By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
Professor Shaun Lovejoy, as he continues the active marketing of his latest paper purporting to prove that “the world desperately needs to drop the skepticism and change course – humanity’s future depends on it”, writes in a hilarious op-ed at livescience.com:
“The majordomo of this deniers’ hub [Watts Up With That] is the notorious Viscount Christopher Monckton of Brenchley, who – within hours [fast on his feet, that Viscount is: strong in him the Force must be] – had declared to the faithful that the paper was no less than a ‘mephitically ectoplasmic emanation from the Forces of Darkness’ and that ‘it is time to be angry at the gruesome failure of peer review’.”
The Professor describes this as “venom”. No, sir, it is eloquence in the service of truth. Perhaps he would prefer a scatological rather than an eschatological metaphor. Happy to oblige. The scientific merit of his paper is aptly described by the third, eighteenth, first, and sixteenth letters of the alphabet, taken sequentially. Or, if he prefers it up him palindromically, the sixteenth, fifteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth.
Let me put on my major-domo’s tails, white starched wing-collar, maniple, and white gloves, polish up the nearest silver salver, and, Jeeves-like, shimmer in to address some the fashionable pseudo-physics in Professor Lovejoy’s latest Technicolor yawn.
After deploying the hate-screech word “deniers”, he wheels out Svante Arrhenius, who, “toiling for a year, predicted that doubling CO2 levels would increase global temperatures by 5-6 Cº, which turns out to be close to modern estimates”.
The Professor is perhaps unaware (for he does not seem to be aware of all that much in the realm of physics) that Arrhenius is known to have made errors in his line-by-line calculation of the warming effect of CO2 (actually performed at intervals over the long Arctic winter, not over a whole year). He had, for instance, relied on defective lunar spectral data.
Furthermore, Arrhenius – a chemist and not a physicist – had not at that time come across the fundamental equation of radiative transfer, which would greatly have simplified his calculations and made them more accurate.
However, in 1906, in Vol. 1, No. 2 of the Journal of the Royal Nobel Institute, he recanted and divided his earlier climate-sensitivity estimate by three:
“Likewise, I calculate that a halving or doubling of the CO2 concentration would be equivalent to changes of temperature of –1.5 Cº or +1.6 Cº respectively.”
So few of the F. of D. are aware of Arrhenius’ recantation that I am happy to provide a facsimile (Fig. 1) of the quotation from his 1906 paper, published in German (which perhaps explains why the largely English-speaking F. of D. are unaware of it).
Figure 1. Detail in facsimile from Arrhenius, S., 1906, Die vermutliche Ursache der Klimaschwankungen (“The possible cause for climate variability”). Meddelanden från K. Vetenskapsakademiens Nobelinstitut 1: 2, 1ff.
It is also important to note that Arrhenius confined his analysis to radiative transports only. He did not take account of all the numerous non-radiative transports – afternoon convection in the tropics, baroclinic eddies in the extratropics, evaporation everywhere, etc. – that militate homeostatically against any sufficiently small perturbation of the natural climate (such as doubling the tiny concentration of CO2 in the air).
Nor did Arrhenius take account of the biggest unknown in the climate – the behavior of clouds. All other things being equal, returning plant food to the atmosphere from which it came will cause some warming. But we do not know that all other things are equal.
Professor Lovejoy is also incorrect to say that Arrhenius’ original estimate of climate sensitivity was “close to modern estimates”. IPeCaC clings to a sensitivity interval of 1.5-4.5 Cº, entirely below Arrhenius’ original estimate and almost entirely above his revised estimate.
Many “modern estimates” point to a climate sensitivity well below IPeCaC’s interval. We may even see less than 1 Cº of global warming per CO2 doubling (Monckton of Brenchley, 2008, 2010; Douglass & Christy, 2009; Paltridge, 2009; Lindzen and Choi, 2009, 2011; Spencer and Braswell, 2010, 2011; Loehle & Scafetta, 2011, etc.).
