Why climate change communications is like 'Shaka, when the walls fell'

Darmok[1]
Picard and Dathon at El-Adrel
With the pending climate pajamafest all-nighter at the U.S. Senate, (powered by the Washington DC coal burning power plant) the release of former NASA scientists and engineers Right Climate Stuff message that there is no need to be worried about CAGW, and Bill McKibben’s empty boxes fiasco, these loosely related events coaclesced into a moment of understanding last night after I watched what is probably my favorite episode of Star Trek, The Next Generation titled “Darmok“.

So, with “eyes wide open”, I thought I’d write about it. In case you don’t know how the episode plays out, it goes like this, borrowing from the Memory Alpha Wikia description:

  1. The USS Enterprise-D is on a mission to attempt to establish communications between the Federation and the Tamarians after several previous attempts had failed. The Enterprise and the Tamarian vessel make a rendezvous in orbit of El-Adrel IV. The two parties try to communicate but, like the occasions before, neither party can comprehend what the other party is saying.
  2. Captain Picard is captured by the Tamarians, then trapped on a planet with the Tamarian captain who speaks a metaphorical language incompatible even with the universal translator. They must learn to communicate with each other before the “beast of the planet” (Memory Alpha’s label) overwhelms them.
  3. They are both thrust onto the planet’s surface, and the Tarmarians send out a particle beam that disrupts transporter functions. The idea is to stage a showdown between the captains, with hope that they can communicate to overcome the common enemy; the mostly invisible, hard to detect, and fleeting “beast of the planet” which manifests itself as some sort of electromagnetic disturbance.
  4. The Tamarian captain, Dathon, keeps repeating what appears to be nonsense phrases such as “Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra”, and “Shaka, when the walls fell”. Even when Picard tries to ask factually probing questions. They bed down for the night, eyeing each other warily, and Picard fails to make a fire, but Dathon, taking pity, tosses Picard a burning stick from his own.
  5. Meanwhile, back on the Enterprise, they start analyzing the Tamarian language, and counselor Troi notes: “Imagery is everything to the Tamarians. It embodies their emotional states, their very thought processes. It’s how they communicate and it’s how they think.
  6. The next day, repeating the same metaphors, the Tamarian captain, Dathon, looks exasperated that Picard can’t seem to “get it”, especially when Dathon offers Picard a knife, saying “Temba, his arms wide”. Picard takes this as a offer to a knife fight.
  7. Finally when “the beast of the planet” starts growling and making fleeting appearances, Picard takes Dathon up on the knife offer, and they start fighting the beast of the planet together. Unfortunately, knives don’t seem to matter much.
  8. Dathon is injured by the beast, and at the campfire that night, while dying, Picard and Dathon try once again to communicate. Dathon sticks with metaphors, Picard still asks factual questions, though some level of understanding ensues when Picard finally realizes that the Tamarian method of communications is emotive, based solely on imagery and metaphors.
  9. Dathon dies, and the next day while Picard starts to bury him, the beast of the planet attacks again, but by this time the Enterprise crew has disabled the transporter disruptor on the Tamarian ship and beams Picard back aboard in the midst of a fierce phaser battle between the ships.
  10. Picard enters the bridge, opens a channel, and repeats the series of nonsensical phrases that are metaphors (learned from Dathon) only he and the Tamarians can comphrehend. The Tamarians reply angrily but they quickly calm down when Picard addresses them in metaphor. The Tamarian first officer, hearing these familiar metaphors repeated back to him exclaims: “Sokath, his eyes uncovered!”. Meanwhile, the “beast of the planet” is ignored by both sides.
  11. The battle ends, the Tarmarian exclaims this understanding represents a new story/metaphor, the story of “Picard and Dathon at El-Adrel”, and they depart. Picard tries to make sense of it all, and reflects upon Homeric Hymns in his ready room, explaining to Riker that maybe more familiarity with their own mythology may help them relate to the Tamarians.

This table might be helpful for people whose eyes have already glazed over.

Tamarian Metaphors:

Cultural Reference Meaning
Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra. Friendship as a result of a fight against a common enemy.
Shaka, when the walls fell. Failure.
Sokath, his eyes uncovered (or, his eyes open). An understanding or realization has been achieved.
Kailash, when it rises. An accident or unavoidable loss (e.g. natural disaster).

I’m sure readers can see the parallels with climate change debate and its communications problems. One side repeatedly uses metaphors, imagery, and emotional attachments to convey the urgency of fighting the often invisible and fleeting “beast of the planet”, while the other side keeps asking pointed questions, tries to analyze what is being said and the situation, and tries to learn the language of the other side, even though it seems nonsensical. Neither side seems to get much from the other.

