From the tiny dog whistle violin department.
Dr. Michael Mann and Dr. Stephan Lewandowsky have a new paper out that redefines the term “climate ugliness”. Apparently FOIA requests are “harassment”. And Internet blogs “wrongly sidestep peer-reviewed literature”. Oh Mann, tell that to the IPCC who used magazine articles as sources for AR4. The title suggests all this is happening “subterranean” when in fact blogs are all out in the open, while Dr. Mann continues to fight expensive legal battles to hide his publicly funded emails at the University of Virginia and imagines the Koch brothers behind every virtual rock and tree.
Mainstream climate skeptics admit there has been warming in the last century, CO2 has an effect, but that the issue has been propped up by biased surface temperature measurements and oversold by activist scientists (such as Mann) and the media, since we have seen that climate sensitivity has been observed to be significantly lower than claims by computer models.
Since they are slowly losing the argument as nature keeps adding years to “the pause” in global warming, what Dr. Mann and Dr. Lewandowsky are doing is engaging in suppression of dissent.
Suppression of dissent occurs when an individual or group which is more powerful than another tries to directly or indirectly censor, persecute or otherwise oppress the other party, rather than engage with and constructively respond to or accommodate the other party’s arguments or viewpoint. When dissent is perceived as a threat, action may be taken to prevent continuing dissent or penalize dissidents. Government or industry[1] may often act in this way.
Their tactic is exactly the same thing that went on in communist Soviet Union with dissenters. It is called Political abuse of psychiatry. Psychiatry was used as a tool to eliminate political opponents (“dissidents”) who openly expressed beliefs that contradicted official dogma. Dissenters were labeled as having a form of mental illness that needed to be cured.
We all know how that turned out. The Soviet Union is no more.
Anyone who doubts Dr. Mann is political and using political tools to suppress climate skeptics and access need only look at his recent political rallies and writings endorsing the Democratic gubernatorial candidate of Virginia, Terry McAuliffe. He’s taking that side because it is likely McAuliffe promises to fight to keep his UVa emails secret if elected. The Republican candidate, Cuccinelli, has tried to have those emails exposed to sunlight under FOIA requests and lawsuits. There must be something particularly damning in those emails for Dr. Mann to fight this hard and turn himself into a political tool.
IMHO, it is Dr. Mann and Dr. Lewandowsky who need psychological evaluations, not mainstream climate skeptics.
Here’s their paper:
The Subterranean War on Science
Science denial kills. More than 300,000 South Africans died needlessly in the early 2000s because the government of President Mbeki preferred to treat AIDS with garlic and beetroot rather than antiretroviral drugs (Chigwedere, Seage, Gruskin, Lee, & Essex,2008). The premature death toll from tobacco is staggering and historians have shown how it was needlessly inflated by industry-sponsored denial of robust medical evidence (Proctor, 2011). The US now faces the largest outbreak of whooping cough in decades, in part because of widespread denial of the benefits of vaccinations (Rosenau, 2012). According to the World Health Organization, climate change is already claiming more than 150,000 lives annually (Patz, Campbell-Lendrum, Holloway, & Foley, 2005), and estimates of future migrations triggered by unmitigated global warming run as high as 187 million refugees (Nicholls et al., 2011). A common current attribute of denial is that it side-steps the peer-reviewed literature and relies on platforms such as internet blogs or tabloid newspapers to disseminate its dissent from the scientific mainstream. In contrast, the publication of dissenting views in the peer-reviewed literature does not constitute denial.
