The Empire of the Viscount Strikes Back!

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).

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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).

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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).

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David A
April 23, 2014 11:00 pm

LadyLifeGrows says:
But Mosher? TROLL?! I have a book on my climate shelf co-authored by him. Its title is Climategate.
————————————————————————————————-
Dear Lady Life, here is why I agree with the assessment. In a recent WUWT post on an NIPCC skeptical science report on the benefits of CO2 to this planet, (A report done by respected PHD scientist with a fairly long and published history in the field, chalk full of hundreds of references to other peer reviewed studies, Mosher made an early, pointless, and wrong critical comment, and then called them “clowns”. This is becoming ever more typical for him. http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/04/20/dueling-climate-reports-this-one-is-worth-sharing-on-your-own-blog/
Mosher said, ” I wonder how the clowns who wrote the NIPCC scientifically determined that there will be little effect in the future? how’d they do that? I read the NIPCC. I saw no experiments that proved there would be little effect. I saw no statistical analysis in that report that proved there would be little effect. And they explained why you could not use models to project the effects.
How did those clowns deduce from no evidence that there would be little effect”
I am afraid I called him a troll with this comment…
“Mosher revealed for the troll at heart that he is.
Gee Steven, read the report. It is long. They conclude this by the fact that none, as in zero of the often predicted and modeled disasters, have occurred, (backed by numerous peer reviewed science applied to real world observations, not climate models or lab studies non reflective of real world environments) ) but the known benefits of CO2, aerial fertilization of the biosphere are readily observed. It is elementary and fundamental simple scientific deductive reason, applied to observations and experiments.”
Steve is a luke warmist, but he is here insulting very trained, and very real published scientist, in his usual support of the misguided interpretation of the “precautionary principle”, which renders his “balanced perspective” meaningless, as he supports the socialist objectives of one world government folk by baselessly attacking the authors of a reasonable, detailed, referenced, educated scientific report as “clowns”. This lands him in firm troll territory. This plus his extreme hubris in making hit and run holier then thou comments, and never condescending to engage in dialogue with reasonable objections to his comments.

Rex
April 23, 2014 11:14 pm

And while I’m at it, climate scientists do not understand the
difference between the statistical error and the survey error,
And why should they? They have no expertise in this field.
Neither do some of those who do claim such expertise. For
example, it is commonplace for pollsters to interview a thousand
people, and then foolishly say things like “the margin of error
for results in this survey is +- 3.2%” (or whatever the figure is).
This is piffle. That figure is just the statistical error, assuming
that a whole lot of criteria have been compiled with. As a rule of
thumb, at least double the quoted statistical error and you will be
some way towards a measure of reliability.
As for the remark above about Mosher making hit-and-run
holier-than-thou comments, this mirrors something I wrote ages
ago, describing his intrusions as just that, and imploring people
not to respond, as there will be a wall of silence from SM.

April 23, 2014 11:24 pm

Newton used mathematics to derive his inverse square law of gravity from Kepler’s Laws — see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kepler%27s_laws_of_planetary_motion . The mathematics of that derivation was not falsified by the observation (experiment) that the precession of the perihelion of Mercury in reality was not consistent with Newton’s law of gravity, but Newton’s law was falsified by this experimental evidence.
Einstein over stated the differences between mathematics and the experimental sciences that “as far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality.” To be subject to the scientific method, the inquiry must be based on empirical and measurable evidence and theories must be falsified when contradicted by experiment. To the contrary, in mathematics, there are no experiments and no realities to falsify theories. Mathematical theories are created from logic and axioms and, as Einstein observed, are certain enough to not refer to reality. In fact the theories refer to models of reality when used for scientific analysis, not reality.
Lord Monckton should understand that no mathematician looks to the telescope or the microscope to obtain observations to falsify his mathematics and should know better to write rubbish about the scientific method (April 23, 2014 at 4:58 pm) to defend the indefensible.

Toto
April 23, 2014 11:56 pm

Steve is a luke warmist, but he is here insulting very trained, and very real published scientist, in his usual support of the misguided interpretation of the “precautionary principle”, which renders his “balanced perspective” meaningless, as he supports the socialist objectives of one world government folk by baselessly attacking the authors of a reasonable, detailed, referenced, educated scientific report as “clowns”. This lands him in firm troll territory. This plus his extreme hubris in making hit and run holier then thou comments, and never condescending to engage in dialogue with reasonable objections to his comments.

