Guest Opinion by Dr. Tim Ball
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
George Santayana (Original quote from his book The Life of Reason, much paraphrased.)
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and its supporters urge action because the planet and humans are threatened by global warming. We must modify our behavior, mitigate the warming, or die by the millions. In the centuries prior to the First World War (WWI) these reactions were classified as climatic determinism, the idea that human behavior is dictated by climate. As one research group explains.
Climatic determinism has a very long and checkered history. It gave a framework for thinking about the relationship between the human and natural environments by making the climate a demiurge of social universe.
Later, they explain why they are discussing the concept.
While most of such thinking has been discredited, in recent years, the omnipresence of anthropogenic climate change has caused a resurgence of similar ideas, causing scholars and commentators to ask if these represent a revival of climatic determinism and, if so, with what consequences?
The truth is, it should not have been discredited or abandoned. Shakespeare said, “The devil can cite scripture for his purpose.” This doesn’t mean we discredit or abandon them. A complete analysis is required about why the concept was abandoned and how it was used and misused for a political agenda.
The history of the hypothesis of climatic determinism illustrates the fundamental difference between Science and Social Science. A scientific hypothesis is validated by predictive success. Social Science hypotheses invalidate themselves, because humans react to the predictions and alter the outcome. The latter failure is due to something that cannot be quantified – free will.
Failed predictions caused the IPCC to adopt the term projection as early as the second Report (1995). Their projections continue to fail because they blend invalid and inadequate science with the inherent failures of social science. The entire theme behind the Club of Rome, the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), Agenda 21 and the IPCC is neo-Malthusian. Populations, especially when industrialized, will outgrow all resources. They chose global warming and latterly climate change as the dangers imposed, in a modern form of climatic determinism that ignores their belief in evolution.
Climate Influence On Evolution and Human History
We commemorate the 100th anniversary of the start of World War I. Hopefully, we learned from that history, but, ironically, history indicates we don’t. World leaders forgot the lessons of World War I very quickly, as the Treaty of Versailles demonstrated. Treaty failures, skillfully exploited by Hitler, resulted in World War II becoming a continuation of the problems. In fact it was one war with a brief interlude.
Appropriately, we commemorate the sacrifices and losses of people. We acknowledge the positive changes that occurred because of the wars, such as the role of women in both Wars and the emancipation of colonial regions. What we rarely remember are other casualties of war, usually ideas or intellectual pursuits.
As a graduate student in the 1960s I escorted Professor Fisher, from the University of Durham, on a tour of Winnipeg, Manitoba. We passed an English style lawn bowling facility. He asked about it, given the climate of the region. I somewhat flippantly suggested it contradicted the philosophy of climatic determinism. He angrily replied, “Don’t mention that vile topic again.”
I became interested in the topic for a few reasons, but mostly because scientific studies of natural changes omitted humans as an agent. For example, variables listed as part of soil formation included, parent material (rock), weathering, organic agents and chemical activity. The “organic agents” did not include humans. It was part of the ongoing, but essentially ignored, debate about humans as animals.
At about the same time, I became aware of the work of a conference and subsequently an important book by William Thomas titled Man’s Role in Changing the Face of the Earth. The concepts came from George Perkins Marsh, an earlier author I also knew from research for my Honors Thesis, “Some Philosophical Considerations of Humans as a Source of Change”. You can study history and geography separately, but you only have clear understanding when you put them together. I hold that history is the play and geography the stage and only by combining them understand and find appropriate solutions.
Products of the Earth: Climatic Determinism Misused.
Climatic determinism is a subset of environmental determinism, which was effectively resurrected as part of social Darwinism. Resurrected, because it was an idea rooted in many early philosophical works from Ancient Greece through to the present.
For example, Montesquieu, the French lawyer and philosopher wrote about it extensively. As one history commentator wrote,
In his famous book, The spirit of laws, French philosopher Montesquieu proposes the controversial theory that geography and climate can influence the nature of men and societies.
The rider, “controversial theory” is wrong. It wasn’t controversial when written, relatively new, but not controversial.
At the end of the 19th-century Darwin influenced Friedrich Ratzel’s influential book Anthropogeographie (French version). It was a book grossly misused by Adolf Hitler, but gave academic justification for what he did. Karl Haushofer, a German General in WWI, was a keen student of Ratzel’s His views were transmitted to Hitler by Haushofer’s assistant, Rudolf Hess. Anthropogeographie included the term lebensraum to describe how a more powerful state will occupy weaker states as it expanded – a natural process he called the organic state theory.
