Monckton’s letter to the Rochester Institute of Technology regarding Assistant Professor Lawrence Torcello

Earlier, I had mentioned Assistant Professor Lawrence Torcello’s despicable climate ugliness and offered some links to addresses on where to complain to. Monckton took the lead on that. I urge others to write such factual and courteous letters.

14 March 2014

The Provost and Senior Vice-President for Academic Affairs

Eastman Hall

Rochester Institute of Technology

New York, New York, United States of America

asenate@rit.edu, stp1031@rit.edu

Sir,

Breaches of Principles of Academic Freedom (Policy E2.0) and of the mission statement of the Institute by Assistant Professor Lawrence Torcello

Principle of public law relied upon

The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States applies to all. It says:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

Principles of private law relied upon

The Institute’s policy on academic freedom applies to all faculty members, including Assistant Professor Torcello. The Institute declares that its policy is “guided” by the principles of academic freedom promulgated by the Association of University Professors in 1940, and, in particular, by the third such principle:

“3. College and university teachers are citizens, members of a learned profession, and officers of an educational institution. When they speak or write as citizens, they should be free from institutional censorship or discipline, but their special position in the community imposes special obligations. As scholars and educational officers, they should remember that the public may judge their profession and their institution by their utterances. Hence they should at all times be accurate, should exercise appropriate restraint, should show respect for the opinions of others, and should make every effort to indicate that they are not speaking for the institution.”

The Institute’s mission statement includes the following paragraph:

“Respect, Diversity and Pluralism: Provides a high level of service to fellow members of the RIT community. Treats every person with dignity. Demonstrates inclusion by incorporating diverse perspectives to plan, conduct, and/or evaluate the work of the organization, department, college, or division.”

Alleged breaches of the said principles of law

On 13 March 2014, Assistant Professor Lawrence Torcello published a blog posting[1] entitled Is misinformation about the climate criminally negligent? at a tendentious propaganda website, “The Conversation”. In that posting, he committed the following breaches of the Institute’s policies:

1. Mr Torcello describes himself as “Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Rochester Institute of Technology” and makes no effort to comply with the explicit requirement of the principles on academic freedom by indicating that he writes neither on behalf of the Institute nor in his capacity as an assistant professor there but as a private citizen.

2. Mr Torcello offends against the requirement of accuracy stated in the principles of academic freedom in that his posting falsely said “the majority of scientists clearly agree on a set of facts” about “global warming” on which they do not in fact agree. Mr Torcello links his cited statement to a reference to three papers each claiming a “97% consensus” to the effect that most of the global warming observed since 1950 was manmade. However, as Legates et al. (2013)[2] have demonstrated, a review of 11,944 papers on climate published in the 21 years 1991-2011, the largest such review ever published in the scientific literature, had marked only 64 papers, or 0.5% of the sample, as explicitly endorsing that proposition. Though it may well be that 100% of scientists publishing in relevant fields accept that – all other things being equal – our returning CO2 to the atmosphere from which it once came will be likely to cause some global warming (though the record amounts of CO2 we have emitted recently have not caused any warming at all for up to 17 years 6 months[3]), legitimate scientific doubt remains about the quantum of future global warming that may be expected, with an increasing body of peer-reviewed papers moving towards a climate sensitivity of only 1-2 Celisus degrees per CO2 doubling[4], and the IPCC itself drastically reducing its predictions of global warming over the next 30 years.

3. Mr. Torcello offends not only against the Institute’s requirement to treat every person with dignity, including those persons with whose views he disagrees, but also against the Constitution’s assertion of the right of free speech, which includes the right to fund those who wish to exercise it in opposition to what he falsely regards as the prevailing scientific opinion, when he says: “We have good reason to consider the funding of climate denial to be criminally and morally negligent. The charge of criminal and moral negligence ought to extend all activities of the climate deniers who receive funding as part of a sustained campaign to undermine the public’s understanding of scientific consensus” – a “consensus” which, as the three papers on the subject that Mr Torcello has linked to his posting define it, does not in fact exist.

4. Mr Torcello offends against the requirement of accuracy stated in the principles of academic freedom in that he links the statement in his posting that “public uncertainty regarding climate science, and the resulting failure to respond to climate change, is the intentional aim of politically and financially motivated denialists” to an allegation, long demonstrated to have been fabricated by one Peter Gleick, a climate change campaigner, that the Heartland Institute had circulated memorandum stating that Heartland intended to persuade schoolteachers that “the topic of climate change is controversial and uncertain – two key points that are effective at dissuading teachers from teaching science”. In the interest of accuracy Mr Torcello ought to have made it plain, but did not mention at all, that Gleick had been suspended from his post at an environmental campaign group for several months as a result of this incident, in which he had corruptly posed as a member of Heartland’s board so as to obtain access to its private documents, to which he had added documents of his own when the private documents he had obtained proved to be disappointingly innocent.

