The Paradox of Consensus – a novel argument on climate change

Paradox
Paradox (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

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.

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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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April 30, 2013 8:47 pm

Stan W,
What you posted is not testable scientific “evidence”. Planet earth is deconstructing your belief system: as CO2 continues to rise, global temperatures have stagnated for the past sixteen years. Thus, CO2 is not the cause of global warming. QED.
Logic is not your strong point, is it, Stan?

davidmhoffer
April 30, 2013 8:47 pm

Stan W. says:
April 30, 2013 at 8:36 pm
@theo —
what you call “homework” others call “evidence.”
sad that you won’t confront it. but i understand why not….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Sadly, you present evidence of increased GHE and presume that this equates to evidence of CAGW. The two are not synonymous.

Janice Moore
April 30, 2013 8:48 pm

“We are left with the impression that man is the sole cause of climate change, not one of the causes.” [Geran @1857 on 4/30/13]
Thank you, Geran, for responding to my query; that rarely happens! It appears that we must (well, I, at least, will) agree to disagree. You believe that humanity is one of the small but significant causes of global climate change. I go further and assert that there is no evidence that humans have ANY meaningfully significant influence on global climate.
To use your hypothetical, I would say that the car was swept off the road and over a cliff by a big landslide before the driver had ANY opportunity to apply the brakes.
As Rhoda stated last week, the AGW proponents have the burden of proof as to their speculative conjecture that humans are one of the main causes of global climate change. They have not yet produced even one piece of evidence to prove their case. Not only have they not proven their assertion by a preponderance of the evidence, they have not even proven it “more likely than not.” (I realize that you agree with me on this)
Thanks again for helping me to understand where you are coming from. Much appreciated!

Stan W.
April 30, 2013 8:49 pm

dbstealey says:
Planet earth is deconstructing your belief system: as CO2 continues to rise, global temperatures have stagnated for the past sixteen years.
do you honestly not understand that the ocean is the prime repository of any energy imbalance?
if not, how can i make this clearer for you?

April 30, 2013 8:58 pm

Stan W says:
“…how can i make this clearer for you?”
You can post verifiable empirical, testable data, showing deep ocean heating. Post it here, if you can…
…and post your C.V. while you’re at it — if you even have a C.V.

Stan W.
April 30, 2013 9:01 pm


what I posted is the results of experiment.
i understand why you would deny it, but such measurements are open to anyone.

Stan W.
April 30, 2013 9:02 pm


post your c.v. first.

barry
April 30, 2013 9:09 pm

All rhetoric, no data. The argument is thus assertive rather than deductive or inductive. “I assert that concensus on science that is uncertain can be corrupt, therefore the consensus on climate change, in which there is uncertainty, is corrupt.”
The equation is arbitrary and untested The article is simply politics trying to pass itself off as some kind of analysis.
REPLY: The point is to discuss it not be snooty about it. The fact that it irritates you gives it more credibility, since your role is defender of the indefensible. – Anthony

Janice Moore
April 30, 2013 9:10 pm

Alex S [re: 7:57 PM comment: “…Uncertainty is intolerable to those that need a certain level control to feel secure and-or need to give meaning to their lives.”]
Yes. Reminds me of a conversation I had with one of my enviro-controller friends [yeah, if we just didn’t talk about just about anything I care about we had a fun time, LOL] several years ago. I think we were talking about the Christmas light displays we had just walked past on her street.
Janice [with gusto]: I like liberty!
Friend: I like rules!
She was serious.

Greg House
April 30, 2013 9:14 pm

“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. …
Guest Essay By D. RYAN BRUMBERG and MATTHEW BRUMBERG”

==========================================================
This is the case for climate science. The level of scientific disagreement on “global warming” is much greater than some people think. The majority of relevant scientists do not believe in this nonsense, but for understandable reasons they keep their mouths shut: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/04/30/consensus-argument-proves-climate-science-is-political/#comment-972119.

philincalifornia
April 30, 2013 9:15 pm

I can’t keep up.
Which shell is the pea under ? The one labeled “spectroscopy” or the one labeled “ocean heat content” ??

davidmhoffer
April 30, 2013 9:38 pm

Stan W;
what I posted is the results of experiment.
i understand why you would deny it, but such measurements are open to anyone.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Uhm no…. what you posted were studies based on measurements. If you don’t know the difference between a measurement and an experiment, you need to go back and understand that first.
BTW, here’s a link to an excellent article on WUWT talking about the GHE and CO2 and how we can verify it by measurement. I, a raging skeptic, refer to it often.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/03/10/visualizing-the-greenhouse-effect-emission-spectra/
I suggest also that you read the IPCC report, the penultimate authority on consensus science, in which they specifically state that a change in RF (radiative forcing) can not, repeat NOT, repeat NOT be directly related to SF (surface forcing) and hence surface temperature.
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch2s2-2.html
It is mind boggling to me that people like you sneer down your noses at people like me, accusing us of crass ignorance, when it is clear that you don’t even know what the consensus science you think you are rubbing our noses in says. I suggest you read the actual literature to see what it actually says before spouting off further.