The tragic track record of denial has stimulated research into its political, sociological, and psychological underpinnings (Dunlap, 2013; Jacobson, Targonski, & Poland, 2007; Kalichman, 2009; Lewandowsky, Oberauer, & Gignac, 2013; Lewandowsky, Gignac, & Oberauer, 2013; Oreskes & Conway, 2010). Although research has focused on diverse issues — from HIV/AIDS to vaccinations to climate change — several common variables have been isolated that determine whether people are likely to reject well-established scientific facts. Foremost among them is the threat to people’s worldviews. For example, mitigation of climate change or public-health legislation threatens people who cherish unregulated free markets because it might entail regulations of businesses (Heath & Gifford, 2006; Kahan, 2010; Lewandowsky, Gignac, & Oberauer, 2013; Rosenau, 2012); vaccinations threaten Libertarians’ conceptions of parental autonomy (Kahan, Braman, Cohen, Gastil, & Slovic, 2010; Lewandowsky, Gignac, & Oberauer, 2013); and evolution challenges people’s religious faiths (Rosenau, 2012). Another variable that appears to be involved in science denial is conspiracist ideation (Kalichman, 2009; Lewandowsky, Gignac, & Oberauer, 2013; Lewandowsky, Oberauer, & Gignac, 2013; Lewandowsky, Cook, Oberauer, & Marriott, 2013; Smith & Leiserowitz, 2012). Thus, AIDS is thought to be a creation of the US Government (Kalichman, 2009), climate change is a “hoax” perpetrated by corrupt scientists (Inhofe, 2012), and research into the health effects of tobacco is conducted by a “cartel” that “manufactures alleged evidence” (Abt, 1983, p. 127).
The conspiratorial element of denial explains why contrarians often perceive themselves as heroic dissenters who — in their imagination — are following Galileo’s footsteps by opposing a mainstream scientific “elite” that imposes its views not on the basis of overwhelming evidence but for political reasons. Mainstream climate scientists are therefore frequently accused of “Lysenkoism,” after the Soviet scientist whose Lamarckian views of evolution were state dogma in the Soviet Union. Other contrarians appeal to Albert Einstein’s injunction “. . . to not stop questioning” to support their dissent from the fact that HIV causes AIDS (Duesberg, 1989).
This conspiratorial element provides a breeding ground for the personal and professional attacks on scientists that seemingly inevitably accompany science denial. The present authors have all been subject to such attacks, whose similarity is notable because the authors’ research spans a broad range of topics and disciplines: The first author has investigated the psychological variables underlying the acceptance or rejection of scientific findings; the second author is a paleoclimatologist who has shown that current global temperatures are likely unprecedented during the last 1,000 years or more; the third and fourth authors are public-health researchers who have investigated the attitudes of teenagers and young adults towards smoking and evaluated a range of tobacco control interventions; and the fifth author has established that human memory is not only fallible but subject to very large and systematic distortions.
This article surveys some of the principal techniques by which the authors have been harassed; namely, cyber-bullying and public abuse; harassment by vexatious freedom-of-information (FOI) requests, complaints, and legal threats or actions; and perhaps most troubling, by the intimidation of journal editors who are acting on manuscripts that are considered inconvenient by deniers. The uniformity with which these attacks are pursued across several disciplines suggests that their motivation is not scientific in nature.
In light of the lethal track record of denial, one might expect opprobrium to be reserved for those who deny the public’s right to be adequately informed about risks such as AIDS or climate change. Paradoxically, however, it is scientists whose research aims to inform the public of such risks who have been at the receiving end of hate mail and threats. Thus, the first author has been labeled a “Nazi zionist kike” and has been accused of “mass murder and treason.” The second author has been attacked on a neo-Nazi website and has received envelopes with a powdery white substance resembling Anthrax (Mann, 2012). The third author has received anonymous abusive emails and nighttime phone calls in her home. This abuse is at least in part orchestrated because the frequency of such emails tends to increase when scientists’ e-addresses are posted on contrarian websites.
Other attempts of intimidation have involved the solicitation of potentially compromising information from the first author by a non-existent internet “sock puppet” whose unknown creators pretended to be victimized by climate deniers — and who then splattered the private correspondence on the internet (Lewandowsky, 2011). At a public level, an American lobbying outfit has recently likened climate scientists to the Unabomber in a billboard campaign, and a British tabloid journalist entertained the execution of the second author by hanging in what passes for a “mainstream” newspaper in the UK (Delingpole, 2013).