Next, the Professor says that in the scientific method “no theory ever can be proven beyond ‘reasonable doubt’”. It would be more correct to say that some hypotheses (though few in physics and very few in climate physics) can be demonstrated definitively.
For instance, it is possible to demonstrate the Theorem of Pythagoras. My own simple proof by inclusion is at Fig. 2.
Figure 2. Demonstration of Pythagoras’ Theorem by inclusion. The boundary contains either the square on the hypotenuse (red) and two congruent right triangles or the squares on the other two sides (blue, green) and two more congruent right triangles. Subtract on each view the two right triangles. Then the square on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides. Q.E.D.
Professor Lovejoy sets out his stall thus:
“Climate skeptics have ruthlessly exploited this alleged weakness, stating that the models are wrong, and that the warming is natural. Fortunately, scientists have a fundamental methodological asymmetry to use against these skeptics: a single decisive experiment effectively can disprove a scientific hypothesis. That’s what I claim to have done. Examining the theory that global warming is only natural, I showed — without any use of GCMs — that the probability that warming is simply a giant natural fluctuation is so small as to be negligible. He compounds this point later by saying “skeptics dismiss the models”.
Well, are the models right? A single experiment demonstrates that, on the central question how much global warming should have occurred since 1990, the modelers’ hypothesis that the trend in global temperature would fall on their predicted interval (the orange region in Fig. 3) has been demonstrated to be false. Skeptics doubt the models not least because the modelers’ confidently-made predictions have been demonstrated, time and again, to be wild exaggerations.
Figure 3. Near-term projections of global warming (IPCC, 1990: orange region), compared with observed outturn taken as the mean of the RSS and UAH monthly global mean surface temperature anomalies, 1990-2014.
Professor Lovejoy says that his “CO2 proxy … predicts with 95 percent certainty that a doubling of CO2 levels in the atmosphere will lead to a warming of 1.9 to 4.2 Cº”. He prays in aid Fig. 4.
Figure 4. “This figure visually shows the strong linear relation between the radiative forcing and the global temperature response since 1880 … showing the 5-year running average of global temperature (red) as a function of the CO2 forcing surrogate from 1880 to 2004. The linearity is impressive; the deviations from linearity are due to natural variability. The slope of the regression line is 2.33±0.22 degrees Celsius per CO2 doubling (it is for the unlagged forcing/response relation).”
I do not pretend to understand this graph. For a start, it seems to show (albeit in exasperatingly non-standard units) that just about half the CO2 forcing since 1750 occurred before 1960, when CO2 concentration last stood at 316 ppmv. However, the official story-line (in standard units) is that the CO2 forcing from 1750 to 1958 was 0.7 W m–2, whereas that from 1958 to 2014 was greater by four-fifths, at 1.2 W m–2. Makes a bit of a mess of the claimed “linearity”, that.
Secondly, the linear trend on the global temperature anomalies since 1880 is 0.87 Cº, (Fig. 5), in response to 1.9 W m–2 of CO2 forcing. A doubling of CO2 concentration would give 3.7 W m–2 of CO2 forcing, according to the current official method.
Therefore, if there were a linear relation between CO2 forcing and temperature change (which there is not), and if all of the warming since 1750 were anthropogenic (which it was not), and if there were no major natural influences on temperature over the period (which there were) the warming in response to a CO2 doubling would be just 1.7 Cº, not the 2.33 Cº suggested in Professor Lovejoy’s caption.
Figure 5. The least-squares linear-regression trend on the mean of the HadCRUT4, GISS, and NCDC monthly mean global surface temperature anomalies from 1880-2014 is 0.87 Cº. The linearity is not particularly remarkable: the correlation coefficient is only 0.69. The oscillations of global temperature following the 60-year period of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation can be clearly seen.
There is demonstrably no linear relationship between the CO2 forcing, which increases monotonically, and global temperature change, which is stochastic. Global temperature change is more closely related to changes in the great ocean oscillations in the short term (Fig. 6), in total sunlight hours at the surface in the medium term (Fig. 7), and in total solar irradiance in the long term (Fig. 8).