Insulting a scientist? Did he insult Mann too?
socialist? I must have missed something.
attacking a reasonable, detailed, referenced, educated scientific report ? I thought you were talking about the IPCC there for a second. Are we recycling the Team’s put-downs now?
hubris in making hit and run holier then thou comments? reminds me of Socrates.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socrates
Only a true skeptic keeps the home team honest.

April 24, 2014 12:28 am

at look at climate science bsc courses shows 50% of it is exploring sustainability and creating policy agendas so its not a hard science course. So climate scientist is a bit a of jedi mind trick term. The public think one thing but the reality quite another. Like any field there is probably a spectrum where some ‘climate scientists are nothing but sustainability agents to those who actually make the models in the physics faculty. The IPCC has been selecting recent phds which means those soaked in the current orthodoxy of settled science. They would never have got a phd if they did not sign up to the prevailing dogma?
the Upanishads talk of the ‘vanity of scholarship’ and so one has to beware getting wrapped up in the vanity of it.
facts can be examined in a calm way such that Geoffry Howe’s quiet torpedo speech sank Margaret Thatcher battleship of rhetoric.
This is what we have a battleship of rhetoric based on crying wolf. What are the methods of pointing out someone is crying wolf?
Apparently the wolf criers claim everything is proven yet they are unable to predict anything. This divergence sinks their claims. Science has a standard of prove predict. You can claim to have proven anything but it falls down if you cannot predict from it nor recreate past historical results which they can’t.
the co2 temp divergence cannot be explained by them nor do they know why it warmed at first then stopped. They have guns with no triggers so have to make the bang noises themselves.

April 24, 2014 12:45 am

I do apologize for the typos that crept into my brief comment about the Wiles Theorem. WorDepress is not good at symbols, so I had foolishly used the computer-speak pair of angle brackets to mean “not equal to”. However, WorDepress, failing to discern that there was nothing between the two symbols, naively treated them as though they were the earpieces of an instruction in HTML and stripped them out, leaving gibberish behind.

philjourdan
Reply to  Monckton of Brenchley
April 24, 2014 5:27 am

Precisely why I use =/= to signify not equal to. I stay away from the brackets and will use GT and LT if necessary.

April 24, 2014 12:59 am

Mr Lee, who knows as little of the history of science as he does of the scientific method, says mathematicians do not resort to telescopes or microscopes to verify their hypotheses. However, Einstein suggested that his theory of special relativity, which he had derived by applying mathematics to the results of observations through telescopes, particularly by de Sitter, recommended that his startling and counter-intuitive result might be verified by – er – looking through telescopes. Eddington had written to him asking whether his theory might explain the contra-Newtonian behavior of Mercury. He proposed an experiment during a forthcoming transit of Venus to determine the extent to which the relativistic displacement of a beam of light by a sufficiently large mass (the Sun) conformed to what his theory predicted. Some unsatisfactory measurements conducted at Principe during the 1919 transit were hailed at the time as confirming Einstein’s hypothesis in that respect, and many subsequent – and better-conducted – observations through telescopes have confirmed it.
When I used a hitherto-unexploited wrinkle in the law of probability to design and market a puzzle with 209 pieces and no picture, with a £1 million prize for the first solver, covered by insurance in the event that someone won it before enough sales had been made, I was asked to advance a hypothesis about how long it would take to solve the puzzle. I had already done the math on that, and had concluded that in the then-existing state of knowledge and of computer power it would take 18 months. The hypothesis was tested by offering the puzzle for sale (the underwriters being courageous folk). After 500,000 copies of the puzzle had been sold at a healthy and rewarding price, the first of only a tiny handful of solutions was found after 19 months.
When I returned to the underwriters to ask for contingency cover on the second Eternity puzzle, I estimated that no one would solve it during the four-year period of availability for the prize. Another 500,000 puzzles were sold, and no one solved the puzzle during the four-year period.
Mr Lee’s interpretation of the scientific method is, therefore, at odds not only with the history of science and of mathematics but also with my own experience. Of course the scientific method is applicable to mathematical hypotheses – such as the Wiles theorem – that have not been demonstrated. Once a mathematical hypothesis (such as the Wiles theorem) has been demonstrated, the iterative algorithm that is the scientific method, which Mr Lee will find well described in Popper’s book if he can pause from shouting for long enough to read it, terminates, having done its work to the full. And, as another learned commenter here has correctly pointed out, Fermat’s elementary demonstration of the theorem has not been replicated. Fame – though not fortune – still awaits him who can rediscover it.