Another common tool of harassment involves FOI requests. Under many legislations around the world, email correspondence by an academic is subject to almost unconditional release. During the last 9 months, the first author has been subject to numerous requests for correspondence and other documents, including trivial pedantry such as the precise time and date stamps of blog posts. In a paradoxical twist, accusations of impropriety were launched against the first author when an FOI-release confirmed that inconvenient research (Lewandowsky, Oberauer, & Gignac, 2013) was conducted with ethics approval. The allegations — by bloggers unaccountable to any form of review or ethical scrutiny — cited the fact that ethics approval was granted expeditiously (for details, see Lewandowsky, Cook, et al., 2013). The second author and his former university endured vexatious demands for the release of personal email correspondence by Virginia’s Attorney General. Those actions attracted national and international attention and were labeled a “witch hunt” by Nature (2010). The demands were ultimately rejected with prejudice by the Virginia Supreme Court. Other attacks on the second author involved front groups like the “American Tradition Institute” and the “Competitive Enterprise Institute” which sought access to his personal emails, professional notes, and virtually every imaginable document from his entire career. The third and fourth authors’ research center on tobacco control has been subject to a number of extensive FOI requests from a tobacco giant, Philip Morris International, for confidential interview records involving teenaged participants. Notably, the identity of Philip Morris was disguised during the first FOI request, which was launched with a law firm serving as a front group (Hastings, MacKintosh, & Bauld, 2011). The information requested included “all primary data,” “all questionnaires,” “all interviewers’ handbooks and/or instructions,” “all data files,” “all record descriptions,” and so on.
The use of FOI to obtain correspondence or research data mirrors legislative attempts by the tobacco industry to gain unhindered access to epidemiological data (Baba, Cook, McGarity, & Bero, 2005). At first glance, it might appear paradoxical that the tobacco industry would sponsor laws ostensibly designed to ensure transparency of research, such as the Data Access Act of 1998. However, the reanalysis of inconvenient results by obtaining the raw data is a known tool in the arsenal of vested interests: Michaels (2008) shows how epidemiological data have been subjected to industry-sponsored re-analysis because of their regulatory implications, such as the link between tobacco and lung cancer or the link between bladder cancer and chemicals used in dye production. Re-analyses by industry bodies often fail to detect such well-established links (e.g., Cataldo, Bero, & Malone, 2010; Proctor, 2011). Similarly, results by the first (see Lewandowsky, Cook, et al., 2013), second (see Mann, 2012), and third (Sims, Maxwell, Bauld, & Gilmore, 2010) author have been reanalyzed on internet blogs (sometimes by the same individuals). Those reanalyses used various tricks, such as the violation of strong statistical conventions relating to the inclusion of principal components, to attenuate the inconvenient implications of the research—specifically, that the warming from greenhouse gas emissions is historically unprecedented (Mann, Bradley, & Hughes, 1998) and that those who oppose this scientific fact tend to engage in conspiracist ideation (Lewandowsky, Oberauer, & Gignac, 2013; Lewandowsky, Gignac, & Oberauer, 2013). Another tactic to discredit “inconvenient” peer-reviewed results involves publishing alternative versions of “the evidence” using different sources that proport to be equally legitimate. For example, the third author’s review of the impact of smoke-free legislation in England, published by the UK government (Bauld, 2011) was the subject of a report by Imperial Tobacco, the world’s fourth-largest tobacco company. Entitled “The Bauld Truth” as a play on the third author’s name (Imperial Tobacco, 2011), it presented alternative, non peer-reviewed evidence as more viable and opened with the statement that the third author’s review was “lazy and deliberately selective”. Anyone familiar with climate disinformation on the internet will recognize those rhetorical tools as the standard fare of dismissal of inconvenient science.
