Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
Over at Roy Spencer’s usually excellent blog, Roy has published what could be called a hatchet job on “citizen climate scientists” in general and me in particular. Now, Dr. Roy has long been a hero of mine, because of all his excellent scientific work … which is why his attack mystifies me. Maybe he simply had a bad day and I was the focus of frustration, we all have days like that. Anthony tells me he can’t answer half of the email he gets some days, Dr. Roy apparently gets quite a lot of mail too, asking for comment.
Dr. Roy posted a number of uncited and unreferenced claims in his essay. So, I thought I’d give him the chance to provide data and citations to back up those claims. He opens with this graphic:
Dr. Roy, the citizen climate scientists are the ones who have made the overwhelming majority of the gains in the struggle against rampant climate alarmism. It is people like Steve McIntyre and Anthony Watts and Donna LaFramboise and myself and Joanne Nova and Warwick Hughes and the late John Daly, citizen climate scientists all, who did the work that your fellow mainstream climate scientists either neglected or refused to do. You should be showering us with thanks for doing the work your peers didn’t get done, not speciously claiming that we are likeable idiots like Homer Simpson.
Dr. Roy begins his text by saying:
I’ve been asked to comment on Willis Eschenbach’s recent analysis of CERES radiative budget data (e.g., here). Willis likes to analyze data, which I applaud. But sometimes Willis gives the impression that his analysis of the data (or his climate regulation theory) is original, which is far from the case.
Hundreds of researchers have devoted their careers to understanding the climate system, including analyzing data from the ERBE and CERES satellite missions that measure the Earth’s radiative energy budget. Those data have been sliced and diced every which way, including being compared to surface temperatures (as Willis recently did).
So, Roy’s claim seems to be that my work couldn’t possibly be original, because all conceivable analyses of the data have already been done. Now that’s a curious claim in any case … but in this case, somehow, he seems to have omitted the links to the work he says antedates mine.
When someone starts making unreferenced, uncited, unsupported accusations about me like that, there’s only one thing to say … Where’s the beef? Where’s the study? Where’s the data?
In fact, I know of no one who has done a number of the things that I’ve done with the CERES data. If Dr. Roy thinks so, then he needs to provide evidence of that. He needs to show, for example, that someone has analyzed the data in this fashion:
Now, I’ve never seen any such graphic. I freely admit, as I have before, that maybe the analysis has been done some time in the past, and my research hasn’t turned it up. I did find two studies that were kind of similar, but nothing like that graph above. Dr. Roy certainly seems to think such an analysis leading to such a graphic exists … if so, I suggest that before he starts slamming me with accusations, he needs to cite the previous graphic that he claims that my graphic is merely repeating.
I say this for two reasons. In addition to it being regular scientific practice to cite your sources, it is common courtesy not to accuse a man of doing something without providing data to back it up.
And finally, if someone has done any of my analyses before, I want to know so I can save myself some time … if the work’s been done, I’m not interested in repeating it. So I ask Dr. Roy: which study have I missed out on that has shown what my graphic above shows?
Dr. Roy then goes on to claim that my ideas about thunderstorms regulating the global climate are not new because of the famous Ramanathan and Collins 1991 paper called “Thermodynamic regulation of ocean warming by cirrus clouds deduced from observations of the 1987 El Niño”. Dr. Roy says:
I’ve previously commented on Willis’ thermostat hypothesis of climate system regulation, which Willis never mentioned was originally put forth by Ramanathan and Collins in a 1991 Nature article.
Well … no, it wasn’t “put forth” in R&C 1991, not even close. Since Dr. Roy didn’t provide a link to the article he accuses me of “never mentioning”, I’ll remedy that, it’s here.
Unfortunately, either Dr. Roy doesn’t fully understand what R&C 1991 said, or he doesn’t fully understand what I’ve said. This is the Ramanathan and Collins hypothesis as expressed in their abstract:
Observations made during the 1987 El Niño show that in the upper range of sea surface temperatures, the greenhouse effect increases with surface temperature at a rate which exceeds the rate at which radiation is being emitted from the surface. In response to this ‘super greenhouse effect’, highly reflective cirrus clouds are produced which act like a thermostat, shielding the ocean from solar radiation. The regulatory effect of these cirrus clouds may limit sea surface temperatures to less than 305K.
Why didn’t I mention R&C 1991 with respect to my hypothesis? Well … because it’s very different from my hypothesis, root and branch.