5. Mr Torcello shows no respect for Constitutional freedom of speech, or for the principles of academic freedom for those with whom he disagrees, when falsely alleges that all who fund those who dare to question what we are (inaccurately) told is the “consensus” position on global warming are “corrupt”, “deceitful”, and “criminally negligent in their willful disregard for human life”.

6. Mr Torcello, in perpetrating his me-too hate-speech about the alleged “loss of life” from “global warming”, fails yet again to comply with the requirement of accuracy in the principles of academic freedom, in that he departs from the “consensus” to the effect that a global warming of up to 2 Celsius degrees compared with 1750, or 1.1 degrees compared with today, will be not only harmless but net-beneficial to life on Earth. He also ignores the fact that the very heavy additional costs of energy arising from arguably needless subsidies to “renewable” energy systems make it impossible for poorer people to heat their homes. These energy price hikes may, for instance, have contributed to the 31,000 excess deaths in last year’s cold winter in the UK alone – 8000 more than the usual number of excess winter deaths.

7. By looking at only one side of the account, and by threatening scientists who disagree with him with imprisonment for criminal negligence, Mr Torcello offends fundamentally against the principles of academic freedom that he will himself no doubt pray in aid when he is confronted with the present complaint, and against the principle of tolerance of diverse opinions – including, horribile dictu, opinions at variance with his own – that is enjoined upon him by the Institute’s mission statement, and by common sense.

The academic senate will, no doubt, wish to consider whether Mr Torcello is a fit and proper person to hold any academic post at the Institute, and whether to invite him not only to correct at once the errors of fact that he has perpetrated but also to respect in future the academic freedom of those with whom he disagrees as though it were his own freedom – a freedom that, in his shoddy little posting, he has shamefully and ignorantly abused.

Yours faithfully,

Viscount Monckton of Brenchley


[1] https://theconversation.com/is-misinformation-about-the-climate-criminally-negligent-23111

[2] Legates, D.R., W.W.-H. Soon, W. M. Briggs, and C.W. Monckton of Brenchley, 2013, Climate consensus and ‘misinformation’: a rejoinder to ‘Agnotology, scientific consensus, and the teaching and learning of climate change’, Sci. & Educ., August 30, DOI 10.1007/s11191-013-9647-9.

[3] Least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS monthly global mean lower-troposphere temperature anomaly dataset, September 1996 to February 2014 inclusive.

[4] See e.g. Lindzen, R.S., and Y.-S. Choi, 2011, On the observational determination of climate sensitivity and its implications, Asia-Pacific J. Atmos. Sci., 47:4, 377-390, doi:10.1007/s13143-011-0023-x.

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Greg Roane
March 14, 2014 10:03 am

Dang it @pottereaton! You beat me to it! “Don’t debate the issues, attack the person instead!” Is this not the playbook?
Lord Monckton, excellent letter!
And one more thing, what is a Philosophy Professor doing at RIT, anyway? That sounds as counterintuitive as a Law College at MIT.

TBraunlich
March 14, 2014 10:03 am

Who cares about this philosophy professor at a small technical college? He is the academic version of a troll. Add his comments to the growing list of heinous things global warming promoters say that can be used against them later, and then forget about it.

Jimbo
March 14, 2014 10:10 am

There are those who argue that the ‘small’ band of sceptics is able to slow or halt public action on global warming climate change. I disagree, and think that since our voices have been clean swept from the airwaves for over a decade we have only been heard by a few. Yet a recent survey of Americans put global warming climate change second to last in their list of concerns.
It is their failure to convince and not us sceptics. They are a bunch of failures and need to accept that fact.

March 14, 2014 10:12 am

Minor correction to one of the comments; RIT is NOT the university of Rochester; two very separate (and competing) entities. Both are academically excellent (Dr. Douglas, who frequently partners with Dr Lindzen is associated with the UofR.) To my knowledge, neither are considered bastions of liberalism, compared to many Northeast institutions.
(I have an MBA from the UofR, my wife was a director at the university hospital. I also consulted for a year after retirement under the sponsorship of RIT.)

