brumberg,
G.R. is scary; an unthinking throwback to Naziism [note his psychological projection]. G.R. provides absolutely nothing in the way of any scientific evidence, just his wild-eyed assertions.
Thank you for providing rationality in this often emotional debate.
Great post. The useage of the word paradox is trending up in recent years. Reading the title reminded me of the following:
“Collins English Dictionary
Definition of ‘liar paradox’
(logic) the paradox that this statement is false is true only if it is false and false only if it is true: attributed to Epimenides the Cretan in the form all Cretans are liars”
If the dendrochronology shoe fits….you may be a Cretan!
Cheers,
Big Dave
What an excellent essay. Thank you.
I like the concept, though quantifying K and C will be problematic. Who determines K and C? Those who support an idea or those who are skeptical? We’d need to find a way that is independent of the opinion of most anyone.
To understand why an idea may deviate strongly from K/C=1, consider adding a third orthogonal axis. Call it the P4-Axis, for Profit, Power, Pride, and Politics. A sin-axis for the less secular. Normalize all 3 and create a surface. A high P4 index would suggest post-normal science.
The whole manufactured “consensus” of the global warming industry may have the outward appearance of a planned hoax, but it was not. It started as a flawed hypothesis, that adding radiative gases to the atmosphere would reduce its radiative cooling ability. Sadly the proposed solutions to this unproven hypothesis fitted neatly with the ideology and political agendas of a great number of disparate “fellow travellers”. When evidence started to mount that the hypothesis may be incorrect, the fellow travellers were already very heavily invested in terms of reputation, politics and finances. Those involved had a choice whether to keep the story alive or back down. They chose poorly.
The time to back down safely was well over a decade ago, possibly at the point of the first IPCC report. After this point an excusable mistake turns to inexcusable malfeasance. The fellow travellers have all failed to realise what a very poor decision fighting to keep AGW alive was in the age of the Internet.
Global warming has in effect been a global IQ test with results permanently recorded on the Internet. It has also been a test of character and ethics for all the journalists, activists, scientists and politicians involved. Most have failed. As the AGW story collapses, the fellow travellers will try the “but everyone believed” line, but the debate became highly polarised and the fellow travellers are very clearly identified.
Climate scientist are currently scrabbling for a “sciencey” sounding excuse for the failure of their claims, but the mistake in their calculations is too basic and it is far to late for that. Most available reasons why CO2 is not causing warming have already been raised by sceptics and AGW promoters record of vehement dismissal is permanent.
Failure to back down at the appropriate time has serious consequences in the age of the Internet. Intentionally trying to keep a failed hypothesis alive to preserve the agendas of fellow travellers has even more severe consequences.
– Almost all politicians of the Left are now compromised.
– Environmental NGOs lose what remains of their reputation.
– Journalists supportive of the Left are now compromised.
– New Media is now more trusted than the old Lame Stream Media.
– Post normal science is now discredited.
– No one will trust the UN with any plans to address any environmental “Crisis” again, especially not involving money.
– A global network of sceptics has been created that cannot be controlled by governments, and is not dependant on their funding.
So on the whole the fallout from the collapse of the manufactured consensus is not too bad 😉
Consensus as input data!
Thanks for the good dissertation!
Yes, every good test on CAGW falsifies it, showing reality is going further away from the models.
Janice Moore says:
April 30, 2013 at 4:53 pm
Re: Gofer @1631 on 4/30/13
Q. How do you significantly contribute toward a result without being one of the effective causes of that result?
I would interpret it like somebody saying that the faulty brakes “contributed significantly” to the car crash but not “caused” it since other factors such as slick roads and speed were also contributing factors. We are left with the impression that man is the sole cause of climate change, not one of the causes. The typical blog statement goes something like “Global Warming is real and is caused by human activity.
This essay would have been stronger without the neologism “knowability” and the fancy graphs and fractions. The basic questions are simple: On any given issue, is there, or isn’t there consensus; and if there is, is it based on solid evidence? If unsupported by solid evidence, consensus does more harm than good.