Figure 6. The remarkable non-linearity of global temperature change since 1890, showing the two periods of global warming that coincided remarkably with the two positive phases of the naturally-occurring Pacific Decadal Oscillation over the period.
Figure 7. The remarkable non-linearity of global temperature change in the South China Sea, 1880 to 2008, tracking a remarkable non-linearity in the number of sunshine hours in Japan. Not all pyrometer records show this correspondence: but the Japanese record is the longest we have, and one of the most meticulously kept.
Figure 8. The remarkable non-linearity of the sunspot record, 1600-2003, from Hathaway et al., (2004). Inset: The remarkable non-linearity of global temperature trend, 1659-2010. The first and most rapid of the three periods (red) of global warming since 1659 (1694-1733) occurred as solar activity began to recover at the end of the Maunder Minimum (1645-1715). The other two periods (1925-1946 and 1977-2000) occurred at the solar Grand Maximum (1925-1995).
Next, Professor Lovejoy makes the startling assertion that the probability that what he calls “rare, extreme fluctuations” in global temperature such as those of the 20th century were natural is 1:1000 to 1:10,ooo.
This is where his omission of any reference to the Central England Temperature Record, or to the Utrecht or Prague temperature records, or to the historical circumstances (the freezing of the Thames, of the Dutch canals, of the Hudson in New York), is so reprehensible.
The rapid warming at the transition from the Maunder Minimum to a more normal climate occurred well before the industrial revolution began. It was not our fault.
Or Professor Lovejoy could have gone back to 1421, at the time when global temperature began to tip downward into the Little Ice Age. An interesting letter in the Vatican archive from the Papal Legate in Greenland to the Secretariat of State reported that the Legate regretted that he could not take up his appointment because “the ice is come in from the north”. Suddenly, ships could not reach Greenland.
By now, anyone who has studied the climate ought to have realized that what Professor Lovejoy calls “rare, extreme fluctuations” are neither rare nor extreme. They are the norm, not the exception.
Moreover, the entire interval of global temperature change since 1750, from the depth of the Maunder minimum to the acme during the Great El Niño of 1988 represents a movement of just 0.9% in absolute mean global surface temperature. By contrast, the change between midday and midnight at one location can be as much as 20% of absolute mean temperature. And the interval between the hottest and coldest places on Earth represents close to half of absolute mean temperature.
Next, the Professor says: “But what about Medieval warming with vineyards in Britain, or the so-called Little Ice Age with skating on the Thames? In the historical past, the temperature has changed considerably. Surely, the industrial-epoch warming is just another large-amplitude natural event?”
He answers his question in the negative, saying large-scale changes can only occur over periods much longer than a century. He would have gotten a nasty surprise if he had been around at the end of the Younger Dryas cooling event 11,400 years ago. At that time, according to the ice cores, the temperature in Antarctica rose by 5 Cº in just three years. As Professor Ian Plimer puts it, “Now, that’s climate change!”
Next, Professor Lovejoy writes: “My result focuses on the probability of centennial-scale temperature changes. It does not exclude large changes, if they occur slowly enough. So if you must, let the peons roast and the Thames freeze solid, the result stands.” No, it doesn’t. Just look at the warming of 1694-1733: 1.7 Cº in just 40 years, a rate equivalent to 4.33 Cº/century.
The Q&A that Professor Lovejoy has issued to prop up his paper says that he regards any change of more than 0.25 Cº over 125 years as exceptional, and likely to occur only 10% of the time. No, it isn’t. As I pointed out in a previous posting, more than a third of all 125-year periods predating the onset of anthropogenic influence on climate in 1950 show warming or cooling of more than 0.25 Cº.
Figure 9. Left: The misleading propaganda claim made by “Skeptical” “Science” that 97% of scientists agree we are the cause of global warming. Right: The true position exposed by Legates et al. (2013): 99.5% of 11,944 climate-science papers did not say we are the cause. They did not even say we are the primary cause.
Next, Professor Lovejoy says IPeCaC has “strengthened its earlier 2007 qualification of ‘likely’ to ‘extremely likely’ that human influence has been the dominant cause of the observed warming since the mid-20th century.” Yes, it has, but it has done so not only on no evidence but in the teeth of the evidence.
