Dr. Roy Spencer’s Ill Considered Comments on Citizen Science

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:

roy spencer homer simpson climate scientistDr. 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:

change in cloud radiative effect per one degree goodNow, 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.

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JJ
October 9, 2013 5:37 pm

Willis Eschenbach says:
Aw, JJ, you’re just jealous because you didn’t get attacked by name in public …

Neither did you.
Roy Spencer did not attack you. He offered some constructive criticism to you and (mostly) to the people who read you uncritically. ‘Hatchet job’ and ‘attacks’ and ‘slamming me with accusations’ are all inventions of your own mind, as it tries to rescue your overstuffed self-image from being confronted by the view from outside.
The persecution complex bit is one of the least attractive manifestations of your delusions of grandeur. Anthony does a disservice to himself and his other regular contributors when he allows you to throw these tantrums here. It devalues their work to be associated with your self-serving belligerence.

Adam
October 9, 2013 5:40 pm

It doesn’t matter whether it is original. It is interesting and every different explanation of something is interesting. Keep up to good work Willis!
Most of the time you would find that if you could read Russian that the Russians already did it years ago anyway!

magicjava
October 9, 2013 5:49 pm

Chipotle says:
October 9, 2013 at 5:26 pm
I can see why Willis would take offence at being likened to Homer, but doesn’t the presentation of the “professional” climate scientist offset that? Good grief, that photo is of a complete disaster…of the two, I’d rather be likened to Homer
just sayin’
————————————————————————————–
It’s doubly ironic as Hansen is they guy who made the claim Venus is hot due to CO2, when in fact its temperature is due to atmospheric pressure.

Kevin Schurig
October 9, 2013 5:53 pm

Right on Willis. I have read many commentors stating that Willis should basically shut his yap and take his medicine, well screw that. Being a political person, I have been told on many occasions that I too needed to shut up and just let the “big boys” take care of everything by giving the opposition what it wants, but we’ll stand up next time. Except there is never a next time, just the same excuse. Willis is right to stand up to this accusation for if he doesn’t now, then when?

Jerry Haney
October 9, 2013 5:56 pm

Willis,
I completely agree with your comments and the reasons for them. I hope Dr. Roy issues an appology or at least a statement that proves his accusations, because I also respect him and his science. Please keep sharing your science with us.

Eric Barnes
October 9, 2013 5:57 pm

Keep up the good work Willis. I don’t always agree with your conclusions but have confidence in your integrity and honesty. The same cannot be said about the 97%.

October 9, 2013 5:59 pm

FIG. 4. (a) The cloud longwave forcing as a function of SST.
5. Cloud feedbacks and the regulation of
tropical SSTs
house effect and that a negative feedback must operate
to limit the climatological SSTs to about 30°C. This
point was notably raised in the observational study of
Ramanathan and Collins (1991) who referred to this
runaway effect as the “supergreenhouse” effect and the
regulation of SSTs as the thermostat hypothesis. The
idea of a runaway greenhouse effect in the absence of a
regulatory negative feedback is also supported by
simple energy balance arguments (e.g., Pierrehumbert
1995; Kelly et al. 1999; among others).
tonsof good references
Tsushima, Y., and S. Manabe, 2001: Influence of cloud feedback
on annual variation of global mean surface temperature. J.
Geophys. Res., 106, 22 635–22 646.
a a few by peter webster and judith curry

October 9, 2013 6:01 pm

http://www.drroyspencer.com/wp-content/uploads/Stephens-review-of-cloud-feedback.pdf
actually a pretty good place to start.
I know when I started looking at UHI I started with the literature review, and then read the 100 or so papers. Its a good practice to read on your own first rather than force people to give you links

John Archer
October 9, 2013 6:11 pm

Rud Istvan (Oct 9, 2013 at 2:06 pm),
bit chilly has already said it but I can’t let it go without heartily seconding him. Yours was a SUPERB comment.
_______
On a separate note, I can’t stand the word ‘citizen‘ — in any context. I associate it with the forced totalitarian attitudes of that hideous French Revolution and for me it is the equivalent of the USSR’s komrade.
Citizens? NEVER!
People? ALWAYS.
Of course, some are lucky enough to be one’s fellow countrymen, but most aren’t — thank God. 🙂
Fcuk ‘citizenship’, and all who sail in her.
_______
Willis,
I don’t know if he is without sin or not, but Dr Roy has cast the first stone. In my book that gives you carte blanche. If you have to, I’d say start with a pebble. You can work your way up to the trebuchet and boulders later if needs be. But let’s hope it doesn’t come to that and that the affair is sorted out amicably, and soon. Either way, good luck. 🙂