• Their hypothesis was that cirrus clouds act as a thermostat to regulate maximum temperatures in the “Pacific Warm Pool” via a highly localized “super greenhouse effect”.
• My hypothesis is that thunderstorms act all over the planet as natural emergent air conditioning units, which form over local surface hot spots and (along with other emergent phenomena) cool the surface and regulate the global temperature.
In addition, I fear that Dr. Roy hasn’t done his own research on this particular matter. A quick look on Google shows that I have commented on R&C 1991 before. Back in 2012, in response to Dr. Roy’s same claim (but made by someone else), I wrote:
I disagree that the analysis of thunderstorms as a governing mechanism has been “extensively examined in the literature”. It has scarcely been discussed in the literature at all. The thermostatic mechanism discussed by Ramanathan is quite different from the one I have proposed. In 1991, Ramanathan and Collins said that the albedos of deep convective clouds in the tropics limited the SST … but as far as I know, they didn’t discuss the idea of thunderstorms as a governing mechanism at all.
And regarding the Pacific Warm Pool, I also quoted the Abstract of R&C1991 in this my post on Argo and the Ocean Temperature Maximum. So somebody’s not searching here before making claims …
In any case, I leave it to the reader to decide whether my hypothesis, that emergent phenomena like thunderstorms regulate the climate, was “originally put forth” in the R&C 1991 Nature paper about cirrus clouds, or not …
Finally, Dr. Roy closes with this plea:
Anyway, I applaud Willis, who is a sharp guy, for trying. But now I am asking him (and others): read up on what has been done first, then add to it. Or, show why what was done previously came to the wrong conclusion, or analyzed the data wrong.
That’s what I work at doing.
But don’t assume you have anything new unless you first do some searching of the literature on the subject. True, some of the literature is paywalled. Sorry, I didn’t make the rules. And I agree, if research was public-funded, it should also be made publicly available.
First, let me say that I agree with all parts of that plea. I do my best to find out what’s been done before, among other reasons in order to save me time repeating past work.
However, many of my ideas are indeed novel, as are my methods of analysis. I’m the only person I know of, for example, to do graphic cluster analysis on temperature proxies (see “Kill It With Fire“). Now, has someone actually done that kind of analysis before? Not that I’ve seen, but if there is, I’m happy to find that out—it ups the odds that I’m on the right track when that happens. I have no problem with acknowledging past work—as I noted above, I have previously cited the very R&C 1991 study that Dr. Roy accuses me of ignoring.
Dr. Roy has not given me any examples of other people doing the kind of analysis of the CERES data that I’m doing. All he’s given are claims that someone somewhere did some unspecified thing that he claims I said I thought I’d done first. Oh, plus he’s pointed at, but not linked to, Ramanathan & Collins 1991, which doesn’t have anything to do with my hypothesis.
So all we have are his unsupported claims that my work is not novel.
And you know what? Dr. Roy may well be right. My work may not be novel. Wouldn’t be the first time I’ve been wrong … but without specific examples, he is just handwaving. All I ask is that he shows this with proper citations.
Dr. Roy goes on to say:
But cloud feedback is a hard enough subject without muddying the waters further. Yes, clouds cool the climate system on average (they raise the planetary albedo, so they reduce solar input into the climate system). But how clouds will change due to warming (cloud feedback) could be another matter entirely. Don’t conflate the two.
I ask Dr. Roy to please note the title of my graphic above. It shows how the the clouds actually change due to warming. I have not conflated the two in the slightest, and your accusation that I have done so is just like your other accusations—it lacks specifics. Exactly what did I say that makes you think I’m conflating the two? Dr. Roy, I ask of you the simple thing I ask of everyone—if you object to something that I say, please QUOTE MY WORDS, so we can all see what you are talking about.
Dr. Roy continues:
For instance, let’s say “global warming” occurs, which should then increase surface evaporation, leading to more convective overturning of the atmosphere and precipitation. But if you increase clouds in one area with more upward motion and precipitation, you tend to decrease clouds elsewhere with sinking motion. It’s called mass continuity…you can’t have rising air in one region without sinking air elsewhere to complete the circulation. “Nature abhors a vacuum”.
Not true. For example, if thunderstorms alone are not sufficient to stop an area-wide temperature rise, a new emergent phenomenon arises. The thunderstorms will self-assemble into “squall lines”. These are long lines of massed thunderstorms, with long canyons of rising air between them. In part this happens because it allows for a more dense packing of thunderstorms, due to increased circulation efficiency. So your claim above, that an increase of clouds in one area means a decrease in another area, is strongly falsified by the emergence of squall lines.