April 24, 2014 1:04 am

We know its not an ice age because manchester university is not under 1 mile of ice. Which makes this an inter glacial warming period. So climate scientists claim to have proven this inter glacial warming is not natural? or did they just take a snapshot and do some statistical tricks to show whatever they wanted to show? Then sexed it up to make a dossier out of it?
it seems climate science does not use a true baseline. Some use 30 yr snapshots, 100 yr snapshots or put things into decades when so far no decade cycles have been found. So in this game the goalposts really do move. If climate science cannot answer the big question of how ice ages work then how can they hope to work out the mini cycles within the ice age cycle? without standardisation of baselines it becomes like a railway with many different gauges where nothing can be matched up.
if i took a snapshot of the day’s temperature from 8am to 12midday then projected prediction lines then by midnight the planet would be roasting.and by next week the earth would be a fireball.
We know earth has been much warmer than now. So we are currently at neither extreme in the ice age cycle.
the gold standard we are told is IPCC because it has 12000 peer reviewed papers. The fact that civil servants determine the conclusions seems not to be a problem except for a few who did the the unpaid research saying they feel used [lol]. So lets cut out the middleman science and give it over to the civil servants given they have the final veto?
So we have no standard baselines, reports determined by civil servants and a campaign to silence anyone pointing this out thro name calling? Is this the science method or a box of frogs?

tonyb
Editor
April 24, 2014 1:11 am

jhiv
There was a lot of comment about the 1906 paper in a WUWT thread from 2009. At the time Hans Erren had uploaded details to Wiki but I suspect the original links have been removed.
Here is Hans’ list of papers. He does post here and his web site is easily found by Googling so am sure he would have an English translation
——– ———–
Hans Erren says:
April 14, 2009 at 12:51 pm
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/04/13/6995/
Nasif Nahle (15:59:09) :
I’d do prefer another reference to Arrhenius’ work better than Wikipedia.
How good is your german? You can read it from the horse’s mouth:
Svante Arrhenius, 1896a, Ueber den Einfluss des Atmosphärischen Kohlensäurengehalts auf die Temperatur der Erdoberfläche, in the Proceedings of the Royal Swedish Academy of Science, Stockholm 1896, Volume 22, I N. 1, pages 1–101.
Svante Arrhenius, 1896b, On the Influence of Carbonic Acid in the Air upon the Temperature of the Ground, London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science (fifth series), April 1896. vol 41, pages 237–275.
Svante Arrhenius, 1901a, Ueber die Wärmeabsorption durch Kohlensäure, Annalen der Physik, Vol 4, 1901, pages 690–705.
Svante Arrhenius, 1901b, Über Die Wärmeabsorption Durch Kohlensäure Und Ihren Einfluss Auf Die Temperatur Der Erdoberfläche. Abstract of the proceedings of the Royal Academy of Science, 58, 25–58.
Svante Arrhenius, 1903, Lehrbuch der Kosmischen Physik, Vol I and II, S. Hirschel publishing house, Leipzig, 1026 pages.
Svante Arrhenius, 1906, Die vermutliche Ursache der Klimaschwankungen, Meddelanden från K. Vetenskapsakademiens Nobelinstitut, Vol 1 No 2, pages 1–10
Svante Arrhenius, 1908, Das Werden der Welten, Academic Publishing House, Leipzig, 208 pages.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svante_Arrhenius#Bibliography
PS I wrote the bulk of the greenhouse topic in Arrhenius wikipedia article
——- ——— —-
tonyb