A further line of attack involves complaints by members of the public to scientists’ host institutions with allegations of research misconduct. The format of those complaints ranges from brief enraged emails to the submission of detailed, elaborately-formatted multi-page dossiers. The scientific literature on querulous complainants (e.g., Lester, Wilson, Griffin, & Mullen, 2004; Mullen & Lester, 2006) explicates the nature of the majority of such complaints. However, not all complaints to universities are from querulous individuals: The tobacco industry, specifically Philip Morris, used complaints to scientists’ deans or department heads as part of their action plan to discredit researchers who investigated the health risks of smoking (Landman & Glantz, 2009).
The fifth author has experienced a particularly chilling legal attack based on an article that disputed the legitimacy of the claim by an individual (whose name was not released) that she had with the help of a psychiatrist recovered a “repressed childhood memory” of sexual abuse by her mother (for a review of the case, see Geis & Loftus, 2009). Although the suit was ultimately settled, the complaints to the university delayed publication—or indeed any public mention—of the research by several years (Loftus, 2003).
Those attacks on scientists by personal abuse, vexatious use of FOI and the complaints process, and legal proceedings, have not only consumed valuable time, thereby delaying research, but have also taken an emotional toll. Those attacks have caused considerable trauma among some junior scientists known to us. However, the problem does not end there. Even more concerning is another line of attack that directly targets the integrity of the scientific process: We are concerned about the activities of individuals outside the scientific community and of little scientific standing, who systematically insert themselves into the peer-review and publication process to prevent the publication of findings they deem inconvenient. Those insertions typically involve emails to editors which have been described as “bullying” by some parties involved. Far from being isolated incidents, at last count we have identified 7 editors of several journals who have been subject to such bullying tactics across two disciplines; viz. climate science and psychology.
Once again, precedents for those attempts to subvert the scientific process involve the tobacco industry. A 1995 Philip Morris action plan explicitly devised strategies to interfere with funding of health research. Those strategies included approaches to the appropriations committee of Congress (albeit without raising the profile of the tobacco industry), and the writing of letters critical of public-health research to the editors of scientific journals by associates of the industry’s Tobacco Institute (without necessarily revealing their associations). Landman and Glantz (2009) show how this plan was translated into action.
What are the consequences of such insertions by external parties into the scientific process? There is little doubt that pressure from the tobacco industry affected the course of medical research, if only by consuming massive amounts of scientists’ time that could otherwise have been devoted to research (Landman & Glantz, 2009; Proctor, 2011). It also delayed the translation of that research into interventions and policies that could have saved lives by reducing smoking rates. There is also a growing body of literature which suggests that the aggressive efforts by climate deniers have adversely affected the communication and direction of climate research (Brysse, Oreskes, O’Reilly, & Oppenheimer, 2013; Freudenburg & Muselli, 2010; Lewandowsky, Oreskes, Risbey, Newell, & Smithson, 2013), and allegations of defamation have led to the re-examination of one of the first author’s papers to eliminate legal risks that is ongoing at the time of this writing (Lewandowsky, Cook, et al., 2013).
How should the scientific community respond to the events just reviewed? As in most cases of intimidation and bullying, we believe that daylight is the best disinfectant. This article is a first step in this effort towards transparency. Knowledge of the common techniques by which scientists are attacked, irrespective of their discipline and research area, is essential so that institutions can support their academics against attempts to thwart their academic freedom. This information is also essential to enable lawmakers to improve the balance between academic freedom and confidentiality of peer review on the one hand, and the public’s right to access information on the other. Finally, this knowledge is particularly important for journal editors and professional organizations to muster the required resilience against illegitimate insertions into the scientific process.