In addition, you’ve failed to consider the timing of onset of the phenomena. A change of ten minutes in the average formation time of tropical cumulus makes a very large difference in net downwelling radiation … so yes, contrary to your claim, I’ve just listed two ways the clouds can indeed increase in one area without a decrease in another area.
So, examining how clouds and temperatures vary together locally (as Willis has done) really doesn’t tell you anything about feedbacks. Feedbacks only make sense over entire atmospheric circulation systems, which are ill-defined (except in the global average).
Mmm … well, to start with, these are not simple “feedbacks”. I say that clouds are among the emergent thermoregulatory phenomena that keep the earth’s temperature within bounds. The system acts, not as a simple feedback, but as a governor. What’s the difference?
- A simple feedback moves the result in a certain direction (positive or negative) with a fixed feedback factor. It is the value of this feedback factor that people argue about, the cloud feedback factor … I say that is meaningless, because what we’re looking at is not a feedback like that at all.
- A governor, on the other hand, uses feedback to move the result towards some set-point, by utilizing a variable feedback factor.
In short, feedback acts in one direction by a fixed amount. A governor, on the other hand, acts to restore the result to the set-point by varying the feedback. The system of emergent phenomena on the planet is a governor. It does not resemble simple feedback in the slightest.
And the size of those emergent phenomena varies from very small to very large on both spatial and temporal scales. Dust devils arise when a small area of the land gets too hot, for example. They are not a feedback, but a special emergent form which acts as an independent entity with freedom of motion. Dust devils move preferentially to the warmest nearby location, and because they are so good at cooling the earth, like all such mechanisms they have to move and evolve in order to persist. Typically they live for some seconds to minutes and then disappear. That’s an emergent phenomenon cooling the surface at the small end of the time and distance scales.
From there, the scales increase from local (cumulus clouds and thunderstorms) to area-wide (cyclones, grouping of thunderstorms into “squall lines”) to regional and multiannual (El Nino/La Nina Equator-To-Poles warm water pump) to half the planet and tens of years (Pacific Decadal Oscillation).
So I strongly dispute Dr. Roy’s idea that “feedbacks only make sense over entire atmospheric circulation systems”. To start with, they’re not feedbacks, they are emergent phenomena … and they have a huge effect on the regulation of the climate on all temporal and spatial scales.
And I also strongly dispute his claim that my hypothesis is not novel, the idea that thunderstorms and other emergent climate phenomena work in concert planet-wide to maintain the temperature of the earth within narrow bounds.
Like I said, Dr. Roy is one of my heroes, and I’m mystified by his attack on citizen scientists in general, and on me in particular. Yes, I’ve said that I thought that some of my research has been novel and original. Much of it is certainly original, in that I don’t know of anyone else who has done the work in that way, so the ideas are my own.
However, it just as certainly may not be novel. There’s nothing new under the sun. My point is that I don’t know of anyone advancing this hypothesis, the claim that emergent phenomena regulate the temperature and that forcing has little to do with it.
If Dr. Roy thinks my ideas are not new, I’m more than willing to look at any citations he brings to the table. As far as I’m concerned they would be support for my hypothesis, so I invite him to either back it up or back it off.
Best regards to all.
w.
Dollis you made 14 comments on Dr. Roys blog on 10-11-2013 between 3:22 pm (whatever time standard his logging is). Then 4 more today (as per current time of this post).
WOW you are engaged!
Shawnhet:
I repeat, if you think the R&C and Eschenbach Effects are the same or that one includes the other then argue your case because I have stated the reality as I understand it.
Your assertion saying
is an evasion.
Richard
Geez, man, can you please drop the part about my supposedly claiming that they are the same. I said that one includes the other.
I fail to see how my pointing to a passage in a paper that says X is an evasion about whether a paper actually says X. Do you dispute that the paper talks about the vertical transport of latent energy or that this can form a cumulonimbus cloud?
Some here can help out Dollis by entering his/her/their comments as well as poptech into a spreadsheet and find out it they/he/she ever sleeps. I’m ready to call TROLL.
TRO….. L… Let me out of this low abyss of the low clas…. I’ll stop now.
Shawnhet:
At October 12, 2013 at 2:56 pm you ask me
No, I don’t.