As Legates et al. (2013) demonstrated, 99.5% of 11,944 scientific papers on climate published between 1991 and 2011 did not say that most of the global warming since 1950 was caused by us (Figure 9).
Besides, since Professor Lovejoy’s paper plays with statistics a great deal, he should know that no recognizable statistical process performed on any actual dataset (unless science now recognizes a show of hands among scientifically-illiterate, rent-seeking representatives of governments) generated IPeCaC’s “95-99% confidence” value.
Next, the Professor asserts that “skeptics … insist that warming results from natural variability”. No, we don’t. We assert that in the present state of knowledge it is impossible adequately to distinguish between natural variability and anthropogenic influence.
The Professor digs his hole ever deeper: “The new GCM-free approach rejects natural variability, leaving the last vestige of skepticism in tatters.” Here is an honest version of that sentence: “I reject natural variability aprioristically, so I bished and bashed the numbers till they fitted my preconception, leaving the last vestige of my scientific credibility in tatters.”
Yet he rants blithely on to the effect that the Canadian government has “axed climate research” (hurrah!); that it gave him no funding for his research (so he got more than he deserved); that it has “shamelessly promoted the dirtiest fuels” (but CO2 is not dirty, it is the stuff of life); that it has “reneged on its international climate obligations” (no, it took lawful and timeous advantage of the opt-out clause in the Kyoto Protocol and, therefore, has no “international climate obligations”); that “two decades of international discussion have failed to prevent emissions from growing” (along with crop yields and net primary productivity of trees and plants, thanks to CO2 fertilization); and, finally, that “the world needs to drop the skepticism and change course – humanity’s future depends on it” (but, as T.H. Huxley said, to the scientist “skepticism is the highest of duties, blind faith the one unpardonable sin”, and whenever someone says humanity’s future depends on something he means his income depends on it).
“[snip – sorry, I don’t want a _______ argument on this thread – Anthony]”
No fuss. (however I would point out my objection to the “S” word, as I have no association.)
I do see great similarity between Viscount Monckton’s observations and those of Sir George Simpson. Perhaps just [snip]ing the last paragraph would have been the go 😉
Lord Monckton’s blather and erudition is ambrosia, and I drink it in. For all those that cannot enjoy (or even fathom his intellect); get a life!.
george e. smith says:
April 23, 2014 at 4:15 pm
“Dunno about the rest of Y’alls, but Monckton of Brenchley’s construction of Pythagoras’ theorem, was totally unknown to me.
“For the life of me, I couldn’t get it. The thick lines threw me off a bit, but do make the artwork more creative.
“Finally it dawned on me that “THE Triangle” is in fact any of the four congruent triangles, that need to get scrapped.”
Yup. Exactly the same problem, and the same realisation, for me. Thanks for letting me know I wasn’t being completely dense, and now I’m returning the favour. Christopher Monckton could have described the proof just a little differently and it would have been much more obvious.
I hope you had fun writing this post, Christopher, because I had fun reading it.
Regards
RACookPE1978 :
Although Lord M.’s suggestions are largely fine, you may want to double-check the following: “The fastest 100-year warming rate was in Central England from 1663-1762, at 0.9 Cº per century – before the industrial revolution began. It cannot have been our fault.”
Two issues:
First, he may have meant “The fastest 100-year warming rate in Central England was from 1663-1792. . . ”
Second, in the CET version I recently downloaded, the 100-year warning rate for the period ending in March of 2007 was actually slightly higher than the one for 1663-1792.
This doesn’t much detract from the point he’s making, but there’s no point in leading with your chin.
I should add to my previous message that I found the rest of CM’s post much clearer, so it’s not a general observation.
Many commenters have been very kind in what they have said, and I am most grateful to them. In answer to Bob Tisdale, for instance, I did indeed enjoy writing the head posting and I am delighted that he enjoyed reading it.