Seeking or misusing academic justification for political action is common since the emergence of universities. Global warming is just a recent example as Gore and others misused the ideas of Roger Revelle.
Ratzel’s work applied Darwin’s “survival of the fittest” to the merging nation-states. Herbert Spencer coined the phrase. Darwin liked it and as a strong supporter of Spencer’s work, put it in the sixth edition of Origin of Species. This is all part of today’s intellectual and philosophical contradiction that people, who totally agree with Darwin, are also usually advocates of socialism, the desire to make all things equal by actively offsetting natural inequalities.
The other misapplication of Ratzel’s work by Hitler did greater damage to climate determinism. This was the claim that people from cool and temperate climates were aggressive, industrious and superior, while people from hot climates were lazy, indolent and inferior. It became the most damaging part of what happened to climatic determinism because of the clear racial superiority implication.
Many issues, crucial to understanding human history and human evolutionary history, are not properly or fully examined. The current condemnation of humans, as the cause of environmental degradation, global warming and the goal to reduce human populations, especially developed and industrialized nations are not discussed in a complete context. A fundamental assumption is human activity is not natural, which infers humans are not natural. Also, it assumes we are not continuing to evolve, which is subtly built in to such assumptions as “business as usual”.
Ellsworth Huntington and Ellen Semple Churchill were two American supporters of Ratzel’s work at the turn of the 19th-century. Huntington contributed to the rejection of climatic determinism because he also promoted eugenics. Churchill was different. She learned German and attended lectures by Ratzel. She disconnected herself from his ideas disagreeing, particularly, with his organic state theory. She incorporated the wider idea of the relationship between history and geography in the 1903 publication of “American history and Its Geographic Conditions. The point about Churchill is she didn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater, as happened to climatic determinism.
Drought Patterns and Human History
Huntington, like Alexander von Humboldt, also travelled extensively visiting all continents except Antarctica and wrote from observation and experience. Despite ethnocentricity and his support for eugenics, Huntington produced some fascinating observations about climate, specifically climate change, and determinism. His important work, The Pulse of Asia published in 1907 argued that the history of Eurasia was determined by the periods of drought and desiccation of grasslands. There are vast grasslands in central Asia, particularly the Tarim Basin. (Map)
Drought patterns cause a periodic growth and decline of the grasses that support grazing herds. Most important for the Mongolian people are the horses essential as a food source, but transport for a migrating aggressive people. Huntington argues that the pulse is created as the population waxes with wetter conditions and expand out to surrounding regions and wanes as the dry conditions set in. Location and orientation of the Great Wall of China appears to support the theory, as does the fear of Mongol hordes throughout eastern and even parts of Western Europe. That fear extends to the present. The British, using their standard technique of divide and conquer, split the Kurdish people into four new countries, Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria.
Modern Adaptation Of Humans To Climate Change
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) drew all the attention to temperature, to CO2 and specifically warming; even most skeptics became narrowly focused. There’s no question that temperature reaches limits that force responses and adjustments. The problem is climatic determinism is mostly about changing precipitation, particularly with regard to plants and animals, including humans. Governments prepare for warming and assume it will all be business as usual. They generally don’t allow for technological advances or any other adjustments, as humans have done in the past.
Climatic determinism is interpreted to mean that people, like animals, are passive victims of change. The only adaptations are to move or die. What is overlooked in the entire discussion was the transition from humans, as passive victims, to active controllers of their destiny. It is an evolutionary transition that environmentalists oppose. Consider Ron Arnold, Executive Vice-President of the Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise, observation that,
“Environmentalism intends to transform government, economy, and society in order to liberate nature from human exploitation.”
David Graber, a research biologist with the National park Service said,
“Human happiness, and certainly human fecundity, are not as important as a wild and healthy planet. I know social scientists who remind me that people are part of nature, but it isn’t true. Somewhere along the line – at about a billion years ago – we quit the contract and became a cancer. We have become a plague upon ourselves and upon the Earth. It is cosmically unlikely that the developed world will choose to end its orgy of fossil energy consumption, and the Third World its suicidal consumption of landscape. Until such time as Homo Sapiens should decide to rejoin nature, some of us can only hope for the right virus to come along.”
That was likely the source of Prince Philips comment that, if reincarnated he would return as a deadly virus and eliminate most people. That’s fine if they start with monarchies. Richard Conniff’s comment in “Audubon” extends the idea.