In my reply to you at October 12, 2013 at 2:17 pm (i.e. less than an hour ago) I wrote
But so what?
Richard
Richard,
It is a red herring to say that no one in the professional climate science community takes his theory seriously? And it is a red herring to say that the ONLY ones who do take his work seriously know far less about the relevant science than he does? And how can those who do take him seriously adequately evaluate his ideas?
Joe:
Your post at October 12, 2013 at 3:34 pm asks me a series of questions.
I address each in turn.
Q1.
It is a red herring to say that no one in the professional climate science community takes his theory seriously?
A1.
Yes, because that is a not relevant distraction from the issues under discussion which are
(a) the assertion by Spencer that Eschenbach plagiarised from Ramanathan&Collins
and
(b) the conflation by Spencer of Eschenbach with Homer Simpson
and
(c) the claim by Spencer that Eschenbach has not done any original work.
Q2.
And it is a red herring to say that the ONLY ones who do take his work seriously know far less about the relevant science than he does?
A2.
No, that is not a red herring. It is a lie. For example, Judith Curry takes his work seriously.
Q3.
And how can those who do take him seriously adequately evaluate his ideas?
A3.
By thinking. (And thinking is something you would be benefit from doing before making your silly posts.)
Richard
– – – – – – –
Matthew R Marler,
Thanks for your comment.
I find of high interest the point that, although reasonably articulated and sound professional advice by a well thought of and senior skeptical professional was given to an amateur about reasonable due diligence on prior published work and although the amateur acted amateurish in response, the amateur may be misrepresenting himself as more than an amateur. My thinking is that Poptech is checking if the amateur is over egging his status (misrepresenting) beyond amateur ranking.
I find it of high interest to follow the checking because it is about the most basic integrity.
NOTE to Poptech => that is entirely my view of your focus, I apologize if I am incorrectly interpreting you or emphasizing the wrong aspects of your comments.
Finally, Matthew R Marler, as to what you consider the main points, you should go where you intellectually wish without any prejudice from me.
John
Richard,
You also suggest that a point by JJ was not answered. That point merely displayed that JJ had not read R&C1991 and it was answered by me and, importantly, by Willis at October 10, 2013 at 8:53 am
Un, no. Unlike Willis, I had read R&C91. My synopsis of relevant portions of that paper, quoted by Shawnhet above, is accurate.
You and Willis have not addressed the content of that commentary. Instead, you have talked around it, using bluff and bluster to imply what you know you cannot say outright for its untruthfulness. You wave your hands over lessor distinctions between R&C91 and Willis, hoping to distract from the fundamental overlap that was the subject of Roy’s gentle and measured constructive criticism. In doing so, you both say some things that are simply not true. For example, this bit from you:
That attempt at creating the appearance of a fundamental difference between R&C91 and Willis is completely false in its statements and its construction.
Despite your false claim, the R&C91 effect includes the induction of both cirrus and thunderstorms. More precisely, it posits the induction of cirrus anvils by thunderstorms induced by SST increase. Your assertion that thunderstorms are not in R&C91’s hypothesis is asinine. Thunderstorms are central to the R&C91 hypothesis. They call their effect “the thermostat hypothesis” and they name “thunderstorm anvils” as that thermostat.
BTW, the false distinction you attempt to draw using cirrus and thunderstorms also fails the other way around. Not only does R&C91 depend on thunderstorms, but it is also the case that Willis’ paper includes among its enumerated effects an increase in cirrus cloud albedo. Driven by thunderstorms. Just like R&C91. Huh. Maybe Roy was on to something.
Despite your false implication, and just like the later effort by Willis, R&C91 also depends on export of heat from the surface to high altitude. And despite your false claim, and just like your claim for Willis’ hypothesis, the R&C effect also starts to operate at temperatures below 305K.
Unlike Willis, you claim to have read more than the three sentence abstract of R&C91. The above suggests that you need to read it again. You should also spend some time with Willis’ paper, and pay careful attention to what is in it, and what is not, and what is concluded, and on what basis. If you use your head, you will find that Roy was spot on in his kindly recommendations to Willis.
Now, if you want to look at an actual glaring difference between Willis’ ideas and published atmospheric science, then pay attention to the other issue that Roy gently prodded Willis to educate himself about: what goes up, forces something else down. It is now generally held (e.g. Hartmann and Michelsen 1993) that the convection driven increase in cloud albedo over one area (as with thunderstorms) is more or less cancelled out by an opposing decrease in cloud cover on the subsiding limb of the induced circulation. Conversely, Willis holds that the dry descending air mass enhances the effect of his hypothesis.