Jim Bo
March 14, 2014 10:14 am

FYI and convenience…
The Democrat and Chronicle
Letters to the Editor
Democrat and Chronicle
55 Exchange Blvd.
Rochester, NY 14614
Or
email us at dceditpage@democratandchronicle.com

Jones
March 14, 2014 10:16 am

My Good Lord Monckton
It is with a quiver in my hands that I would like to take issue with the following.
You write
“7. By looking at only one side of the account, and by threatening scientists who disagree with him with imprisonment for criminal negligence”
Now, I do not wish to be accused of being a pedant (heaven forbid!) but by a strict interpretation the esteemed Prof seems to actually be saying that deemed subversive individuals SHOULD be threatened with imprisonment. The good chap isn’t in any actual position to make any such threats under the current legal system.
However much I suspect he would like to be.
Apologies if one is grossly off-beam with this minor correction.
Cap doffed and forelock tugged vigorously til bald patch results.
Luuurve your work.
Jones.

Bernie Hutchins
March 14, 2014 10:17 am

pottereaton said in part March 14, 2014 at 9:45 am:
“Bernie 9:13: it’s not small. It’s has over 18,000 post-graduate and undergraduate students.”
Thank you – quite so. It’s just up the road from me. I was thinking “small” in terms of recognition, as suggested by my own comment about it having graduates of a quality equal to “larger” schools.
Even Division I Hockey!

March 14, 2014 10:31 am

“Secondly, the first amendment doesn’t “apply to all”, it applys to the federal congress and anything it regulates, which sure as hell isn’t some assistant professor’s speech, unless you are a big fan of dystopian society. ”
yes the appeal to the first amendment was the weakest part of the letter. Folks should understand that all a reader has to do is find the weakest argument and counter that.
The second weakest argument is the one that refers to ““Respect, Diversity and Pluralism:”
The code requires this behavior toward those in the RIT community.
The best argument
““3. College and university teachers are citizens, members of a learned profession, and officers of an educational institution. When they speak or write as citizens, they should be free from institutional censorship or discipline, but their special position in the community imposes special obligations. As scholars and educational officers, they should remember that the public may judge their profession and their institution by their utterances. Hence they should at all times be accurate, should exercise appropriate restraint, should show respect for the opinions of others, and should make every effort to indicate that they are not speaking for the institution.”
1. criminalizing thought is not “appropriate restraint”
2. he does not respect the opinions of others
3. he did not make every effort to indicate that he wasnt speaking for the institution.
That is the best argument. The other points are the typical piling on weaker arguments.
The stupid arguments about the first amendment, the stupid arguments about Cook, all distract from the core argument. I would make the argument this way.
Academics are accorded a special freedom, academic freedom which frees them from institutional censorship or discipline. Unlike a civilian employee who can be terminated for expressing noxious ideas, academics are allowed to, in fact encouraged to, speak freely with no fear of retribution. Unlike politicians who can lose their elected positions for spewing nonsense, an academic is protected from losing his position regardless of what he says or writes.
However, this protected status imposes certain responsibilities: Requirements to speak accurately, to practice restraint and to respect the opinions of others. Beneath the requirements for accuracy, restraint and tolerance lies this fundamental ethic: the protected status of academics entails that they should never suggest criminalizing speech. In short, there is an inherent limit on the absolute free expression of academics: they are not free to suggest that others be prosecuted for thought crimes.

David L. Hagen
March 14, 2014 10:34 am

Bob et al. Thanks for the correction from NY NY to Rochester NY

March 14, 2014 10:38 am

‘What is Lord Viscount Christopher Monckton’s theory?’
‘during his research, Christopher buried himself in the highly technical data from the UN’s climate body the IPCC, {but in among this was a bombshell and it was in figure one of that paper}, Monckton had found a paper from a doctor Rachel Pinker, that he thought proved by measurement not modelling, that change in cloud cover was responsible for the warming over the last 25 years and not our co2. {if this conclusion is correct then this is the silver bullet that shoots down the vampire of GW} this would revolution science if he was right [if you came up with an alternative theory that dis-proved GW you would win a Nobel prize, in my judgement because you would replace a century old theory with something new] now that Christopher had the theory it was time to write it up and publish it in a peer reviewed journal [lets put the dukes up as we say, the real test of science is get out there and publish, if you don‘t you are wasting everybody’s time…and the only reason Monckton and others haven’t done that is because their ideas don’t with stand scrutiny, Monckton publish his stuff…if he is right he gets a Nobel prize, if he is wrong he will be shown to be wrong and that is the appropriate way to conduct science]’

Jimbo
March 14, 2014 10:38 am

All I’m askin’ for a little R E S P E C T. Tell em Aretha.