“Among environmentalists sharing two or three beers, the notion is quite common that if only some calamity could wipe out the entire human race, other species might once again have a chance.”
Technological advances to offset the extent of climatic determinism, include, fire, clothing, irrigation and the transition from hunter-gatherer to sedentary agriculture. Why isn’t that part of evolution? It is, but it is philosophically opposite to the basis of environmentalism. Why assume that this evolution will not continue? Of course, if the environmentalists have their way we will be doomed back to absolute climatic determinism. The hockey stick rewrote history. The historic temperature record is lowered to rewrite history. Now they want to redress and halt evolution, the very theory sacrosanct to their belief in Darwin. Confused. Of course, because they haven’t learned from history, except to rewrite it for their political agenda.
And the ‘population trim plan’ proceeds.
I have a simplistic view how determinism relates to CAGW. It has two aspects: one is venal, selfish, profligate, polluting mankind, who is fated to destroy Mother Earth and needs must realize the magnitude of his sins against Her; and the other is the angry visage of God-of-Science, who in his omniscience sees far into the future, who must shepherd his errant Children to an understanding of their transgression… and subsequently milk them for all they are worth.
Hollywood, ironically, got the cynicism of this old story quite right in the 1976 movie, Network. Change only the identities of the corporations to the climate scientists jiggling the strings of our present government for all seasons, and you could have a reasonably accurate portrayal of the Greens’ deterministic world-view.
“You have meddled with the primal forces of nature, Mr. Beal!”
Ned Beaty to Peter Finch in “Network”:
The natural world is ‘red in tooth and claw’.
It is intrinsically murderous and desperate.
The natural world is slowly, with many reverses and with a constant risk of catastrophic errors, being re-ordered by humans into something far more civilised.
Human fertility declines wherever general wealth increases amd more effort is then spent on maintaining the environment.
There will be a peak in human populaton during the 21st century provided environmentalists do not get their way.
After that there can be a slow population decline with an increasingly sustainable accommodation with the natural world.
The only thing in our way is the ignorant nonsense of environmentalism and their aggressive propogation of counterproductive ‘solutions’.
Interesting essay Dr. Ball. The Middle Ages, the dark part that is, has invaded mainstream thinking again. A very costly development as history will tell us.
Tim Ball is missing the boat in his concluding statement: “Technological advances to offset the extent of climatic determinism (…) Why isn’t that part of evolution? It is”.
But it isn’t part of what is called evolutionary biology or any scientific theory attached to that. And that is what it means when people talk about any “evolution theory”. Cultural evolution and adaptive human behavior works on different timescales, involves different forces and needs different types of analysis. Many social theories and anthropological studies abound but please don’t call it “part of evolution”. People who write like that are scientifically illiterate no matter which other valid critique on environmentalism they might have stumbled upon.
If earth happens and there are no humans does it really exist?
Or will trees be the witnesses of the forests?
If I were an environmentalist and the he only human left on earth would I be celebrating?
If I were the last person earth who would I complain to about humans?
I hate parades.
If nature hates humans why do our pets love us so?
Is my lush lawn a sin?
Was Noah green?
“george e. smith;
What does “better” actually mean in a world without humans ??
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>”
I have a theory. When observing nature at my cabin I get satisfaction and inner peace. Why? Could it be instincts and needs from gatherer and hunting sivilisation era? I mean It’s because I am sitting in a food table and I am alone? Subcounciuos Experienced as a good chance of survival? When competition comes in it triggers the survival instinct because this threath has the potential to decrease your chance of survival.
Now imagine some people, due variation, could have much stronger of these instincts/needs? Life would be like hell because they are everywhere to be found?
I think they mean to rid the world of humans so they could have it alone?
In other words to keep nature untouched, their subcounciuos experience of a food table needed for survival, and no competition, also subcounciuos experienced as increasing ones chances of survival.
Agenda 21 finally makes sense. It’s to satisfy small Men with Big Egos?
If you consider humans to be part of nature and not outside it then ‘everything is as it should be’ as the Buddhists say.
If you don’t consider that humans are part of nature I wonder what the criteria is and when we separated ourselves.
Radical thought I know.
pat says:
August 9, 2014 at 5:54 pm
“…PHOTO CAPTION: Milton Glaser, who designed the famous I Love New York logo, created this logo as part of a campaign to raise awareness about the urgency of climate change.