Cancels vs enhances. That is a difference. Now, there is no problem disagreeing with established theory, provided that you address that disagreement with facts and reasoning. That’s science. It is another thing entirely to find oneself firmly at odds with established science out of ones own ignorance. That’s just embarrassing.
If Willis is ever able to pocket his ego, he will notice that he owes Roy a great debt of gratitude, for his kind and gentle efforts in attempting to help Willis to avoid that sort of embarrassment. To date, Willis would rather rant about imaginary offenses and made up accusations. You are not helping.
– – – – – – – –
Christoph Dollis,
What you say is the point that an anonymous commenter not being brave is, in all practical reality, a moot point on this thread where the number of anonymous antagonists and number of anonymous protagonists and number of anonymous neutrals all are on the same order of magnitude as the number of non-anonymous in each group. N’est ce pas? Brave isn’t, in that context, very applicable.
My point about bravery is more pertinent to Poptech, given his opposition to the overwhelming dominance of the fervent populism on this thread. I am impressed.
John
I come back after over 3 hours and Poptech is nowhere to be seen. Where are you Poptech, I miss you? Maybe he’s busy or maybe he’s learned a lesson about humility and non-hypocrisy. Or maybe Poptech is in re-hab or his local metal asylum. All are credible.
I’ll come back tomorrow Sunday morning 9ish GMT to check up on my beloved friend and confidant Poptech. This is just to see whether he is a sucker for punishment or whether he has learned something. I very much doubt the latter.
@ur momisugly Max
The End of Time: The Next Revolution in Physics by theoretical physicist Julian Barbour is an excellent, though tough for some, read on this topic. Be aware though that there are different causalities. Most think in terms of billiard balls and time series, but for example, copper sulphate in water solution causes that water to appear blue. There’s a lot more to this, but this is not the place for that discussion. Aristotle and Aquinas both had much to say about causes.
As it happens, the philosopher who taught me in first year, Phil Dowe took over Wesley Salmon’s cloak of being the leading thinker on causality. Amazon currently have a very short book on the subject by Phil on special for $95.24. Given how many hours I have attempted to fully understand this book, that’s only a few cents per hour 🙂
@ur momisugly milodonharlani
Thanks for the link. I look forward to rereading that essay. Nielsen writes well. A couple of days ago, I learnt of a researcher voluntarily telling all and sundry of an error in a paper she wrote several years ago after discovering she was incorrect. All is not yet lost in some areas of science.
http://www.the-scientist.com//?articles.view/articleNo/37843/title/Mislabeled-Microbes-Cause-Two-Retractions/
The Pompous Git says:
October 12, 2013 at 5:48 pm
Maybe there is hope. Thanks!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pamela_Ronald
The time is more than up (17+ hours). Willis failed to produce his imaginary computer climate model code and we can irrefutably call BS on his claims to being a “computer modeller” (not to mention he has never been employed as such).
Time to review the rest of his BS claims…
Poptech says:
October 11, 2013 at 11:01 pm
Well, it’s now 6 PM, some seven hours after you wrote that, Poptech. I’ve been doing actual science today, looking at the TAO dataset. It’s actually interesting work, I’ll publish it soon. In any case, this is the first I’ve heard of your attempted extortion.
And I gotta say, that’s the most funniest demand I’ve heard in a while. Really? I have to answer you, and I have to do it prior to a deadline that expired six hours before I received your ludicrous note?
Dude, that’s hilarious! Did you write notes like that in grade school? My advice is, don’t go into the kidnapping business … people won’t know what to do with your kind of ransom note, “Pay me the $50,000 by day before yesterday or you’ll never see your poodle Fifi again …”
In any case, I have no intention of bowing to ultimatums from random internet popups without the stones to sign their own name to their words. Make of that what you wish.
Again, your endless ad hominem attacks are the sure sign of a man who is unable to falsify my science.
Do your thing, Poptech. I’m done with your nonsense.
w.
Ashby Manson said @ur momisugly October 12, 2013 at 11:33 am
As it happens, some of us would rather read interesting books and paers than watch TV, especially commercial. So, rather than rely upon my memory of what happened on the few episodes I saw of the Tracy Ullman Show decades ago, I consulted the wikipedia. Homer Simpson is described as “crude, overweight, incompetent, clumsy, lazy, a heavy drinker, and ignorant” which you say is “affectionate”.