“Climate change” is simply the most visible, egregious and lucrative example of manufactured consensus among scientists. However, the general pattern is much more common – wolf packs of scientists ganging together, creating a new theory or, better still, new-fangled “discipline”; promising the people rich rewards if they will fund them, or doom and disaster if they won’t. Climate changers are the masters of doom right now – look at the hype-and-hosiannah end of the news spectrum to see some other fields that fit the general description.
Each such movement needs strength in the numbers to build “momentum” and succeed. To achieve this, low standards are of the essence; every aspiring junior wolf must be reassured that he, too, will be able to howl with the pack. Again, “climate science” has achieved this beautifully, but again there are some other fields that qualify just as well.
Robert L says:
April 30, 2013 at 5:51 pm
The last time I went with consensus , I wound up soaked to the bone and fourteen miles from the truck !
————
Robert, that story wouldn’t include alcohol would it?
Some day that tale must be told.
cn
I wonder why 350.org has never referred back to the time when CO2 was at the “safe” level and shown us how much better the climate/weather was during that time? A direct comparison would surely convince the doubters of the validity of working to reduce emissions. It must have been much better or else why bother reducing emissions since the focus of late has been on “extreme” weather over temperature.
Konrad says:
April 30, 2013 at 6:56 pm
“….Global warming has in effect been a global IQ test with results permanently recorded on the Internet.”
>>>>>>>
If only I had written that….
reminds me of an old joke;
When you tell someone there are a billion stars in the universe and they say; Oh, okay you must be right. But when you put up a “wet paint” sign they have to touch it to make sure…………..
polistra says:
April 30, 2013 at 5:02 pm
“Consider the standard “theory” of evolution. It’s not a theory in the first place, only a set of beliefs; it has never been proved by the origin of any species; and lots of working biologists have abandoned most of its details…”
Paleontologists have seen the origin of thousands of species. Let me give you some evidence, and before you dispute it, suspend disbelief and offer an explanation for it – do your honest creative best – treat it like a mystery in a science fiction work. The world’s sedimentary rocks are like the pages of a book with the oldest page on the bottom and the most recent pages on the top. Now in the oldest pages one finds fossils only of sea creatures and they are few in variety.
Overlying this oldest formation is a younger one, with only sea creature fossils but a large variety – many species not seen in the older formation have appeared. Continue this study of ever younger formations until you find the first amphibian fossils and they increase in number and variety as you progress upwards, then you find land lubbers – lizards, followed by dinosaurs, followed by birds, then mammals appear in the latter stages of the dinosaurs – all during this time we find sea vegetation followed by land vegetation which appears before the amphibians and these give way to increasing varieties and numbers and lead to giant forests of the Carboniferous period during which most of the world’s coal was formed in large forested swamps and then grasslands appear, etc. Primates appeared several millions of years ago, then ~300,000years ago, the first record of stone tools and weapons of the Neanderthal appear and then Cro-Magnon, or anatomically modern man arrive near the tail end of Neanderthal existence.
While going through all this we find something interesting in detail. The first horse is a small dog sized forest dweller with five-toed feet. In the layer above this we see a larger creature with three-toed feet extended in length. It has ventured out into the newly-appeared grasslands and has raised up on three toes to be a bit taller – his skeleton has two extra splinters of bone, one on each side of the first and third toes- vestiges of the old five toed foot. But in the next layer, the primitive grasses have grown taller and the horse ( to be able to see danger from a distance) has raised up onto one toe on each foot and that toe (and the legs) have grown much longer but vestige bone splinters of the second and fourth toe (first and fifth have disappeared entirely) lie along the sides of the single toe that the horse is standing on. This horse, standing on the middle toe of each foot, with its toe nail developed into a hoof and vestiges of two toes remaining as splints along the remaining toe is exactly what we see in the Modern Horse:
http://books.google.ca/books?id=O-EOAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA10&lpg=PA10&dq=horse+skeleton+showing+vestige+toes&source=bl&ots=7BnokDLHAG&sig=fy6vQj7VNYcFx3qS4vf9bZbhVFM&hl=en&sa=X&ei=XHiAUcnKPJDyqAHqzoCgCQ&ved=0CEMQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=horse%20skeleton%20showing%20vestige%20toes&f=false
Be honest now and remember Occam’s razor. Evidence of the evolution of the horse is so powerful, that anti-evolution folks have taken on the challenge of explaining it away with the zeal that medieval bishops employed to repudiate the Heliocentric theory of Galileo:
https://www.google.ca/search?q=occam%27s+razor&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a
Also remember that Darwin probably didn’t even know about the evolution of the horse and also realize that I can give many example of developments of other species and can tell you that we do not find mixing – e.g. Neanderthal tools and skeletons in the age of the dinosaurs (Jurassic and Cretaceous), or dinosaur remains in the Cambrian seas where all life of this ancient time were aquatic, etc.
