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.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

204 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
March 15, 2014 8:31 am

Alan
“Would you like to reconsider that statement Steve?”
No, I would stand by it.
As you write
“True enough, academics are free to express anything, but they are not free from the repercussions of their speech.”
To say they are free to say it, but will suffer consequences amounts to the same thing because we have defined academic freedom as the freedom to speak without consequences. And I am arguing that this freedom is necessarily self limiting.

Kirk Hall
March 15, 2014 8:34 am

As mentioned previously but not corrected the numbered links (1,2,3 etc) are pointing to documents on a local PC and cannot be accessed. I’m interested in reading those documents.

pottereaton
March 15, 2014 8:42 am

oldspanky says:
March 15, 2014 at 2:47 am
Does that line of reasoning look familiar to you? I’ll explain: you are saying I am not entitled to point out faults unless I am a domain expert. Really?! You’re going to come here and use that argument?
—————————-
No, you are (purposefully?) misinterpreting what I said. I made no mention of “domain experts” or what you are or are “not entitled” to do. I’m saying that because you have publicly expressed a presumed a level of expertise, that it’s in your interest to share with us that expertise. You are “entitled” to do anything you want. I think it would be enlightening for us all to see what kind of letter you would have written in Viscount Monckton’s stead, regardless of whether you are or are not a person with his kind of public profile.
How hard can it be? In your original statement you suggest such a letter should be “brief” and “pointed.”

Quelgeek says:
March 14, 2014 at 9:11 am
Gosh Monkton is tedious. His letter is nothing a good savage editor couldn’t fix.
If you want to be read keep it brief and make it pointed.

Here’s your chance to show Viscount Monckton how it’s done. If you choose not to, fine. But why deprive all the readers here of your learning and talent? You might even persuade the professoriate at RIT to do the right thing and discipline Assistant Professor Torcello.

March 15, 2014 9:30 am

Science is merely applied reasoning. Applied reasoning is also used in every other endeavor of humanity, not just science. Science has no special claim to it. The potential of applied reasoning is our fundamental nature that distinguishes our species.
RIT’s faculty member Lawrence Torcello wants government laws on use of our human nature; that is our application of reason; he wants there to be thought crimes laws.
Specifically, RIT’s Lawrence Torcello wants to control reasoning (thought) through government coercion (laws) related to the study of climate and also to control the reasoning to interpret / analyze that climate focused applied reasoning.
It is irrational for RIT staff member Lawrence Torcello to maintain there is any human authority in application of reasoning. Only reality validates our applied reasoning. We are shown the path back to thought control by collectivized society when looking at the irrational ideas of RIT’s Lawrence Torcello.
Looking back, we see Naomi Oreskes (formerly UCSD now Harvard) has been a long time leader / advocate of the kind of irrationality that we now see emulated by RIT faculty member Lawrence Torcello.
John

March 15, 2014 9:37 am

This Torcello character didn’t make the rookie mistake when insulting people of naming individuals directly.
Professor Parncutt on the other hand fell straight into it, insulting Lord Monckton and His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI directly, for which he was dully called out and forced into a grovelling apology, which Lord Monckton accepted and then much too graciously some might say let the matter lie.
This weasel otoh. sought to avoid direct and honest confrontation by casting aspersions widely and generally and all who might not concur with his warped thinking.
What ever did become of Prof, Parncutt ?

Alan Robertson
March 15, 2014 9:43 am

Steven Mosher says:
March 15, 2014 at 8:31 am

To say they are free to say it, but will suffer consequences amounts to the same thing because we have defined academic freedom as the freedom to speak without consequences. And I am arguing that this freedom is necessarily self limiting.
__________________
Yes.

March 15, 2014 10:16 am

Roger Sowell,
Thanks for your thoughtful response.