The Climate Conversion
Community standards
………..
Don’t attack people and don’t respond to attacks – report them and move on
Keep your posts on topic and constructive
Take responsibility for the quality of the conversations you take part in
Above all, respect others and their opinions.
https://theconversation.com/au/community_standards

http://youtu.be/6FOUqQt3Kg0

Chad Wozniak
March 14, 2014 10:48 am

The “disregard for human life” that Torcello touts would seem to rest with those who advocate policies, such as carbon taxes or the ethanol program, that kill people. Maybe he’d better look in the mirror.

Ben
March 14, 2014 10:57 am

Great job Viscount Monckton of Brenchley.
Note: The following links that are activated when you click on the numbers above, [1], [2], [3] and [4] do not work:
[1] https://theconversation.com/is-misinformation-about-the-climate-criminally-negligent-23111
[2] Legates, D.R., W.W.-H. Soon, W. M. Briggs, and C.W. Monckton of Brenchley, 2013, Climate consensus and ‘misinformation’: a rejoinder to ‘Agnotology, scientific consensus, and the teaching and learning of climate change’, Sci. & Educ., August 30, DOI 10.1007/s11191-013-9647-9.
[3] Least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS monthly global mean lower-troposphere temperature anomaly dataset, September 1996 to February 2014 inclusive.
[4] See e.g. Lindzen, R.S., and Y.-S. Choi, 2011, On the observational determination of climate sensitivity and its implications, Asia-Pacific J. Atmos. Sci., 47:4, 377-390, doi:10.1007/s13143-011-0023-x.

David L.
March 14, 2014 11:08 am

geek49203 says:
March 14, 2014 at 8:34 am
What next — the professor of poetry will issue a FATWA against those who doubt that zero sodium diets are effective in preventing heart attacks? Will the chair of the art history department demand a pogrom for those who dare point out that we’ve been fracking for 50+ years?
————————–
My thoughts exaclty. The Warmist crowd accepts any and all credentials when you spout the party line. But if you argue against them, you better have a PhD in Climate Science and peer reviewed 100 papers in Science and Nature or you don’t get respect, and even still you won’t get respect.

Bernie Hutchins
March 14, 2014 11:08 am

Once again we see here a confusion about the First Amendment. The fact that the Constitution guarantees Free Speech from the specific intrusion of government largely reflects a much more general understanding of its inherent (so-called “God Given”) origin, and the high regard for Free Speech that is so proudly embedded so deeply in the American character.

TG
March 14, 2014 11:13 am

It seems Assistant Professor of Philosophy Torcello simply repeated (plagiarized?) his previously given talk “Free Speech, Public Discourse, and the Moral Blameworthiness of Suffering Fools”, given in Australia in 2012; see: http://www.ias.uwa.edu.au/lectures/2012_lectures/torcello.

strike
March 14, 2014 11:28 am


“the IPCC AR reports. These reports are, in fact, the actual consensus scientific opinion, and it is not what Professor Torcello claims it to be”
Maybe that is your oppinion, I don’t agree. I think, It is less than a consensus of the scientist taking part, because politicians write the summary in the end. Additionally the cited studies are “handselected”

davideisenstadt
March 14, 2014 11:46 am

JDN says:
March 14, 2014 at 8:38 am
yeah…but who would be in the position to imprison individuals who dare to deny CAGW? Im thinking that this is where the government would come in, no?