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You can leave comments on the paper at the journal here
Related articles
- Why doesn’t Lewandowsky study this phenomenon? (wattsupwiththat.com)
- Paleoscientist: Mann’s recent work was a ‘crock of xxxx’ (wattsupwiththat.com)
- Inconvenient Truth-Tellers (psychologicalscience.org)
- Stephan Is At It Again (part one) (geoffchambers.wordpress.com)
- Mann’s emails to be subject of state supreme court case (wattsupwiththat.com)
- The Role of Conspiracist Ideation and Worldviews in Predicting Rejection of Science (plosone.org)
- Motivated reasoning: Fuel for controversies, conspiracy theories and science denialism alike (blogs.scientificamerican.com)
omnologos says:
November 1, 2013 at 11:06 am
Bob Tisdale – just remember, this is only paper number one…in true Lew form, he will get another one published, based on the comments at WUWT.
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Can’t wait! Press the button, and watch Lewy go. I have long believed he has a personality disorder.
Name calling is a sign of desperation. The warmists must resort to name calling to attempt to distract the media and uniformed public from the fact observations and analysis (in peer reviewed papers) unequivocally (at best) supports lukewarm AGW rather than EAGW even if 100% of the warming in the last 70 years was due to the increase in atmospheric CO2.
Lukewarm AGW is getting smaller, however, as recent data and papers (past cyclic warming and cooling events were global, sun was in a grand maximum during the recent warming period, the warming has stopped, record polar sea ice in the Antarctic, recovery of sea ice in the Arctic, and so on.) supports the assertion that a significant portion (75%) of the warming in the last 70 years was due to the increase in the solar magnetic cycle and that the planet will cool due to the most rapid decline in the solar magnetic cycle in 8000 years. If EAGW was a stock this would be a good time to sell. The public and the media will not accept the heat is hiding in the ocean and skeptics are deniers, in the pay of big oil, if the planet cools.
Name calling is not part of the scientific method for practical logical reasons. Name calling and ridiculous statements such as 95% of the scientists’ support EAGW has made it very difficult for science to progress and for reason to prevail. There is no reason to waste trillions of dollars to fight the war on CO2 if EAGW is a fallacy, a lie. Commercial greenhouses inject CO2 into the greenhouse to increase yield and reduce growing times. Developing countries are deeply in debt, there are no surplus funds to waste.
It is good thing not a bad thing if there is no EAGW problem to solve.
Executive Order — Preparing the United States for the Impacts of Climate Change
Section3 part (b)
“”As part of the broader open data policy, CEQ and OSTP, in collaboration with OMB and consistent with Executive Order 13642 of May 9, 2013 (Making Open and Machine Readable the New Default for Government Information), shall oversee the establishment of a web-based portal on “Data.gov” and work with agencies on identifying, developing, and integrating data and tools relevant to climate issues and decisionmaking. Agencies shall coordinate their work on these data and tools with relevant interagency councils and committees such as the National Science and Technology Council and those that support the implementation of Presidential Policy Directive-21 of February 12, 2013 (Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience). “”
I wish I could just give in and believe….
Talented Monckton (November 1, 2013 at 12:39 pm)
Your comment is visible to you, and my comment is visibe to me, but neither are visible to anyone else, due to the bizarre solipsistic setup of their comments thread.
Under the article it says “Leave a comment below and continue the conversation. Comments go live after a short delay. Thank you for contributing.”
Dozens of people have claimed to have sent in comments, and none have appeared.
Clearly the Association of Psychological Science has the same bizarre belief as to what constitutes normal human interaction as Mann and Lewandowsky.
Asserting the opposite of the truth, and accusing others of doing what one is doing oneself, are well-established techniques of political disinformation.
What worries me about Mann is that I don’t think he is even aware that he is doing it.
Loftus was the hammer that drove the final nail into the coffin of Recovered Memory (RM) because her research buttressed lawsuits against the quacks – but yes, the hysteria was not only a failure of science but a colossal failure of the media and people in authority who should have behaved better.
When any scientist makes such grave assertations that require the Whole World to change fundamentally and spend Trillions of Dollars in mitigations, it is simply insufficient for them to say just “trust us”.
Mann et al must be held up to the most rigorous scrutiny before their combined theories can be accepted and strategies implemented.