April 30, 2013 9:55 pm

Stan W., if you surf now to http://pre.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v84/i1/e011130 you can plunk down on:
Phys. Rev. E 84, 011130 (2011) [8 pages]
“Social consensus through the influence of committed minorities”, J. Xie, S. Sreenivasan, G. Korniss, W. Zhang, C. Lim, and B. K. Szymanski
Previously discussed on this blog here: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/07/27/tipping-points-and-beliefs/

davidmhoffer
April 30, 2013 9:59 pm

Janice Moore;
Janice [with gusto]: I like liberty!
Friend: I like rules!
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don’t ever count on having both at once.
Robert A Heinlein

rtj1211
April 30, 2013 10:12 pm

The boundary between science and faith is whether or not you can design an experiment to test your hypothesis or not.
To date, so far as I’m aware, you can’t test whether God exists or not. You can, however, test whether BELIEVING that he does exist makes some people feel better or not. There is, after all, potential for a religious placebo effect if God didn’t exist but people believe that he does. That is an untestable Gedankenexperiment, after all……
If something is really pretty unknowable, it’s something which shouldn’t be of great concern to practicing scientists of this generation, although they may flag it up as something which people should try and find ways to discover more about – developing new measurement technologies and the like.
Therefore, the first question for al concerned members of the public about any matter of ‘science’, ‘societal concern’ or the like is this: ‘can we actually test whether this is true or not?’
The second question is: ‘if we can’t, do we need to do anything more than just learn more about the phenomenon?
The third question is: if the answer to that is yes, why is that the case?
The fourth question is: ‘what if the scientists are arguing about whether or not we can test this or not?’
The only thing one can deduce from the graphs of this article is this: ‘coercive religion occurs when high unknowability is matched by high concensus’.

Scott
April 30, 2013 10:15 pm

There’s a children story about this title: “The Emperor’s New Clothes”
Hans Christian Andersen must have been a pretty smart guy.

Stan W.
April 30, 2013 10:21 pm

McC:
please address the evidence i have presented, and not some lame sociological interpretation of it.
thank you.

April 30, 2013 10:24 pm

Not mentioned is the resolution of the CO2 record since the Pliocene. Usually the data points for periods that long in the past represent the average level of CO2 over long periods such as 100 years or 1,000 years.
A lake bed in Europe was sampled for CO2 levels with data points at 10-year intervals. What was found? Wide fluctuations in CO2 level within single centuries.
We do not know what was the variance of CO2 since the Pliocene, not by decades nor by centuries. We know only the averages by longer periods than centuries, possibly only millennia.
Comparing the level for one day to the average for 1,000 years is an abuse of statistics.

TomRude
April 30, 2013 10:26 pm

“Does this mean that climate change is not happening?”
Please, this kind of question has been settled: the climate does change all the time. This is the kind of wording that we blast CAGW zealots for when they call us “climate change deniers”. No one in his right mind denies it’s in the nature of climate to change.

Konrad
April 30, 2013 10:28 pm

Stan W. says:
April 30, 2013 at 9:01 pm
“what I posted is the results of experiment.”
———————————————–
Stan,
there is no hope of reviving the AGW scare, it’s over. The foundation of AGW is the radiative greenhouse hypothesis and this contains critical flaws. These flaws are so great they invalidate the entire AGW hypothesis. Quite simply the climate pseudo scientists got the “basic physics” of the “settled science” wrong. They got the radiative physics mostly right, but the fluid dynamics and gas conduction in a moving atmosphere totally wrong. The experiments to prove this are quite simple and can be run in a high school science class. This means that the the current attempts of the pseudo scientists to find a “sciencey” sounding excuse for getting it wrong will not work. The corpse of AGW cannot be reanimated, nor can it be hidden.
If you want evidence of the critical flaws in the AGW hypothesis, build and run these simple empirical experiments for yourself –
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/04/05/a-comparison-of-the-earths-climate-sensitivity-to-changes-in-the-nature-of-the-initial-forcing/#comment-1267231
Stan, the “basic physics” of the “settled science” are in error. It is not just that there is no CAGW, there is no AGW at all. Our atmosphere is far cooler than it would otherwise be due to the presence of radiative gases.

Konrad
April 30, 2013 10:30 pm

davidmhoffer says:
April 30, 2013 at 8:47 pm
“Sadly, you present evidence of increased GHE and presume that this equates to evidence of CAGW. The two are not synonymous.”
———————————————————————————————————–
No. There will be no “soft landing” for the AGW hypothesis or any of the fellow travellers.

Janice Moore
April 30, 2013 10:31 pm

“You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. …” [David M Hoffer quoting Heinlein]
Janice (with gusto): I choose freedom! I’d rather be free in a dangerous world than sitting in a peaceful prison (where they have LOTS of rules).
BTW this was not, in case it appears to be, to argue with your point.
Indeed,
FREEDOM IS NOT FREE.
Thank you, all you active and retired members of the U. S. armed services!!! Thank you for my freedom.

Stan W.
April 30, 2013 10:31 pm

Konrad says:
blah blah blah
where can i read your published, peer reviewed work, Konrad?
i’m guessing nowhere. you’re an anomymout little blog commenter who does no science at all.

Janice Moore
April 30, 2013 10:33 pm

“The corpse of AGW cannot be reanimated, nor can it be hidden.”
[Konrad 2228 on 4/30/13]
QUOTE OF THE YEAR!

Chris Schoneveld
April 30, 2013 10:36 pm

This essay starts off with a wrong premise. There is no consensus on AGW.