Naturally there are a few dissatisfied customers, the sourest of whom – on the present thread, at any rate – is microbrainharlani, a lumpen troll that cowers and snivels in cowardly fashion behind a pseudonym and shrieks hatred as though it were some crazed juvenile terrorist in the making. Bafflingly, and on no evidence, and entirely off topic, it describes me as an “anti-American bigot”. I must again ask those who keep an avuncular eye on what is posted here not to allow those who are so yellow that they screech and caterwaul from behind inspissate pseudonyms to throw baseless personal invective at those of us who are willing to say who we are. The unfairness is palpable and now needs rectification.
Microdick, whatever it is, provides no references for its belief that the endurance of the current interglacial at temperatures greater than or equal to today’s is greater than in each of the four previous interglacials. It refers me to CreepyMedia on two occasions, but that is justly described as “the encyclopedia that any idiot can edit and only a cretin would credit”, so I neither read it nor cite it. Its quality control on all matters relating to climate is known to be inept, and its governing junta prejudiced in the extreme on the subject. I have persuaded several universities to forbid their students to cite it, on the ground that it has become a malevolent project designed to regiment and centralize thinking worldwide in an unpleasant and often frankly Fascistic direction on this and on too many other issues. In the attempted globalization of group-think, CreepyMedia has degenerated into a baneful and damaging influence. A propensity to cite it is an unfailing hallmark of the politically prejudiced or of the incurably idle and feeble-minded.
I have referred Microbrain to a scientific paper that displays a graph that requires only the addition of a horizontal line corresponding to today’s temperature to make the matter entirely plain even to Microbrain. Yet all it does is shriek hate-speech at me. Let it go away and grow up, and stop taking money from corrupt and dubious criminal sources to peddle its rent-seeking nonsense, and find the courage to post in future under its own name, always assuming that it has any idea who its father was, and learn to cite proper scientific sources that it has actually read, if it can read, and learn to be civil toward those with whom it presumes to disagree, if it is not some mannerless ape with Tourette’s Syndrome, before it comes back and screams petulantly like a spoilt child any further.
And let it not snivel that I have been rude to it. For it has not revealed who it is. I can call it whatever names are appropriate without the slightest risk to its reputation, if it has one, which – on the basis of its recent comments – one rather begs leave to doubt. If it expects to be taken seriously, let it own up to who or what it is, and who is paying it.
milodonharlani says:
April 23, 2014 at 5:06 pm
Monckton of Brenchley says:
April 23, 2014 at 4:58 pm
A bit harsh, I would say. Re length of interglacials, if this is something we can know for sure I’m prepared to accept your statement about the length of interglacials, (I am a geologist but haven’t done anything scientifically in this area so am a bit of a generalist on this), but you are most definitely wrong in your belief that Monckton is anti-American, or anti-anyother nationality. He is anti-dishonesty and anti-stupidity among those who would foist half-baked collegiate science on us.
Re Lovejoy’s dissertation, he remarkably states (in the scientific method) “no theory ever can be proven beyond ‘reasonable doubt’”
Well then why should he be so sure that skepticism should be curtailed? This man is a johnny come lately neophyte if he thinks a statistical analysis using linear regression on the temperature record and supposed record is going to wow anyone, including the well worn statistical jack the rippers of climate science over the past 30 yrs.
I am most grateful to Dr Wingo for his reference to the Kaplan paper indicating that climate sensitivity may be one-half to one-third of the 3.8 K imagined by Plass, Hansen, Schmidt et hoc genus omne. From my own inexpert researches I should expect the outturn to be closer to Kaplan’s position than to that of Plass.
I well remember when Dr Wingo first contacted me in November 2006 to tell me about the slowdown of the magnetic convection currents beneath the surface of both solar hemispheres, indicating the decline in solar activity that has indeed become evident since then.
I have seen several prior mentions of Arrhenius’ 1906 paper, but I have yet to find an English translation. Does anyone know of one, and if so, can a link be provided?
Many Thanks
Monckton of Brenchley says:
April 23, 2014 at 7:03 pm
Still can’t admit you were wrong, can you, Chris? Show me all the recent interglacials that lasted 5000 years less than the Holocene to date. You can’t, so you typically try to change the subject instead of simply admitting error.