Curious George
October 9, 2013 6:14 pm

We should not cede the IPCC the right to reinvent the wheel. Roy, Willis, keep up the good work.

jjfox
October 9, 2013 6:19 pm

Great essay Willis!
I completely agree with your criticisms of Dr. Roy’s blog post “from on high” of citizen scientists,, and you in particular.
After having read his blog post, I was left with the impression that the reason he didn’t support his claims with quotes and citations was because Roy doesn’t really view you as his intellectual equal in the first place (hence the Homer Simpson graphical reference) so why should he bother?.
I think that Roy has gotten too full of himself

October 9, 2013 6:23 pm

Ken says:
October 9, 2013 at 3:08 pm
Why did WUWT even permit this essay??
As many others, above, have noted Spencer was emphasizing the need to avoid “re-creating the wheel” (to paraphrase)….
“Going on Spencer says:
“Anyway, I applaud Willis, who is a sharp guy, for trying.”
Ken, and you actually think this was a nice thing for Spencer to say? People must have fun saying things to you between the lines. No, Roy Spencer and other climate scientists are upset that Willis is onto something big here (with all his posts). With all the dreck that has come out of the noisiest professional climate scientists and the bickering and politicking, it is dawning on some of them that Willis is leading climate science out of the phlogiston while most of its practitioners are sidelined as spectators. The IPCC and the thousands of “top” scientist contributors have rewritten the 1990 (?) report five times with no essential changes and, with climate behaviour getting more uncertain, they are getting more certain that humans are causing a global warming that hasn’t been happening for 17 years (after only 17 years of warming!). You will see more of these attacks on Willis when many of the mainstream recover from the warming halt that sneaked up on them and virtually shut them down. The most prolific of the pre- Climategate authors’ publishing efforts of late have dropped to less than a trickle, except for scoriating op eds and twitter twaddle . It is dawning on many of them that they have been horribly wrong as evidenced by their desperation and public prayers for everything to melt, dry up and blow away in a hurry. It casts me back aways: I remember many times brewing up tea from swampy brown water on remote geological surveys and watching the bugs swim faster and faster looking for cooler water before they sank under a handful of tea.
Roy was a surprise. He has done a lot of heavy good work and taken a lot of flack for his criticism of the mainstream CAGW guys. If Willis had nothing to contribute with his stuff, a prominent climate scientist would not be moved to attack in this fashion. Willis this was an affirmation.

troe
October 9, 2013 6:26 pm

Ouch! A complete and unwelcome surprise.

u.k.(us)
October 9, 2013 6:31 pm

Well, I’m glad that has been settled.
One less variable in the equation.

thisisnotgoodtogo
October 9, 2013 6:34 pm

When Roy played the religion card after his testimony, he demonstrated that he is every bit a political animal first.
He’s doing bizarre behaviours.

markx
October 9, 2013 6:38 pm

Willis seems to be a very logical thinker, has that rare motivation to actually go and do something about his ideas, and has enough skills and energy to find, examine and analyze relevant data.
But above all he has the skill of clear, concise communication.
He is able to clearly express and illustrate his findings with words and graphics in a way which gets bite sized concepts and backing data to be read by the average citizen.
He has no need in communicating here to descend into chapters and pages of convoluted scientific obscurese, a craft where Michael Mann excels, and which is probably a bit of a necessity in work for scientific publication which will usually reference and discuss all prior work on the subject at hand.
The remarkable, and in retrospect, very obvious highlight of his articles (to me) is the clear illustration of a 30°C ceiling on SST. Whatever the mechanism, there is one helluva lot of buffering capacity right there between the equator and the poles – I’d guess that zone only has to extend by a few meters in each direction to get us through the next few hundred years.

DonV
October 9, 2013 6:39 pm

Willis, I hear you. And I agree. Public castigation and humiliation must be answered. I empathize with how pissed off this must have made you. I applaud the restraint you showed in your blogged response.
In the review article I found this reference that shows some plots similar (but not quite), to the ones you came up with in both of your posts:
http://langley.atmos.colostate.edu/publications/Documents_1993/Stephens_Randall_Wittmeyer_Dazlich_Tjemkes_JGeo_1993.pdf
The lack of color that the journal forced on these authors leaves much to be desired in trying to figure out what is being conveyed. Yours made the information quite understandable.
My advice still is to “take the high road”. We will all respect you even more for it.