Athelstan.
April 24, 2014 1:30 am

We can talk around the houses all day, some blokes do nit picking just fine and that’s the way they’ve been taught, not to accept but to argue the toss over Jesuitical niceties.
Arguing the toss for England, or America – its post modern, post normal education at the coal face. The idea that mankind actually makes a difference to global temperatures by pumping CO2 into the air – even if we could separate an anthropogenic signal in the noise – which we cannot, the whole idea is preposterous nonsense but it has a trace, a vestige the merest of a whiff of legitimacy and that’s why we can’t stamp out the supporters of this baneful supposition.
At the beginning, In the end we are talking about the dynamics of a chaotic system – where we do not and cannot yet and may never be able to do so – we do not have the figures for all the inputs and outputs – it’s all just guesswork and clutching at statistics and computer models.
What we can say and this is never mentioned by the whackos of green, the alchemists, pscientists, Mann’s ghouls at Penn State and all the scientific expert coterie extolling the green mania – who justifies the idea of allocation of US$ subsidies for the production of corn ethanol increases food commodity prices across the world, the poorest always suffer and then they die – never do green experts feel the need to want to talk about USgov policy that comes about from their alarmist advocacy. Why not?
Western governments have and continue to cosh the taxpayers and to spend astronomical amounts wasting €$£billions on building worse than useless palliatives to prevent nothing but provide an eyesore and as a series of monuments to the folly of man made belief in the climate faeries.
The internationalists groupthink, a liberal designed vessel to provide an expurgation of original sin and named Agenda 21. Agenda 21 and sustainability of taxation – forced redistribution of taxes through control and world emissions agreements – leading to a world governance by and through the UN the most corrupt bunch of megalomaniacs on the planet after Zimbabwe. Still, and after 70 years of doing that self same redistribution, the wealthy of Africa grow richer and the socio-economic gulf widens by the day. Until such time as the Africans themselves sort out their own problems no amount of aid is going to solve the humanitarian crises – because charity does not work, all it does is redistribute money from the poor in the west to the rich in the third world and along the way in refugee camps across the continent increases the birth rate, increases welfare dependency and takes away the farmers need to farm – how is that “helping”?
We are in an interstitial, a period of warming between glaciations, at some point soon the climate will dive with the temperatures, we do not understand the triggers for this process, would it not be a fine idea if we dropped the arguments about a myth and joined together to find out why the Earth will go back into a deathly hibernation, because even the alarmists must surely admit: cold kills and warming is beneficence.
So where are we, oh yes…………….. CO2 is a very, very, very inconsequentially minor GHG but so bloody what – it was never about man made warming was it?

rogerknights
April 24, 2014 1:35 am

E.M. Smith described how to make WordPress behave.
First, google thusly: “unicode unequal sign” (or whatever you’re looking for)
The first hit will provide, in the search-results page, the hex value you want. You don’t even have to click on it–although it is educational. In this case the hex value is 2260.
This number must be followed by a semicolon when typed in, thus: 2260;
And it must be preceded by three characters: an ampersand, a pound sign, and an “x”, thus: &#x
(I hope that shows up.)
The result comes out (I hope) as ≠

Old Goat
April 24, 2014 1:41 am

My Lord, do, please, continue with your use of “long words” – it is a profound pleasure to read your work, and to dwell on the intricacies of the English language. Love it – don’t stop, whatever you do, don’t stop.