I said nothing about the paper you imagine falsely I commented on, or more likely intentionally bring up to try to deflect from the fact of your error.
If by troll you imply anonymity, I’m not. The first time I log in my name, John Tillman, comes up, then after that the moniker. Many posters here log on similarly.
Gary Pearse says:
April 23, 2014 at 7:08 pm
I posted references on the length of interglacials. Chris was not only wrong, but wildly, preposterously so. The measure of the boy is that he can’t admit being so.
As for anti-Americanism, judge for yourself. Chris considers the American atomic bombings of Japan to be atrocities, yet says nothing of British Bomber Command’s highly inaccurate night time area bombing of German cities, burning 100,000s of thousands of civilians alive, with little advantage to the allies’ cause. Same goes for destruction of French & Italian cities & cultural treasures. By contrast, the American atomic bombing of Japan saved on the order of ten times as many lives as it cost, both Allied & Japanese. The pompous twit Chris, perhaps a victim of bullying or worse at English public school, is so ignorant of the war in which his father served honorably that he was unaware of these simple facts. So, if not a bigot, then an ignoramus.
Lovejoy’s Figure indicates to me that his understanding of the climate topic is feeble but cloaked and “protected” by his constant reference to his own seemingly impressive sounding ‘non-linear geophysical statistics’ analysis.
I very much enjoyed your post Chris and don’t be put off by those who don’t understand your subtle put-downs using eloquent phraseology for those who deserve it most. Good stuff!
FrankK says:
April 23, 2014 at 8:15 pm
I think I understand Chris, sharing his love of math(s) & languages & opposition to the anti-human, anti-scientific religion of CACA, but feel that there is nothing subtle about him. Unlike him, however, I have studied paleoclimatology & other relevant sciences.
Compare & contrast Boy Monckton’s reaction to being corrected as to the length of prior interglacials & likely duration of the Holocene to Willis’, who made a similar error. Being a man instead of a viscount, Willis simply did his own checking into the facts, discovered his mistake, & said thanks for pointing this out. B. M. by contrast reacted by ad hominem attack, attempted straw man distraction, wiggling, wriggling, squirming &, dare I say, denying. Mikey Mann & Chris thus appear to be psychological twins.
As for anti-American bigotry, there is this, below. Chris might not know that it’s considered bad form to wear a simulacrum of the flag in that manner, no matter how often he might have seen it on telly. But I grant you he doesn’t seem to show contempt for the audience. OTOH, as we say in the West, all hat & no cattle:
How many angels can dance on a pinhead? Stop guessing about the advent of the next ice age.
@ur momisugly RACookPE1978 asks:
“I have been asked to provide a local politician (whom I trust and support) a short series of “sound byte” answers…..”
———————————————————————————————————————-
As useful background you might suggest she reads the questions put by the socialist green left Australian ABC in this appallingly biased piece of propaganda that pretends to be an interview with Maurice Newman.
Does it get worse than that?
He did a good job – with a couple of weaker spots.
It starts at 13.40 exactly and finishes at 22.30.
http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/lateline/NC1471H052S00#playing
Lord Monckton’s post is yet another which delights and instructs at the same time*.
I am a bit puzzled by the line “the largely English-speaking F. of D.” Many of the F. of D. seem to express themselves in a language almost, but not entirely, unlike the language with which I am familiar and of which Lord M. is a master. Perhaps he is being generous to speakers of MTV.
(*Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci,
lectorem delectando pariterque monendo.)
“Keep up the good work, and pretty soon you may get a job in Obama’s mafia. Oh wait, …/sarc off.”
If he is political enough in the right flavor he might. I would call it Obama’s crusade team to achieve International socialism?
Jhiv says:
April 23, 2014 at 7:26 pm
I don’t know if his 1906 paper has been translated, but Arrhenius’ book “Worlds in the Making” has been, which deals in passing with his ideas about CO2. CACA advocates tend to skim over the fact that Arrhenius thought a warmer world would be a better world. Also the fact that, like many eminent scientists of his generation, he was an ardent eugenicist.