March 15, 2014 10:32 am

Steven Mosher says:
March 15, 2014 at 8:31 am

To say they are free to say it, but will suffer consequences amounts to the same thing because we have defined academic freedom as the freedom to speak without consequences. And I am arguing that this freedom is necessarily self limiting

– – – – – – – – – –
Steven Mosher,
Your initiation of a dialog on ‘limits to freedom’ is welcome and important. Thanks.
You are potentially implying a context suspended in conceptual mid air, if you are arguing intellectual freedom must be actually limited by society or culture or government.
Intellectual freedom conceptually is derived from epistemological and metaphysical concepts, not moral, social, cultural or political. Logically there is a progression to philosophical ideas like intellectual freedom: what is (metaphysics), how do we know it (epistemology), then create values based on those for living (ethics) and determine optimum rules for men to live together (politics). The later two (ethics and politics) depend on the first two (metaphysics and epistemology).
Our intellectual freedom is not limited at all in any fundamental sense by reality (metaphysics) or our method of knowing (epistemology). So, it would be inconsistent and arbitrary for ethics and politics to limit intellectual freedom. Therefore my initial sentences about you possibly implying a context suspended in conceptual mid air concerning ‘limits to freedom’.
Regards.
John

March 15, 2014 10:38 am

JDN says:
March 15, 2014 at 3:27 am

: Torcello isn’t attacking freedom of speech in general. If you have a sinking ship with the crew trying to get people to the lifeboats and someone goes around announcing that the ship isn’t really sinking and that this is just a drill, please return to your staterooms; that isn’t protected speech because it causes a positive harm. This is the sort of argument he’s making.

I have a question for those taking this line (and I think the above is a fair summary of Torcello’s reasoning): what should we have done with all those folks back in the late 1930’s who advocated “constructive engagement” (a phrase from a later era) with Hitler’s Germany? The name Neville Chamberlain is most readily linked with that thinking, but he was hardly alone. In the US Joseph P. Kennedy (ambassador to Great Britain and father of JFK, RFK, Teddy, etc.) was promoting the same line. Those gentlemen and many others were the “consensus view” at the time and they turned out to be absolutely, tragically, and at least to some way of thinking, avoidably wrong. Should they have all been tossed in prison?
Or is their error excused because it was the “consensus view”? Does being wrong and thereby contributing to massive harm and suffering stop being a crime if there were a bunch of others in it with you? In other words, is being wrong only “criminally negligent” if you hold the “minority” opinion? And how long do we have to wait before we determine which side was right in the question? In the case of Hitler and Germany, it was pretty clear who was wrong in September of 1939 when German troops invaded Poland (I should say rather it was undeniable then; it had been pretty clear for some time before that). In the matter of AGW we don’t have any actual events in evidence to show whether warmists or skeptics are correct. Other than those espousing the “consensus” opinion (who are certain), nobody really knows.
But it is apparently enough for Mr. Torcello that he believes skeptics are wrong and that he believes great harm will come as a result. On that basis, and the assertion that his views are shared by almost everyone, or almost everyone who really counts, Mr. Torcello is advocating dissenters be subject to criminal prosecution. For those who want to argue he didn’t really say that, please explain the purpose of labelling climate change denial as criminally negligent instead of merely negligent — US law recognizes both kinds and treats them differently. One is a crime and the other is a tort; one is punishable by prison and the other is not. I do not expect a professor of philosophy to be professionally competent in atmospheric physics or advanced statistics, but I do expect him to understand the proper use of language to make meaningful distinctions. If I extend Mr. Torcello the courtesy of assuming he is competent in the English language, I must at the same time infer from his essay that he wants to put people in prison for expressing the wrong (according to him) opinions. If I also extend Mr. Torcello the courtesy of assuming he is aware of the historical company that puts him in, I am entitled to make an even grimmer inference.
So the bottom line is Christopher Monckton is correct: a professor at a US university is advocating people be imprisoned for their opinions, apparently with tacit approval from the officers and trustees said university.
There is a reason the standard for criminal conviction is beyond a reasonable doubt; thousands of years of experience have established that people can be wrong, even when they are certain they are right. We are nowhere near beyond a reasonable doubt regarding the effects of human CO2 emissions and climate change; we aren’t even convincingly at the point of preponderance of evidence, which is the standard in civil proceedings. Yet Mr. Torcello and others insist we discard the hard-won experience of centuries in Western law and toss people in prison for their opinions because he and other drones in his particular mind-hive are certain those opinions are wrong and harmful.
Shameful doesn’t even come close.