The climate change debate has always been mostly about two viewpoints where the players talk past one another without really understanding much of what the other says.

In “Jarmok”, the side using the imagery and metaphor was so desperate to get their story across, they even resorted to kidnapping to force an understanding, and the issue. And, they created new imagery and metaphors in a story to explain the brief moment of understanding. It reminds me of some of the desperate acts we’ve seen from climate advocates, such as Gleick willing to commit a crime, and Bill McKibben making lies in the open to tout the imagery surrounding the delivery of 2 million comments to the State Department just under the deadline, except the boxes were nothing but empty metaphors.

Recently Bob Tisdale wrote on WUWT: It Isn’t How Climate Scientists Communicated their Message; It’s the Message

While he has a point, the “how” still figures into why many people just don’t seem to care much about climate change anymore. Many people simply look at the increasingly wild imagery, metaphors, and claims used by climate change proponents, decide it is nonsensical, and simply stop trying to comprehend it anymore. Climate fatigue sets in.

A good example is John Cook’s “Hiroshima bombs” metaphor, turned into a phone app.

Widget[1]

Only the truly faithful pay any attention to this. Anybody with a lick of sense can see the atmosphere today doesn’t look anything like that sort of hellish imagery atomic bombs conjur up, so they chuckle and ignore it. It wasn’t even Cook’s idea, he borrowed it from James Hansen’s TED talk and tried to make it an everyday scare tactic for the science challenged.

Undeterred, Cook and company have moved onto “kitten sneezes“.

When accounting for all heat accumulating in the climate system, global warming is proceeding at 7.4 quadrillion kitten sneezes per second.  Image created by John Cook at Skeptical Science.

“Shaka, when the walls fell.” might very well be an apt metaphor for climate change proponents failure to communicate.

Facepalm_Picard

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Post Script: I had tried to visualize a similar meeting on a planet, using climate players from today. I gave up when I realized that it was likely none of the proponents would have the skills to build a fire, and even if they did, they probably wouldn’t share the burning stick like Dathon did.

Can you imagine Steve McIntyre and Michael Mann in those roles?

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Stephen
March 9, 2014 10:03 pm

The problem is that a LOT of people speak in imagery and emotions rather than words when given a choice. It’s not just some fringe hardcore supporters who follow those images. It’s pretty mainstream, especially when people assume that the hard facts and figures would be too complicated for them to comprehend (because they have been taught that science is too complex for them.)

CRS, DrPH
March 9, 2014 11:01 pm

…Al Gore, with his palms outstretched….
Great post, Anthony! “Darmok” is also a favorite of mine. STNG was a great show!

ChrisM
March 9, 2014 11:23 pm

E. F. Hutton
ANYONE OLD enough to remember the heyday of
E. F. Hutton remembers their ad, “When E. F. Hut-
ton speaks, people listen” in which entire city
blocks fell silent to hear the pearls of financial ad-
vice spoken by in whisper by a Hutton client. Chief
Executive Officer Robert M. Foman was so enam-
ored of Hutton’s image that he built a 29-story,
$100 million headquarters in Manhattan, New
York City, that some people called a memorial to
corporate greed.
People stopped listening to Hutton, however,
after discovering that the company had been en-
gaged in a systematic effort to avoid paying interest
on short-term bank loans through a complicated
scheme of check kiting. The scheme came to light in
December 1981 when Hutton gave in to the pleas of
the Batavia, New York, branch of the Genesee
County Bank and moved accounts for its local of-
fice from the Marine Midland Bank to the small,
local bank.
People are stopping to listen to the science is settled crowd

Louis
March 9, 2014 11:27 pm

Lewandowsky and Cook at Oz when the curtains flew open.

Greg
March 10, 2014 12:20 am

The Star Trek episode is an interesting study of the communication problem. However …
choey2 says: “Considering one side is trying to talk science and the other is talking politics dishonestly disguised as science it’s no wonder they can’t communicate.”
This is the whole problem. Those who deny natural climate change are pretending to talk logic and science while really trying to communicate something else. They are saying stuff like “Kailash, when it rises, as shown by median of 100 bias adjusted records of global SST. Therefore it’s AGW ”
They also won’t to come to any meetings at El-Adrel IV to try communicate because they refuse to talk to those who do not agree with them.
Shaka, when the walls fell !!

eco-geek
March 10, 2014 1:28 am

AW transcends the final frontier, to boldly go where no man has gone before.
Communicating with aliens is problematic. Even if a communications channel could be established there is no reasoning entity at the other end just a nebulous undifferentiated neural network plugged into belief, greed, corruption and stupidity.