I don’t have the time to translate the 1906 paper, but maybe Chris does. Since it’s science, however, an English speaker could IMO puzzle out much or most of it. Do you know a German speaker or reader? That would help.
My translation of Chris’ quotation is: “In a similar way I calculate that a reduction of the carbon dioxide content by half or an increase of the same amount to twice would correspond to temperature changes of -1.5 degrees C and + 1.6 degrees C.” Don’t know why he didn’t provide his own translation.
FWIW, Arrhenius advocated an international language based upon English, a more practical alternative to Esperanto.
“””””…..Monckton of Brenchley says:
April 23, 2014 at 4:58 pm
Mr Lee is incorrect to imagine that the scientific method does not apply to mathematical hypotheses. It does. Consider the history of the hypothesis that a^n+b^nc^n where n>2 is an integer and a, b, c are integers or rational fractions, and abc0. For 350 years no one was able either to prove or to disprove this hypothesis, but it gradually gained credibility because no one had been able to disprove it. …..””
Slipped a typochondriac in on us there, M of B
a^n + b^n = c^n
Folklore has it, that Fermat wrote a note in the margin of his note book, that he had found ” a wonderful proof”
Evidently so wonderful he didn’t think it needed writing down.
So now we have the conundrum; just what was Fermat’s “wonderful proof” of Fermat’s last theorem ?
It certainly can not have been the existing very modern proof.
So for me, the mystery is still out there.
So your comment about the “scientific method” having worked in that case, is very pertinent.
The case is not closed yet.
What was Fermat’s proof of Fermat’s last theorem ??
Incidently, it still works for n = -1. I have often believed it also holds for n = -2 ,but I have never spent any time trying to find any non trivial cases for a^-2 +b^-2 = c^-2
So I can’t claim that it is valid for |n| <=2
I wonder if Lovejoy would give 1000 to 1 odds on a wager.
climatologist says:
April 23, 2014 at 8:46 pm
It requires no guesswork to know that the Holocene has not yet lasted as long as most prior interglacials. That’s simply an observation. I agree that we can’t know when it might end. “Expert” opinion is all over the place, since science isn’t sure about which of the orbital mechanics in the Milankovitch cycle will rule this time, let alone what other factors may be in play. Hence it was highly unscientific of Chris to assert without any evidence whatsoever that the next glacial phase was overdue by 5000 years. All that is certain is that most prior interglacials lasted a lot longer than this one to date.
>> milodonharlani says:
>> Unlike him, however, I have studied paleoclimatology
>> & other relevant sciences.
Not me. I have, for 45 years, been engaged ‘hands-on’ in
the collection, analysis, and interpretation of survey data,
and in my opinion some of the claims made for the land-based
temperature record are bloody outrageous, excuse my language.
Climate scientists have no expertise in this regard, and hence
do not understand that the network of temperature stations
from which their measurements and conclusions are derived
is a structure that’s broken-backed. If I can rake up the energy
I will one day describe a thought experiment which illustrates
this perfectly.
Rex says:
April 23, 2014 at 9:33 pm
The temperature record has indeed been corrupted, but proxy data for previous interglacials IMO show quite conclusively that at the very least the Eemian & MIS 11 (among others) were warmer than even the Holocene Climatic Optimum.
Steven Mosher coughs up a strawman instead of actually trying to deal with the fact that his apparent religious beliefs are emptier than a Cargo Cult’s.
Hey Moshpup, is your reading comprehension deteriorating that badly?!?!?!
Monckton of Brenchley says:
April 23, 2014 at 1:21 pm
Mr Mosher, like the few other remaining trolls here…
Now, now, m’dear Viscount, you learned in the nursery that name-calling isn’t nice. Of course, the appalling treatment of science on the part of the Lovejoys and other alarmists isn’t very nice, either. I scream in fury at them time and again.
But Mosher? TROLL?! I have a book on my climate shelf co-authored by him. Its title is Climategate.