April 24, 2014 1:43 am

“Milodonharlani” has at last told us who he is. He says he has studied climatology and that I have not. Other readers of the head posting may perhaps take a less ungenerous view on that point. He persists in screeching that I ought not to have suggested – albeit glancingly in a comment – that we were 5000 years overdue for the next glaciation. I have already explained to him that the basis for my statement had been a graph in Petit et al., 1999, readily available to all, which shows that none of the last four interglacial periods had endured for as long, at temperatures at or above today’s, as this one.
I have also asked him to produce a single scientific paper indicating a different position. He has not provided one. Even if he had, there would then exist merely a conflict of testimony, as so often happens when science is not settled, and his pompous, hate-filled remarks about how he had “corrected” me and I had not accepted his “correction” would still be inappropriate.
Unlike “milodonharlani”, who seems to live in some weird parallel corner of the multiverse, I live and move and have my being in this world, albeit with a weather eye on the next. While a warming of even 3-5 K would probably do not much harm (or so say Dick Lindzen, Ian Plimer and many others who have studied these matters in the round), a cooling of even a couple of degrees might well be widely harmful. I say again that, on the evidence of Dr Petit’s graph, we are 5000 years overdue for such a cooling – the next step on the already-evident downslope towards the next interglacial.
And I also pointed out to “milodonharlani” that I am not alone in being intrigued by the unusually long persistence of the Holocene warm period at its present mean temperature. I had explained that an article in Unscientific Unamerican a few years ago had suggested that land-use changes consequent upon the widespread adoption of agricultural methods several thousand years ago had been sufficient to delay the onset of the decline towards the next glaciation that the author of the paper had anticipated. Unscientific Unamerican were so pleased with the paper that it was their cover story and (if I remember rightly) they supported it with an editorial demanding the immediate shutdown of the West so as to Save The Planet.
Finally, readers of my weekly column at WorldNet Daily will know full well how much I admire the United States. Yet “milodonharlani” offers two outstandingly lame pretexts for his barmily misconceived assertion that I am an “anti-American bigot”. First, he says I described the bombing of Hiroshima by the United States as an atrocity but did not also describe the bombing of Dresden and Hamburg by the British as atrocities. Well, as I pointed out at the time, the Allies operated a joint command, so our forefathers on both sides of the Atlantic were both responsible for what – if we had lost the War – would have been regarded as war-crimes. I had also pointed out at the time of my remark, which referred only to Hiroshima because the unspeakable Cook of “Skeptical” “Science” had exploited the misery of those who were killed or maimed by offensively denominating recent radiative forcing in units of “Hiroshima bombs”, that I had not intended to cause any offense to anyone by my glancing reference to Hiroshima as an atrocity.
I also explained that anyone who had studied the suffering of those were killed by the bomb or diseased by its fallout – as I have done because it is relevant to some medical research I am conducting – could not but regard the dropping of so hideous a weapon of mass destruction on hundreds of thousands of innocent, non-combatant civilians as an atrocity. I also explained that I fully understood the ghastly metric by which the Allies had calculated that killing 100,000 Japanese citizens would prevent greater loss of life by hastening the War’s end. All of this goes to show that what Pope John Paul II said to us when he visited Coventry 23 years ago was correct: the scale and horror of modern warfare render it inappropriate as a method of resolving differences between nations.
In the ancient and subtle religion to which I inadequately subscribe, one draws a distinction between the sin (like a famous Archbishop of Canterbury, we are against that) and the perpetrator of the evil deed (whom we do not judge). This valuable and humane distinction is reflected in the laws of all Christian nations and of all nations to whom we have given laws. it is the distinction between the mens which may or may not be rea and the actus reus. The bombing of innocent civilians en masse is manifestly an actus atrociously reus.
“Milodonharlani’s” second item of evidence that I am an “anti-American bigot” lies in my having agreed to wear at some of my presentations a Western costume that included a shirt portraying Old Glory (much as people wear waistcoats or even boxer shorts with our own Union Flag on them). So let me patiently – for I remain largely incapacitated by a broken foot and have more time on my hands than usual – explain that the shirt was presented to me by the Tea Party movement in Texas after I had addressed 15,000 of their members at a spectacular moonlight rally at a racecourse in North Houston, after which cries were heard from the crowd that I should be elected Governor by acclamation.
The jeans, belt, buckle, boots and other accoutrements were presented to me by a great American patriot, also a Texan, when I visited the Sheriff of Maricopa County, AZ, for a purpose that is off-topic here. The hat was made to measure and presented to me by a fine hat-maker when I had addressed the Stockmen’s Club of Denver, CO. All of these kind gifts were from people who seemed to me to be loyal and enthusiastic Americans, and who recognized me as one of the greatest fans of the United States, of her remarkable Constitution, of her athletic democracy (which those of us who groan under the well-polished but unelected heel of the unelected Eurocracy long for), and of the freedoms that she won first for herself and then for so many other nations by the great courage of her armed forces, often standing shoulder to shoulder with ours.
Let me conclude by asking “milodonharlani” to recall and meditate upon the following lines from the Song of Hiawatha (I quote from memory, so do not hold me too harshly to account if I have not gotten it quite right) –
I am weary of your troubles,
Weary of your wars and bloodshed,
Of your wranglings and dissensions.
All your strength is in your union;
All your danger is in discord;
Therefore, be at peace henceforward,
And as brothers live together.