Konrad says:
April 30, 2013 at 6:56 pm
……………So on the whole the fallout from the collapse of the manufactured consensus is not too bad 😉
—————————–
Damn, Konrad! Bravo brother bravo.
cn
interesting that no one here will confront the actual evidence:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/04/30/the-paradox-of-consensus/#comment-1292801
that’s what i’ve come to expect….
Those minds don’t differ because AGW theory – and its opting out unfalsifiable escape “climate change”- is a Social Construct.
Socialization, and if it is established as a systemic acculturation is a way to escape uncertainty. Uncertainty is intolerable to those that need a certain level control to feel secure and-or need to give meaning to their lives.
This kind of thinking had open hears in journalism, not surprising, itself a profession where people go to “change the world” – control once again.
For short term pack behavior, professional and social intimidation was utmost necessary to establish an obedient culture.
Stan W., take a deep breath fella. You have not presnted “evidence”, you have presented questionable links that you “believe in”.
Hint: If it doesn’t fly, it’s probably not aerodynamic.
If for “level of knowability” you substitute “complex” this theory seems to reduce to “the more complex the problem the lower the consensus ought to be, in the absence of verifiable proof”, which (to my mind anyway) is a clearer statement of the basic proposition.
I agree there must be other factors at play to give disproportionately high consensus based on a complex issues – but isn’t this just self-evident and on what scale is complexity to be measured?
Stan W. says:
April 30, 2013 at 7:49 pm
interesting that no one here will confront the actual evidence:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/04/30/the-paradox-of-consensus/#comment-1292801
You don’t know much about WUWT, I see. Confronting the “evidence” is what we do thanklessly and effectively. The “evidence” of your masters has been pretty thoroughly debunked in this blog and other blogs, like Climate Audit – a blog that strikes terror into hearts of the climate chefs – check and see if any of these linked papers have been withdrawn BY THE AUTHORS or the journals after vivisection by Steve McIntyre! Here is some real evidence that you missed:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/10/18/gergis-et-al-hockey-stick-paper-withdrawn-finally/
http://www.thegwpf.org/steven-mcintyre-marcott-filibuster/
I know it must hurt when people here stop noticing you. You are in the company of giants where one liners and a batch of links to the rap-sheets of the climate felons won’t get much traction here after the politeness of earlier responders gives way to silence.
Good article. Another important criticism of the “global warming consensus” claim is that the “consensus” is about no particular claim. For example, is there a consensus on Mann’s Hockey Stick? If so, then what of the criticisms of the Hockey Stick? Is there a consensus on the criticisms? If so, where is that position stated? In short, the claim of consensus is empty of all content.
Very poor analogy, and not even close to being true. The microscopic turbulence caused by the butterfly’s wings are quickly dispersed and overwhelmed by normal breezes. Even on a dead calm day that butterfly can’t make a whit of difference in even it’s local weather patterns. Consider all the things that move through the air every second of every day that are multiple orders of magnitude larger and more turbulent than a butterfly’s wings. Even they have zero effect.
It’s really difficult to describe how stupid the statement is in the first place.
Stan W.
It doesn’t matter how many times you say it, or in how many different ways, or how many links you post – it’s not “simple physics”. Posters here don’t want to go near that sub-meme because it is dead and buried and smelly.
….. but many congratulations on your support, albeit unknowingly to you, of the original essay.
Stan W. says:
April 30, 2013 at 5:53 pm
People who post here are expected to participate in debate. You do that by stating your own arguments in your own words. Do not presume to assign homework.
@theo —
what you call “homework” others call “evidence.”
sad that you won’t confront it. but i understand why not….