Dr. John M. Ware
October 9, 2013 6:41 pm

As a long-time (now retired) veteran of academe, I know that there is no magic in a degreed tenured connection with a university; the people are no smarter, and are often pettier, than people in the general public. If they are better informed, it is often in a narrow specialty; the Renaissance man of yore is rare in the modern university. There are, of course, many fine scholars and teachers in academe; however, advancement in their profession requires pursuit of publication and publicity, and it often involves a certain suspicion or jealousy of persons or ideas from outside their academic circle. Please believe me; I was in that milieu long enough to know.
In the present confrontation, Willis has my wholehearted support. He and his work have been attacked in an extremely unprofessional manner; and his reply, while a bit plain-spoken for most academics, laid out the issues properly and comprehensively.
Several commenters have remarked on the clarity and vividness of Willis’s writing. That attribute is one of the clearest possible distinctions between his work and so much of what passes for research writing in academe. For many, the working hypothesis seems to be: If the common man can understand it, I shouldn’t have written it. If it ceases being mysterious and jargonistic, I have failed in my effort to write a suitably opaque and obscure paper–thus, if someone can understand it, that someone might be able to falsify it. Not a favorable outcome. I am grateful to Willis for his clear and well-authenticated writing.

Jeremy
October 9, 2013 6:42 pm

I this and I that and I am the best and I know better and I figured it all out when nobody else could!
This is the ugly side of the blogosphere, IMHO. Let’s park the egos please on all sides.

DonV
October 9, 2013 6:42 pm

Strike that. The article DID have color images. I just didn’t scroll far enough!

William Sears
October 9, 2013 6:47 pm

Yes, this is all very strange. For what it’s worth I support you on this Willis. I would also want to see chapter and verse from those who choose to criticize. It is all very reminiscent of the occasional reviewer comments that I get on my own publications. I also think that you may have inadvertently stepped on someone’s toes as has already been suggested. I’ve done this before as well. Such unsupported speculation may be unworthy but there you go.
The resentment that you generate in others is staggering and the plain rudeness is almost beyond belief (I’m writing here of the comments and not Spencer), but I like your approach and I hope that I have your gumption when I am your age, which is only a couple of years from now. Damn the torpedoes and full speed ahead. Who cares if it has been done before as it will all come out in the wash in the end. Use my approach and do the literature research afterwards. When you (I?) do weird and wonderful things the chances of duplication is slim in any case.
Although I rarely comment be assured that I read and enjoy everything that you write here.
Cheers,
WS

milodonharlani
October 9, 2013 6:51 pm

To paraphrase Clemenceau on war:
La science est une chose trop grave pour la confier aux “experts”.
And that goes double for “climate science”.

October 9, 2013 6:59 pm

Seems to me that Willis, is the lightning rod. Whatever really set Dr. Spencer off, Willis got the brunt.
If I used a graphic of Homer, friendly like to represent a close friend, I’d better have the apology shortly after the picture or be prepared to apologize mightily in person.
If Hansen going to jail was supposed to be the counterpoint softening the Homer implication, it is not enough because Hansen’s picture is absolutely true. Many another professional climate leech’s name and picture could be in that picture and the simple citizen’s thought response would still be the same.
I, as a simple citizen take offense to being portrayed as Homer. A citizen scientist should really take offense. After all, the Dr. Spencer’s climate scientists get paid for their work; anything a citizen scientist does is on their own time, dime and effort. Dr. Spencer gets to bounce ideas off of co-workers, honest feedback and ideas without too much acrimony. Willis in this case posts his ideas open for criticism on the net, and when necessary retries and reposts with identified errors/oversights corrected.
Whether Dr. Spencer intended ill with his blog post is not the question. Dr. Spencer’s blog post caused ill and Roy is directly responsible. Hopefully a responsible scientist, citizen or professional, will own up to their mistakes and apologize.

October 9, 2013 7:01 pm

I hope it’s OK that I invited folks to the show at Spencer’s blog. This should be good for a scientific process debate. Willis, I love your work and honesty here. You’ve been consistent wrt “show me the data, show me the sources”

commieBob
October 9, 2013 7:02 pm

RC Saumarez says:
October 9, 2013 at 3:58 pm
… The problem with citizen scientists is that they may not all be Heavisides but some think that they are!

A hundred years from now most scientists, amateur and professional, will be forgotten. We don’t know who will be remembered and who will be forgotten. When I was a student I worked with a fairly prominent scientist whose work was followed by many. Someone else came up with the proverbial game changer; and reduced my supervisor’s career to irrelevance.
A professional scientist has a small but non-zero chance of coming up with something important. An amateur has a smaller but still non-zero chance. That’s not why we do science though. It’s about the journey, not the destination. If the professionals get shirty about the amateurs, they are probably missing this important point.

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