April 24, 2014 2:05 am

from http://www.av8n.com/physics/scientific-methods.htm
Examples of Unscientific Thinking
You should avoid using fallacious arguments, and you should object loudly if somebody tries to use them on you. Common examples of unscientific thinking include:
The fallacy of OTBE (i.e. Other Things Being Equal)
Improperly weighted voting. (A thousand pieces of weak evidence should not outweigh one piece of strong evidence,
Selecting the data. (It is not right to select tendentious anecdotes from a mass of data
Other misuses of probability.
Argument from no evidence
Proof by bold assertion
Dropping or mistaking the provisos and limitations of a rule
Appeal to authority
————————————
so when people say ‘you are not a climate scientist’ which bit of unscientific thinking is that?
Do i need to be a mechanical engineer to say the car won’t start? Or a chemist to say the milk is off? should probability phds be the only ones allowed to play the lottery or cross the road?

April 24, 2014 2:18 am

Could the Co2 increase,
Causing the vegetation to increase.
the absorption of the sun light to increase.
Be the reason for the temperature “pause and not increase.

Espen
April 24, 2014 2:41 am

From Lovejoy’s Q&A (http://www.physics.mcgill.ca/~gang/eprints/eprintLovejoy/esubmissions/Questions.Answers.17.4.14.pdf):
Q. To estimate the probabilities you used the hockey stick and everyone knows that it has been discredited, why should I believe your probabilities?
A. The hockey stick is the result of using a large number of paleo data to reconstruct past global scale (usually annual resolution) temperatures. Starting with the [Mann et al., 1998] series, there are now a dozen or so in the literature. They have been criticized and improved, but not discredited.[…]
——
This is the main reason why this paper is GIGO. He actually believes the broken hockey sticks can be used to estimate the range of century-scale natural climate variability.

April 24, 2014 3:04 am

Mr Marler asks about the word “timeous”. It is a Scots word: or, at any rate, it is routinely used in Scotland – e.g. “timeous compliance with the Sheriff’s order” – and rare elsewhere. Its meaning lies somewhere between “punctual” and “timely”. It is pronounced as two syllables, the first of which is “time”.

Mike McMillan
April 24, 2014 3:10 am

george e. smith says: April 23, 2014 at 4:06 pm
… Is not the restriction of Pythagoras even more than you cited. It only applies to two dimensional Euclidean space. Has no rational meaning in three dimensional Euclidean space.

Pythagoras’ theorem applies to three-dimensional Euclidean space. The distance between any two corners of a box is the square root of the sum of the x, y, and z squares.
It also applies to four-dimensional Minkowski space, the difference being that time has an opposite sign from the x, y, and z parts. Gravity, of course, messes things up.

Mike McMillan
April 24, 2014 3:20 am

Jim Blinn, who did the computer graphics for NASA’s Voyager journey, presented a video at SIGGRAPH long ago that went rapid fire through about a million different proofs of Pythagoras’ theorem. Geometry normally isn’t all that funny, but we started cracking up about halfway through, and it kept getting better.
I’ve searched for a copy of that ACM video, but have yet to find it.

Eliza
April 24, 2014 4:08 am

Take note lukewarmers and those who believe that the earth has actually warmed at all (97% respondents, consensus), from an Atmospheric physicist
http://www.americanthinker.com/2014/04/global_warming_and_settled_science.html
There is no evidence whatsoever that Human C02 has any effect of Global temperatures. I actually think like him: There earth has not warmed significantly recently relying on fraudalent surface data since 1880 (except Armagh and CET since 1640 which shows no warming). RSS and AMSU are too recent for any climate judgment and for half the record show a flat trend. RSS shows warming NH, Flat tropics and flat SH its not global. SST’s show warming and cooling about everywhere refer to this site. (For manipulation of temp data records look at Steve Goddards extensive record keeping of “adjusments to the US records by NOAA, GISS etc). Those skeptics stating that the earth has warmed even slightly don’t know what they are talking about and are feeding the AGW lie by default considering above facts.

ren
April 24, 2014 4:31 am

Dear Sir! Thank you for the fair presentation of climatic data.