Russell Klier
March 10, 2014 2:24 am

Climate scientists in hooded robes…….
Historical data in flames……
Mann, his lawyer in tow………..

gnomish
March 10, 2014 2:46 am

semiotics. it’s subverbal. words are not required.
basically, the only thing it can communicate is affection or hostility; approval or disapproval.
logic requres words; critical thinking requires logic.
there is no intersection of these separate domains.

chris moffatt
March 10, 2014 6:40 am

@clay marley: “the flourishing of human life and cultures is compatible with a substantial decrease of the human population. The flourishing of nonhuman life requires such a decrease. Everyone who understands this has an obligation to implement these changes. (Arne Næss and George Sessions, Basic Principles of Deep Ecology)”
There may well be some population number above which disaster will befall but to claim that we have reached it or that we can know what it is is utterly false. Even so the greenies solution to the “overpopulation” they see is also completely wrong. If we know anything about populations we know that better education (especially of women), better economic opportunities and circumstances and higher living standards will result in lower populations. There is no need to freeze or tax or drown people out of existence. Just improve living standards by the usual methods. Of course then we’ll have the other doom scenario of aging populations around the planet……
Tch, tch – always some crisis to be overcome, innit?

Legatus
March 10, 2014 7:19 am

If the greenies really believed that overpopulation was the problem, they would prove it by committing suicide. They do not, so we know what they really believe. They do not believe that there are too many people, they believe that there are too many other people.

Box of Rocks
March 10, 2014 7:54 am

Cynical Scientst says:
March 9, 2014 at 1:22 pm
Stalin; on behalf of the people.
Gore; on behalf of the planet.
*******
Nah –
Gore: wealth for me, poverty for thee on behalf of me.

March 10, 2014 7:56 am

First, you have to want to communicate.
When you what you want is TO WIND, communication is a tool of war: you use it to confuse, mislead and manipulate.
A lot of conflicts, personal, tribal, national, international, are about one side trying to win. Negotiation as a way to peace is not an option. Peace is to be achieved by winning, the other sides, by losing. Explaining yourself is important only in that the opponent knows what, where and how he is to give up.
The warmist view on the conflicts with skeptics on CAGW is the same as the tribal/religious wars of Africa today: cleanse the world of the opponent, don’t find common ground and compromises. The warmist is Right; by definition, the skeptic is Wrong.

Susann
March 10, 2014 10:23 am

This is my favorite episode. I am glad you understand the, “What If.” When trying to explain why this episode is so important, I felt “Shaka, when the walls fell.” Today’s metaphor would be “CAGW warmist in the EPA.” Meaning, failure (of the sane).

Ossqss
March 10, 2014 11:02 am

Ha! Awesome post!
The thought of Steve and Mikey spawned this image in my head.

March 10, 2014 3:24 pm

Legatus says:
March 10, 2014 at 7:19 am
If the greenies really believed that overpopulation was the problem, they would prove it by committing suicide. They do not, so we know what they really believe. They do not believe that there are too many people, they believe that there are too many other people.

===================================================================
They need to stick around to make sure the rest of us do our part for Ma’ Gaea.

mbur
March 10, 2014 3:55 pm

Institutional paradise, when they ate the competition.
Shaka , no brotha.
Thanks for the interesting articles and comments.

Rational Db8
March 10, 2014 5:37 pm

The problem with the analogy is that to be equivalent, the Tamarian’s would have had to have started the communications exchange with a statement something along the lines of “hello, we have this excellent understanding of your language and your science, better than you yourselves do actually, and using your own science, we will prove this to you…” Then lapsed into nothing but “Shaka, when the walls fell.” interspersed with more claims of completely understanding our language, science, and technology better than humans understand any of it….
In other words, it’s not a failure to communicate – or an emotional plea vs. a scientific one. It’s a failure of the AGW True Believers to actually stick to the scientific method and be honest about what it does or doesn’t show, all while claiming that’s EXACTLY what they are doing.

Rational Db8
March 10, 2014 5:41 pm

David Ross says: March 9, 2014 at 12:01 pm
Piltdown, when the jaw dropped.

ROFL!! Good one! All sorts of innuendo tied to that doozy.

March 11, 2014 3:38 pm

Why climate change communications is like ‘Shaka, when the walls fell’

Because it’s full of NERDS?

Brian H
March 12, 2014 12:09 am

The Desire for the Dire seems dominant; Drastic Warming which unleashes floods and rising seas would make CAGWers ecstatic.