Paul Thomas
March 14, 2014 11:46 am

Hi Anthony:
Thanks to Lord Moncton.
I have made my own contribution as follows:
Dear Sirs/Madame’s:
Lawrence Torcello pronounces that anyone not believing in Global Warming should be considered a criminal. There are so many levels of wrong about his statements that there is no satisfactory place to start.
When did it become a criminal matter to be unconvinced of an argument?
To begin with, where is the documentation supporting the assertion that unnamed corporate funding supports denial of global warming? Show it or stop advancing that notion.
By actual measurement, the basis for supporting or falsifying a scientific theory, there has been no warming for over 17 years.
The behavior of the atmosphere, land, and water bodies is a coupled non-linear system. Any attempt to model it using present technology is doomed to fail. No machine anywhere can provide the computational power to do that. There is no closed solution for the Navier Stokes equations, blocking that route to an answer.
Travelling through the countryside and cities on a motorcycle is most instructive. There are pockets of rapid change in air temperature everywhere, desert, mountains, ocean shores, wherever I travel. How can “scientists” or “science” hope to model that level of nuance. Tell me, how do we know what the ideal temperature is on earth? There are successful ecosystems in Antarctica at -80C and at the equator at +45 C. There are successful eco systems in the deep oceans near vents that pour out heat and gasses that no surface creature can survive. So I ask again, what is the ideal temperature?
When we do find out what that ideal temperature is, how will it be regulated? Who will hold the thermostat? Will there be a governing bureaucracy that will allocate temperature norms for each country, state, region, county, city, village?
What ethical model is applied that considers a person to be acting with criminal intent by being sceptical of a theory that measurements do not support. Richard Feynmann points out that every scientific law started as a theory which began with a guess, was supported by mathematics, then tested by measurement. When the theory and measurement don’t correspond, the theory is falsified and it is time to make a new guess.
The earth is a massively inertial system, a heat engine driven by a sun that would be even more difficult to model even if the fluid boundaries could be know to the very poor level that we know the earth boundaries. There are many other external influences as well. We live in a very large universe.
How is it criminal to be sceptical of a theory that cannot survive the average person’s simple look out of the window?
Regards
Paul Thomas

March 14, 2014 11:47 am

The snidely pseudonymous “blackadderthe4th” asks why I have not published the theory that much of the warming from 1983-2001 was attributable to a naturally-occurring but transient reduction in global cloud cover. The basis for my analysis was not in the least complicated: it was that the cumulative forcing from the reduction in cloud cover over 18 years was 2.9 Watts per square meter, while the entire net anthropogenic influence on the climate in the 263 years 1750-2012 was 2.3 Watts per square meter.
My paper on Global brightening and climate sensitivity was published in 2010 in the Annual Proceedings of the World Federation of Scientists’ Seminars on Planetary Emergencies.
The Chinese Ambassador to Italy was sitting in the audience when I presented my paper in Erice, Sicily. His scientific counsellor, who was also present, afterwards asked for a copy of the paper so that it could be sent to Peking. I was subsequently invited to visit China to address the leadership.
And no, there are seldom any Nobel prizes for the definitive paper that refutes a bad idea.
As to those, like the moaning Minnie Mosher, who think they could have written a better letter than me, let them do it rather than sitting on the sidelines of life and whining. A dreamer should also be a doer, just as a doer should also be a dreamer. But neither should be a whinger.

rogerknights
March 14, 2014 11:57 am

Wasn’t Christopher involved in a tiff with folks in Rochester a year or two ago?
——–
For a list of 20-plus things that would be happening (but aren’t) if climate contrarians were actually well-organized and well-funded, see my WUWT guest-thread, “Notes from Skull Island” at http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/12/16/notes-from-skull-island-why-skeptics-arent-well-funded-and-well-organized/

Poor Yorek
March 14, 2014 12:08 pm

Assistant Professor of Philosophy, indeed. God help us all.
The problem is not that Dr. Torcello is a philosophy professor, but that he is a bad one.
It is also disturbing to read repeated comments here that seem to suggest some necessary irrelevance of philosophy as a academic discipline within a “technical” institute. Again, the “scientists acting badly” that is so excoriated (rightly so) here is due in no small part to very poor philosophical training. Though, one can also point out that this extends to facile use of falsification (e.g. it is one thing to assert that “a proposition cannot be science if is is not falsifiable;” it is quite another (and an error) to assert that “a proposition cannot be true or known to be so if it is not falsifiable.”

Simon
March 14, 2014 12:18 pm

Don’t expect a reply to this letter and if you get one, I suspect it will be a quick sharp “thanks but no thanks.” As you can see from the wiki quote below, Monckton is hardly offered any level of respect from the halls of academia. In fact it, would seem he is a source of amusement to some.
“Monckton asked to be invited by Victoria University of Wellington to present his views on climate change, but Professor Jonathan Boston declined, thinking that he “would be doing the public and the university a disservice by in any way supporting an event involving Lord Monckton”. Two other professors at Victoria University called Monckton’s views “harmful with no scientific basis”. Monckton made a formal complaint with the university about the three professors, which in April 2013 the university confirmed receipt of, but a spokesperson refused to comment further. The three professors involved reportedly met the complaint “with hilarity”.[57]

Sun Spot
March 14, 2014 12:20 pm

Global Warming, Climate Change alarm-ism is neither scientific or philosophical it is political and ever professor of philosophy should know this or they have not kept up to speed with modernity.

Sun Spot
March 14, 2014 12:21 pm

or post modernity.