If they don’t like the spotlight and public scrutiny – well tough – I don’t like what they are proposing without seeing good evidence. Perhaps cooperating with OIA requests and stop being so secretive would go a long way to help.
Until then – dream on chaps
AndiC
We have basket cases all over the place including the White House just giving out an executive order preparing the United States for the impacts of climate change:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/11/01/executive-order-preparing-united-states-impacts-climate-change
Now that’s creepy because this means this country is run by a wacko
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We have this already in the UK – The Climate Change (Destruction of the Economy) Act of 2008, brought to statute by the current leader of the opposition, Ed Miliband,
FergalR-I’m STILL laughing. Your post was priceless. And Peter Miller, I too could hear the tiny stomping feet and the huffing and puffing behind each keystroke. Mr Mann’s obsession with the idea that not everyone likes or agrees with him makes me wonder when he actually finds time to do any actual research. Oh….wait….:-)
Is this the same Dr. Mann who tweets with abandon? Odd he would choose to discuss media outside the peer reviewed literature if that’s the case. I hope he’s getting the help he needs. I’d hate to see him become a ward of the state. I hope too his circle of trusted people help him recognize this downward spiral of cognition and looming irrelevance.
I just had a look. There are no comments visible to me.
> “A further line of attack involves complaints by members of the public to scientists’ host institutions with allegations of research misconduct.”
A non-issue if the scientist’s work does not involve misconduct. But one can see why Mann and Lewandowsky would see it as an issue.
> “A common current attribute of denial is that it side-steps the peer-reviewed literature ”
Mann and Lewandowsky don’t bother to mention that “peer-reviewed literature” they are defending is not they unbiased, critically reviewed, and scientific “peer-reviewed” literature of the past. Their “peer-reviewed literature” has lost credibility due effects of pal-review, group-think, peer-pressure, and blocked dissenting literature.
> “In light of the lethal track record of denial, one might expect opprobrium to be reserved for those who deny the public’s right to be adequately informed about risks such as AIDS or climate change.”
Appears Mann and Lewandowsky are not above leaching off the serious health epidemic of AIDs in hopes of transferring some credibility to their AGW. Pretty pathetic and hypocritical of Mann and Lewandowsky to cry of wolf with their “public’s right to be adequately informed”, given all the attention AGW has gotten.
> “The conspiratorial element of denial explains why contrarians often perceive themselves as heroic dissenters who …”
Ironic being Global Warmers have Supermandia… (http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/caped_climate_crusader1.jpg?w=640)
Also kind hypocritical of Mann, being it is he who falsely claimed to be recipient of Nobel Peace Prize for his contributions to GW. And where does one start with ManBearPig’s perceived greatness?
> “As in most cases of intimidation and bullying, we believe that daylight is the best disinfectant. This article is a first step in this effort towards transparency.”
Well Mann, here is suggestion for your second step, that ties in with your first step. Release your emails. Release your work. Quit hiding behind Lady Justice’s tunica.
> “There is also a growing body of literature which suggests that the aggressive efforts by climate deniers have adversely affected the communication and direction of climate research…”
Translation: the Truth is having an effect, we AGWers don’t like daylight, and that is why we are writing this paper.
> “to enable lawmakers to improve the balance between academic freedom and confidentiality of peer review on the one hand, and the public’s right to access information on the other”
Mann and Lewandowsky, do you really want to go down this road?
Cause I for one would love to pursue and see legislation enacted that forces “Scientist” like yourselves to be held accountable to taxpayers. All your records, all your research, all your computer activity and programs, all your phone calls, all your SMS and emails, all your meetings, and all your discussions be made continuously public.
Being most of our employers monitor our work, which often involves use of security cameras, it would only be reasonable that all scientist’s office and lab areas be video taped too.
Still want to complain?
If they want to be transparent, then show us those emails.
Psychological projection blaming stories written by psychological projectionists themselves. Now that is a quite amazing new phenomena from the getting old CAGW pushers.
