Guest essay by Brandon Shollenberger
Last week, John Cook published a piece in the Europhysics News magazine in which he, quite literally, fabricates a quote. You can see the details here, but basically, he took the old quote about a campaign to “reposition global warming as theory (rather than fact)” and changed it to “reposition fact as theory.” It’s mind-boggling.
Even if John Cook didn’t make the image himself, it’s hosted on Skeptical Science. He chose to publish it in this article. He is fully responsible for publishing a fabricated quote whether or not he created the fabrication.
In my first post here, I accused John Cook (the propietor of Skeptical Science) of lying about evidence. He had written an article which misrepresented multiple sources and even fabricated a quote. To this day, that fabricated quote remains in the piece. John cook has made no indication he thinks it needs to be changed (though he has fixed the quote elsewhere). This led me to observe:
Additionally, you have not apologized for fabricating the quote or explained how it happened. That is troubling. One may reasonably wonder what would have happened had I not happened to randomly read this piece and check your reference (something you apparently didn’t do). Had I not caught the mistake, would it ever have been fixed? Nobody will ever know.
Being accurate with facts, quotes and references is a fundamental aspect of reporting. If you are as apathetic toward such glaring failures in this regard as you seem to be, why should anyone trust what you say? Why should anyone trust you the next time you “quote” a source?
I can now confirm the answer to my question is, “We shouldn’t.” Almost exactly one month after that piece was published, John Cook published another article with a fabricated quote. Figure 2 of that piece includes a this blurb:
Western Fuels Association
$510,000 campaign to
“reposition fact as theory”
This quote is apparently a bastardization of an actual quote which suggested people “reposition global warming as theory (rather than fact).” A Google search for John Cook’s exact quote finds two results. A Google search for the actual quote finds tens of thousands of results, including a paper Cook was the lead author for. This shows Cook is aware of the actual quote, and had he done anything to check his figure, he’d have seen his version was wrong.
Cook fabricating two quotes in two months is bad enough, but nobody is catching him. I don’t read everything he writes, and I’m the only one who caught either of these. How many fabrications have I not caught? There’s no way to know.
And this isn’t a trivial matter like Cook claimed his last misquotation was. The difference between the quotes is enormous. Many people don’t believe global warming is a fact (by definition, it isn’t one). If they’re right, repositioning global warming as a theory rather than fact is a good thing because its true. Even if one doesn’t agree with those people, their behavior is still honest and well-intentioned.
John Cook’s quote requires the opposite. A person cannot seek to “reposition fact as theory” without seeking to intentionally mislead people. That means Cook accuses those people of being lying bastards by making **** up.
And it doesn’t end there. Cook’s piece says:
The result is a significant “consensus gap” between public
perception and the actual 97% scientific consensus (see Figure 3). Public polls have found that nearly half of the American public think climate scientists are still in disagreement [6]. In my own research, when I asked Americans what percentage of climate scientists agree on human-caused global
warming, the average answer was 55%.
Reference six links to this document. A figure on its seventh page and a data table on its eighteenth page provide data for how many people believe:
There is a lot of disagreement among scientists about GW
In both cases, the value given is 36%. This must be what Cook was referring to as no other part of the document discusses anything close to what he said, but 36% is not “nearly half.” 1/3rd is not 1/2th. Cook is, once again, making **** up.
Not only is that inexcusable, it should make wonder skeptical when Cook refers to what he found, “In [his] own research.” This skepticism should be further fueled by the fact Cook didn’t provide a reference for his work. Why would someone refer to work without any providing any reference for it? How can they get away with it?
I can’t answer the latter question. The former question is easy to answer though. John Cook didn’t provide a reference for his work because no reference exists. A copy of the Figure 3 can be found here on Skeptical Science. This is said about it:
Public perception (55%) comes from a survey conducted by John Cook on a representative USA sample, asking the question “How many climate experts agree that the global warming we are witnessing is a direct consequence of the burning of fossil fuels by humans?” Participants were requested through professional survey firm Qualtrics.
That’s it. No publication information. No link or reference. No data or supporting documentation. Nothing at all other than John Cook’s word.
I can’t imagine a world in which that should that be enough from anyone. I certainly can’t imagine why anyone should be expected to trust Cook’s description when he makes **** up time and time again, even in this one piece.
Two last observations. First, while these accusations of fabricating quotes are relatively new, I’ve accused Cook of lying before. Second, at the bottom of the piece’s first page, there’s an unmatched right parenthesis where it says:
As scientific consensus strengthened, efforts to confuse the
public about the level of agreement in the scientific community intensified as documented in Figure 2).
===============================================================
UPDATE/CORRECTION: Brandon Schollenberger writes in comments.
Welp, this is awkward. It turns out while criticizing Cook for getting the quotation wrong, I got it wrong too. The parenthetical should say “not fact” instead of “rather than fact.” A little time with Google shows this is a common mistake, and it’s even made in Al Gore’s, An Inconvenient Truth. I saw the phrasing I used on Wikipedia (which has had that phrasing for six years), used Google to search for it, found dozens of sources using it (including Al Gore’s), and copied and pasted.