Editor
April 24, 2014 5:16 am

rogerknights says:
April 24, 2014 at 1:35 am
E.M. Smith described how to make WordPress behave.
First, google thusly: “unicode unequal sign” (or whatever you’re looking for)

The first hit will provide, in the search-results page, the hex value you want. You don’t even have to click on it–although it is educational. In this case the hex value is 2260.

Often simpler (and with the added benefit of seeing which recent posts have been active) is to click on “Ric Werme’s Guide to WUWT” and check the bottom for a handy list of “character entities.”
Unfortunately, in this case you would have been disappointed as I didn’t list the entry for “not equals.” I’ve added it now, it will show up tomorrow, barring buttered fingers.
BTW, there are names for most of these which are usually easier to remember, “not equal” is “ne”, entered as “≠”
[Reply: Or you could get a Mac. These symbols are very easy: ‘not equal’ is Option, +. Which prints: ≠
~mod.]

David A
April 24, 2014 5:46 am

Toto says:
April 23, 2014 at 11:56 pm
“Insulting a scientist? Did he insult Mann too?
socialist? I must have missed something.
attacking a reasonable, detailed, referenced, educated scientific report ? I thought you were talking about the IPCC there for a second. Are we recycling the Team’s put-downs now?
hubris in making hit and run holier then thou comments? reminds me of Socrates.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socrates
Only a true skeptic keeps the home team honest
—————————————————————————–
Your comment is very strange… “Insulting a scientist? Did he insult Mann too”. Are you saying The NIPCC was deceptive and dishonest in their presentation of the report? Are you saying because someone is critical of the work of one scientist, he has carte blanche to indiscriminately attack all scientist?
Are you equating the NIPCC to the IPCC. Has this scientific group behaved like a “juvenile delinquent teenager”? I must have missed something myself. I was talking about the NIPCC report detailing the benefits of CO2 to the biosphere, and, with detailed real world examples, outlined n numerous peer reviewed studies, demonstrating where the purported harms are virtually non-existent.
As to your question about recycling the teams put downs, The only [one] replicating the warmest ad hominem attacks was Mr. Mosher. His put down was troll like, and furthermore, made zero sense to anyone who actually read the report. Mr. Mosher refused to condescend to defend his attack, despite many logical comments pointing out what was wrong.
There was no honesty Mosher’s the attack. Mr. Mosher never even claimed to read the report, and clearly he did not. He stated, “I have read the NIPCC.” The NIPCC has produced many studies. I am quite certain Mr. Mosher did not read the one in the tread. If he was honest, he would have defended honest criticisms of his comment; criticisms of both the manner in which it was made, and the substance of it.

Steven Kopits
April 24, 2014 5:48 am

I’m with Bob Tisdale: very entertaining.

Mark Bofill
April 24, 2014 6:11 am

Espen says:
April 24, 2014 at 2:41 am

From Lovejoy’s Q&A (http://www.physics.mcgill.ca/~gang/eprints/eprintLovejoy/esubmissions/Questions.Answers.17.4.14.pdf):
Q. To estimate the probabilities you used the hockey stick and everyone knows that it has been discredited, why should I believe your probabilities?
A. The hockey stick is the result of using a large number of paleo data to reconstruct past global scale (usually annual resolution) temperatures. Starting with the [Mann et al., 1998] series, there are now a dozen or so in the literature. They have been criticized and improved, but not discredited.[…]
——
This is the main reason why this paper is GIGO. He actually believes the broken hockey sticks can be used to estimate the range of century-scale natural climate variability.

I’m pretty suspicious of this too. Especially since he put it in his shiny magic new math blender the workings and results of which are inscrutable to me so far.
It looks like he puts a lot of stock in things matching, to him that means small error. The proxies match each other well for century periods? Do they really? Do they match as in the squiggles match, or do they match as in a bunch of random noise riding on a flat line that’s been calibrated to match? His claim is that the temperature datasets are right to within a ridiculous fraction of a degree is based on the fact that the RMS of the average of the datasets is close to each of the datasets. Well, great, but that’s only the difference between the datasets, there’s no justification demonstrating that’s the only error, just independent random errors between the sets. Seeing this type of reasoning used does not inspire confidence in me about the other parts of the paper I’ve yet to grasp.
(disclaimer – I said what I said here and nothing else. Any further implications, insinuations, or ideas that may occur to you while reading my comments where not intended by me and I assume no liability for them.)

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