Alan Robertson
March 15, 2014 11:15 am

Philosophical exploration of ideas is quite a different matter than advocacy of a belief system by an individual with power to enforce his agenda, such as a classroom instructor has over students. Such advocacy becomes coercive tyranny.
It would be one thing for a Professor at Hofstra to be teaching the history of the Third Reich and quite a different thing to be calling for a new Kristallnacht.

Chad Wozniak
March 15, 2014 11:34 am

[snip – off topic – religion -mod]

Steve Allen
March 15, 2014 12:07 pm

Mosher says; “…they are not free to suggest that others be prosecuted for thought crimes.”
Ok, I will ask the same question another way.
In what known universe do “thought crimes” exist?

rogerthesurf
March 15, 2014 3:17 pm

Great stuff Lord M!
Cheers
Roger
http://www.thedemiseofchristchurch.wordpress.com

joeldshore
March 15, 2014 4:31 pm

[snip – off topic – religion -mod]

joeldshore
March 15, 2014 4:40 pm

pottereaston says:

Professor Torcello has perpetrated a crime against academic freedom. If the university lets it stand, perhaps its accreditation needs to be looked at.

But he can be disciplined severely, and should be if the university doesn’t want to be justly accused of tolerating fascist ideology in its ranks of instructors.

Am I the only one who finds these comments pegging my irony meter?

Chad Wozniak
March 15, 2014 5:53 pm

[snip – off topic – religion -mod]

pottereaton
March 15, 2014 7:07 pm

joeldshore says:
March 15, 2014 at 4:40 pm
Yes.

Jeff Alberts
March 15, 2014 8:04 pm

[snip – off topic – religion -mod]

Dan in California
March 15, 2014 9:06 pm

It seems that Assistant Professor of Philosophy Torcello does not understand that the Scientific Method includes skepticism as an integral and important part. If it doesn’t include skepticism, it’s not science. It makes me wonder if there is any branch of philosophy that he *does* understand?

March 15, 2014 9:51 pm

[snip – off topic – religion -mod]

Jeff Alberts
March 15, 2014 10:01 pm

Streetcred says:
March 15, 2014 at 9:51 pm
Jeesh! You sure hold a grudge for a long time … what’s it to you, you weren’t even there.

I guess hypocrisy and cherry picking are ok with you.

Chad Wozniak
March 15, 2014 10:03 pm

[snip – off topic – religion -mod]

JDN
March 16, 2014 2:00 am

@pottereaton
Academic standards and “ethics” today are ridiculous, and we ridicule them regularly on this website. I don’t think I’m out of line here. Universities are looking to see which side their bread is buttered on, then whitewashing Mr. Mann’s work or bragging about the funding they get for complete nonsense. The few university officials that aren’t cynical at this point are the heros of their universities. Every university I’ve seen is scared not to “go green” for fear they won’t get their fair share of the loot. And so, they are ridiculous, and you’ll look like a fool if you count on them to do the right thing. They chase the carrot of money and fear the stick of things that will harm their political patrons.
If this guy Torcello controls enough money, he can do whatever he wants. That’s ethics! /sarc /much
@Lance Hilpert
Gitlow v. New York is a sad case of both misunderstanding the first amendment (i.e. limiting it) and also federal over-reach. The funny thing is that I could probably use Gitlow v. New York to argue for imprisonment of climate skeptics. After all, now is the time when action is needed, and they through their radical intransigence seek to overthrow government protection and human survival by advocating for burning fossil fuels. Thus, states are within their rights to ban their speech and imprison them. See how that works? You have to read the actual ruling, not the summary. You may want to cite later decisions. 🙂
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1508178/Gitlow-v-New-York
IANAL BIPOOTS

joeldshore
March 16, 2014 7:58 am

[snip – off topic – religion -mod]

March 16, 2014 8:39 am

Criminally negligent? I am tempted to offer this deal to the Torcellos of the world: if CAGW becomes an undeniable fact (i.e., actual data supporting and proving man-made climate change is causing catastrophic events with respect to Man), I will enter prison for five years. However, if CAGW is not proven by such events in the next twenty years, then THEY will report to prison for five years.
Somehow I doubt anyone would take me up on that deal.