This doesn’t change anything I said, and it is certainly understandable how I made the mistake. Still, it’s embarrassing.
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@- Brandon Shollenberger
“Many people don’t believe global warming is a fact (by definition, it isn’t one).”
I await with considerable interest your definition of a fact that excludes the objective measurement of the global temperature.
@- “If they’re right, repositioning global warming as a theory rather than fact is a good thing because its true.”
No, if the measured global warming is in error, and the sea level rise, satellite energy balance measurements, growing season and region changes are all wrong then global warming would still be a fact, just an erroneous one. It still would NOT be a theory.
Descriptions of reality, like rises in temperature are FACTS
Explanations of those facts are theories.
@-“Even if one doesn’t agree with those people, their behavior is still honest and well-intentioned.”
But ignorant, mistaken and stupid.
Thanks, Brandon.
izen
“The measured rise from land, sea and satellite instruments all confirm that along with the rise in sea level from thermal expansion and ice melt it is unprecedented for thousands of years and well beyond unforced natural variation.”
Your statement is NOT a factual one. In fact ;), there are multiple non-factual ‘statements’ in it. The use of “unprecedented’ is a dead give away. What exactly is ‘unforced natural variation’? How have we managed to measure it and to what degree of accuracy are we able to do this?
The wisdom of the ages tells us that if a man will lie in small matters then he will lie about anything, and hence you can’t trust him at all. To lie is to knowingly mislead others.
I have trouble believing that the vast majority of climate “scientists” are not liars. They mislead others by fudging the data, cherry-picking endpoints, making claims from models as if it were data, suppressing data that goes against their theory, suppress skeptical papers in journals, help news-outlets mislead the public, and play politics rather than science. I believe that if the “John Does” in the street knew about the shenanigans played by the “Team” and most climate “scientists” they would distrust anyone calling themselves a scientist for generations to come.
I also believe that government funded “science” will always turn out this way. The grant-seekers always find things that please the grant-givers.
izen, I suggest you look up what the definition of “fact” is. I also suggest you consider the myriad ways the phrase “global warming” is used.
Don K, if you compare the quote in that image to the quote highlighted in this post, you’ll see the two are not the same. John Cook has somehow morphed the quote you’ve found (which is referred to in this post) into a dramatically different quote.
hunter, the substantive difference in the quotations is explained in the post. You’re welcome to argue the explanation is wrong, but it’s strange to ignore an explanation while asking for one.
markstoval, while you’re free to believe thousands of scientists are intentionally deceiving people, I think that sounds silly. I suspect so will many others. You’re likely to be listened to more if you apply Hanlon’s razor judicially..
I just saw Tucci78’s comment upthread. It must have been held in moderation. I have to say, I don’t get it. Specifically:
There’s no explanation given as to why it “is frickin’ contemptible” to use asterisks to censors words. It’s done all the time. Many places automatically censor words that way. That allows people to express their sentiments without “polluting” the discussion.
(Also, that should have been judciously not judically in my above comment.)
At 4:23 AM on 18 December, Brandon Shollenberger had responded to my observation that the substitution of an asterisk-string for a commonplace scatalogical pungency is frelkin’ contemptible with a whine:
Well, I might as well hold this guy’s hand (daintily) and guide him explicitly through the reasoning. Ahem.
Mr. Shollenberger, your “asterisk-string” namby-pambiness concedes to the mutilators of language (not to mention the castrators of public discourse) a power over the speech of men which they usurp without either right or even effort at justification. Simply because they feel offended by the plain speech of folks who are not as spastic-sphincter’d – or utterly gutless – as they.
If one must deal with the Comstockian crapola of automatic Net Nanny software designed to utterly obliterate (or “moderate”) plainly expressive language, it’s better by far to do so in a manner expressive of proper contempt for these craven critters and their cowardly impositions on the liberties of their betters.
Your riskless asterisking satisfies these chicken-chokers, and that’s aid and comfort rendered the enemies of free minds in the marketplace of ideas
Thus the use of bippies-en–brochette is best (by far) eschewed in favor of substitutions which impart all the scatalogical significances without giving these fumducks a feculent femtometer.
Or do you lack language skills necessary for such exercises?
Tsk.
“He is fully responsible for publishing a fabricated quote whether or not he created the fabrication.”
If this were a criminal offense, we would have a lot fewer journalists.
It is going to be difficult to maintain a position as defenders of accuracy when just over a week ago Anthony Watts was saying this in another blog post about an inaccurate quotation of Jonathon Overpeck:
Maybe John Cook was using the Anthony Watts rule of paraphrase.
@- Bill Marsh
“Your statement is NOT a factual one. In fact ;), there are multiple non-factual ‘statements’ in it. The use of “unprecedented’ is a dead give away. ”
But the rise in sea level measured over the last decades IS unprecedented over the last few thousand years.
It is a fact established by archeological and observational eclipse records that sea level was static by comparison until around 1900.
“What exactly is ‘unforced natural variation’? How have we managed to measure it and to what degree of accuracy are we able to do this?”