The Git is mildly autistic and so has difficulty with such things as affection and used this new found expression of affection on Mrs Git. He called her crude, overweight, incompetent, clumsy, lazy, a heavy drinker, and ignorant. They tell me I will be able to speak again in several months 😉
@JJ, your reasoning that:
“It is now generally held (e.g. Hartmann and Michelsen 1993) that the convection driven increase in cloud albedo over one area (as with thunderstorms) is more or less cancelled out by an opposing decrease in cloud cover on the subsiding limb of the induced circulation.”
How can an “emergent phenomena” such as clouds that form for whatever reason be cancelled out by subsiding air anywhere else? You seem to be saying that the reflected sunlight from one area (a cloud of any form) and the shaded area of surface (which could be under the desending air or offset to it) is equal to some other area (area of desending air) with, i guess, no cloud cover? something doesn’t seem right with that. i also guess that we’re starting off with clear skies?
P.S.-Thanks for the interesting articles and comments.
Yep, Willis can’t back up his BS about pretending to be a computer modeller. Lets continue…
John Whitman says:
October 12, 2013 at 12:56 am
John, it was an unsolicited public attack, and I fear such an attack comes with its own inherent drama.
As a result, I challenged him to back up the attack with facts.
He has not done so. You have not done so. He’s gone away and is not answering, either here or on his website. Instead, you are acting as his lapdog and attempting to do his biting for him. Bad news, John … it’s not working.
As a result, I choose not to take either his or your unsolicited advice.
w.
PS—Just what are the “rights, privileges, and duties” of a “professional scientist”? A list of the privileges alone should provide some humor … but please, present any of the lists of rights, privileges, and duties that you find relevant. This should be good.
Poptech says:
“Yep, Willis can’t back up his BS about pretending to be a computer modeller. Lets continue…”
Poptech, I really don’t think you understand how badly you’re coming off here. At least to those of us watching from the sidelines.
My well-meaning advice is…
…oh, forget it. I don’t think you’d take any advice. I wish you the best of luck anyway.
Shawnhet says:
October 12, 2013 at 8:41 am
Thanks, Shawnhet. There are a variety of climate papers with “thermostat” in them somewhere. I have not found a single one that has advanced my hypothesis, which is that the time of onset of tropical cumulus and thunderstorms is the major mechanism regulating the temperature of the planet.
Dr. Roy hasn’t come up with such a study. No one else has come up with such a study. Now you want to join the party, because you haven’t come up with one either. You’ve just waved your hands and in essence said Go search, my son …
If you find such a study, let me know. I’ve looked and haven’t found one.
w.
PS—As an aside, Shawnhet, some free advice that’s worth every penny—don’t ever tell a man “you’re a smart guy, why don’t you just …”. That’s just an ostensibly polite way of calling me dumb if I don’t do what you advise. I don’t take well to that. I may not do what you advise, and that may just prove how smart I am …
Or, as in this case, I may have already done what you advise. You think I don’t read the literature? And of course, by saying that you are assuming that I’m too dumb to have read the literature or googled the subject … you see why you want to avoid telling someone “you’re a smart guy, why don’t you …”?
John Whitman: reasonably articulated and sound professional advice
I challenge you to quote some of that. What I read were inaccurate charges clearly refuted by Willis: namely, the claim that he had not acknowledged predecessors, and that he had contributed nothing new. Willis proposed an extension of the idea of self-regulation including thunderstorms, and a series of data analyses to test his hypotheses. The only substance of Dr Spencer’s complaint, if it be substance, is that Willis didn’t write a masters thesis or journal article, or some such. That form is irrelevant to the content of Willis’s writing.
If you have found something of merit in poptech’s ad homs, quote it so that we know what you mean. I do not disdain people who write anonymously (some people do), but to call her or him “brave” is absurd.
Questions Willis cannot answer,
1. Why are you misleadingly implying your published COMMENT on another paper in Nature is on equal footing with an original research paper?
2. What are the TWO “peer-reviewed” papers you had published in E&E (I am aware of one).
3. Why did you not correct Mr.Booker in The Daily Telegraph that you are not a computer modeller (context implied is climate computer modeller) when you had the chance?
4. Why did you not correct The New York Times that you are not an engineer when you had a chance to do so?
It seems Mr. Eschenbach has a documented history of misleading people.