Remove the “scientific” adjustments and all fears vanish.
Homogenized crap is what is at the core.
My advice, we need a much deeper look, back in time, into just how homogenization papers did that much needed trick.
Sociologists have a lot to study fifty years from now: The Chicken Little Hype
Here’s the comment I left.
Of course, I made a typo.8-( The line should have been:
“It’s when they don’t ignore the personal disappointment at being proven wrong that pride becomes ego and honest science goes out the window.”
There is something strange here.
Why would anyone pretend to take comments but actually not do that? Why pretend to take comments at all? It isn’t too hard to put up a “Comments are closed” line.
Hmm, does anyone detect a Lew research tool? “This time we got sceptics and they were blind”.
We were insulted and angry too but that wouldn’t be remembered in the Lew paper.
Hmmmm are Mann and Lewinsky suggesting a conspiracy?
mbabbitt: “When you are out of facts, out of reasoned arguments, and end up out of your minds, you can only rely on name calling defense”
“If you have the facts on your side, pound the facts. If you have the law on your side, pound the law. If you have neither on your side, pound the table.” — Lots of misattribution for this one
Darren Potter: “Their “peer-reviewed literature” has lost credibility due effects of pal-review, group-think, peer-pressure, and blocked dissenting literature.”
Peer review can only be scientifically justified on the basis of Sociology. But if you do not consider Sociology a science, then it is unjustified. But if you do consider Sociology a science, then the science says that peer-review is *always* pal-review. At least, after a very short beginning period. But then peer-review isn’t scientifically justified, it’s anti-science. (Or, if you’re into airborne pasta, an anti-rational religious fundamentalism.)
But the a fortiori case for peer-review requires stating that Sociology is not science, and that peer-review can only be justified on purely unscientific grounds. But peer-review is used to publish Sociological papers. In which case we are forced to acknowledge that peer-review publishes pseudoscience and quackery. So if we are interested only in publishing science, then we cannot use peer review as a guide to what is science. Even what counts as a branch or discipline of science, since we are required to state that Sociology is not science itself.
Pick your poison: a) Peer-review is a philosophical commitment that publishes pseudoscience and quackery. b) Science has established that peer-review is anti-science. Even, dare I say, that it is ‘science denial.’
This isn’t Lew’s only current activity. He’s giving a talk next week on “Taming The Wilful Ignorance Monster”.
See
http://geoffchambers.wordpress.com/2013/11/01/lewandowsky-scratches-the-scab/
for details.
Are there any Psychology students that read this blog? What is their take on why potentially offensive terms are used ‘D’ word in a supposed serious paper ?
The paper does not seem to be based on any research, except for references to other papers, but the purpose of the paper seems to simply expresses a biased opinion.
“likely” I mean, just “likely”, not “certainly”?
the second author is a paleoclimatologist who has shown that current global temperatures are likely unprecedented during the last 1,000 years or more;”
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A few years ago my family was talking about the kids’ childhood. My daughter laughed as she told us about the time when she was very little that we had put baking soda on her tongue as some form of punishment.
But we’d never done that.
The best all of us could figure out is that she’d had a vivid dream as a child of something bubbling in her mouth. Maybe brought on by using hydrogen peroxide on a scrape? We still don’t know where that “memory” came from.
sam: ““likely” I mean, just “likely”, not “certainly”?”
“There will be a battle at sea tomorrow.” Only answer is may be and may be not. The Mighty Maybe. But that’s terrible for prophecy, so you inductively hoist it as ‘may be’ or simply ‘possibly.’ But if that fails to impress with the emotive content, you rhetorically hoist is as ‘likely’ or ‘probably.’ All of this derived from “I don’t know.”
So the second author has shown that they don’t know. But they really hope that you don’t think that of them. Always challenges one-tailed maybes with a maybe not. If they actually know, they can show it. If they don’t, they’re trying to pass legislation.