Internet search engines are your friend. A brief foray will teach you what an unforced natural variation is in climate science and how accurately it can be measured and by what methods.
http://www.ncas.ac.uk/index.php/en/documents/doc_download/566-science-highlight-andrew-schurer
Forced variations include changes from greenhouse gases, volcanic eruptions and solar activity; unforced variations arise from internal changes in the Earth’s climate.
Dirk is correct. Until Cook suffers some sort of penalty for his dishonesty, he will continue to do it. Those who have made the science into their religion will do anything to further it. Including slander, libel and lying.
@- Brandon Shollenberger
” I suggest you look up what the definition of “fact” is.”
I already had, –
something that actually exists; reality; truth:
something known to exist or to have happened: Space travel is now a fact.
a truth known by actual experience or observation; something known to be true: Scientists gather facts about plant growth.
I am still wondering what your definition is that excludes the objectively measured and experienced increase in global temperatures.
@- “I also suggest you consider the myriad ways the phrase “global warming” is used.”
Including the misuse when it is incorrectly asserted to be a theory instead of an observed reality?
I’m with David UK (12:21 am). Either type a word out in full, or use a word you don’t feel shy about. Don’t use ******* asterisks.
here is the actual quote from the leaked document:
“Reposition global warming as theory (not fact)”
the actual document can be found here:
http://www.aip.org/history/powerpoints/GlobalWarming_Oreskes.ppt
IT is obvious that the “repositioning” is from “fact” to “theory”
so the quote is accurate.
for more information on the PR organization that was contracted to perform this function, see here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_Council_on_the_Environment
@jai mitchell
Not if the language is English. Clearly AGW is not a fact. Clearly facts are facts. So you can say you are playing Robin Hood by robbing from the poor to give to the rich. But that is your own language, not English.
Tim,
You hit the nail on the head. This blog post is much ado about very little. sks is a self-parody that is getting far more attention than it deserves.
… basically, he took the old quote about a campaign to “reposition global warming as theory (rather than fact)” and changed it to “reposition fact as theory.” It’s mind-boggling.
“Mind-boggling”? Perhaps not.
More like “typical”.
As said before: one should be very skeptical of the science on the apt-named “skepticalscience” site.
Oh, FWIW, I’m OK with “****”, but might have preferred “#%&$”. Much more descriptive.
🙂
John Cook?
Who?
Why am I supposed to care about the babbling of this person?
Why did the Western Fuels Association spend over half a million dollars trying to call observed factual data {global rising temperature} a ‘theory’?
This is a business association that believes so strongly in the democratic process that it has contributed millions to candidates to enable them to run for office.
And all without any expectation that those politicians will then favor their position in any conflict between the public good and the business interests of Western Fuels!
tom0mason says:
December 18, 2013 at 5:14 am
“John Cook?
Who?
Why am I supposed to care about the babbling of this person?”
No. I don’t care about these people either. They are delusional and paranoid, living their lives in abject fear of the climate change bogeyman. I’d rather not live like them…
If only some of that Big Oil funding would go to creating a point-by-point rebuttal of SkS material (as I’ve repeatedly lamented)!
===========
On second thought, double ^^carets^^ (carats?) would be a better choice.
For more on the weakness of the claim that climate contrarians are ‘well-organized and well-funded,” see my one-year-old guest thread here, “Notes from Skull Island”:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/12/16/notes-from-skull-island-why-skeptics-arent-well-funded-and-well-organized/
I get so tired of that 97% figure.
75 people out of 77 surveyed is 97%, yet for some reason (snark) they never say 75 scientists and instead say 97%…
Thanks Brandon.
That was rather a large response. I understand that people get tired of debating the unscrupulous, but long-winded and heartfelt sermons are rarely as successful as short, quick, direct statements. Each rebuttal keep it the same. Don’t play into games. Leave that to the children. The choir doth tire of the preacher 😉 Peace and light hearts!
I’ve noticed a strange trend in a number of comments where people basically suggest we shouldn’t really care what John Cook publishes. For example:
Henry Galt. expresses my contrary view:
Skeptical Science may not have the readership of WUWT, but it is used as a resource by many people. John Cook is well-known in global warming discussions. He has received quite a bit of respect and attention. He gets media coverage on a regular basis, and his work is commonly accepted as diminishing the skeptical position.
Ignoring his work is a terrible idea, but letting him get away with things like what this post describes is absurd. What would have happened if this attitude had been adopted with Recursive Fury? The behavior this post highlights is the same as what led to that paper being withdrawn.
Like it or not, people are listening to John Cook and Skeptical Science. Far fewer would if they knew he serially misrepresents his sources.
An earlier comment may have been lost or is held in moderation. To rephrase:
A blog post here a little over a week ago discussed another instance of inaccurate quotation:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/12/08/the-truth-about-we-have-to-get-rid-of-the-medieval-warm-period/
It was suggested in that instance that “a paraphrase” of a quotation was acceptable. It is difficult to reconcile that post with this one, making the objection to perceived misrepresentation here less credible.