Climate change now has a logo: A plain green and black circle, designed by the same artist who created the wildly successful and equally simple “I [heart] NY” logo in 1977. The circle is brightest and greenest at the bottom, darkening into pure black at the top.
The logo represents Earth, with the bright green symbolizing life and the smoky black showing the deadly effects of climate change.”
I suggest a better logo. A large male bovine sitting on a toilet, reaching for the toilet paper. The words global warming, climate change and climate disruption are all crossed out inside the animal’s thought bubble. Below the caption reads, “if I could just find a more accurate description.”
If climate determinism is at work it is based on a mirage created by the IPCC and their models. Nothing has actually changed in the real climate to force changes in behaviour.
The shorter version is how Totalitarianists justify their control over all aspects of life in the Western governments post-Enlightment, Republic world.
The earliest reference (I’ve found) regarding government is in the Hebrew Bible 1 Samual 8. It predates all the Greek philosophers (e.g., Plator) and even predates Zoroaster. The philosophers/writers of the Enlightment (e.g. Locke through Hegal) restated the selection of kings to be democratic (i.e., “republican” – see early Roman history). Nietzsche used “master” for “king” and “slaves” for “the people” with the people simply called the herd (mentality). The Founding Fathers, more versed than most today, recognized the totalitarianists (“tyranny”) and crafted their limited government Constituion
The modern totalitarianist (the “Greens”, “Social Democrats”, etc.) rely exclusively on simple Aristotlian syllogisms by first confounding the herd then submitting their syllogism. Along the lines of (a) given climate determinism, (b) we have climate therefore (c) we must control all life on Earth.
Nothing really new, just the details of the process.
Watched the second film of the Hunger Games series last night. As allways when watching such films i was conscious of the fact that this might be our future at some point. Some of the warmistas have even, directly or indirectly, stated as much. And looking at our current lords and masters, i still feel that they are mostly people who read Orwell and thought not “this is awfull, and we must never let it happen” but “this is awesome, how can we make such a perfect society”
If we fail to prevent it, lets hope for a person like the Katness character in our future.
Time is the medium through which all action occurs. All of the activity – consisting of various processes and complex factors and forces (including those that are external to the planet in origin) – at work on our small world is interactive. The interactivity is at base a flowing complexity of actions and consequences (like a massive river of change in time) which trigger further actions and consequences and so on in a determined (mechanistic) fashion, including climate. Until the appearance of man?
Weave the influence of humanity into that flowing complex and what happens?
Essentially the actions of humanity initially become a part of that flowing complex of action with various ongoing impacts – reclamation of land from the sea, digging large holes in the ground, breeding animals etc. The river of change flows on in the same mechanistic fashion as before but with an added element in the interactive process: our impact . . . Until, out of that flowing complex of action we abstract what we’ve classified as climate and begin to make conscious policy choices and implement them.
Choice is the key. When we burned only what we could find we weren’t making choices, but when we leave certain products in the ground and opt for others then we are adding a whole new factor to the river of change: change that’s determined by us, even if we don’t foresee all of the consequences . ..
Of course, before we know what specific difference we can make, we need to establish what we know (and in the field of climate change that seems to be very little). Once we’ve pulled that one off, the relevant climatic consequences will be determined by us and not determined in the pre human mechanistic sense . . . . Even if we make the wrong choices. . . . Climate determinism in the old sense may be over, to a variable and unspecifiable degree in the meantime. . .
But the temp of CONUS has declined 0.4 degrees in the past ten years.
Wilde says
Man you didn’t see Bambi did you don’t know anything about nature.
Al says
Who is going to educate the people in the middle? This the whole point they control the media and dismiss and demonize the other side. Every waking moment they try to remove people from the responsibility of their own lives and work to get the mass to surrender their freedoms.
The “extremists” on the other side are trying to educate the people a preserve their freedom from the total non sense be constantly fed them.
No one on the skeptic side is asking for the governments of the world to take over large chunks of society or control the behavior of the masses. We are not telling the world that the debate is over and the science is settled. No one except for maybe a very small group even deny that there is a chance that AGW theory is partially correct. What we DENY is that a theory that the evidence and the environment itself refutes should not be used as a reason to hand over our liberty. You are right are two extremes one is a group of elitists who want to control the world the other is a group of people who believe that the individual has the ability to understand and control their own lives. Two extremes for sure and the same battle that this country has fought before.
Stop being a fool.
Thanks, Dr. Ball, for an interesting essay that adds some perspective to the current struggle.
We humans evolve, even “green” humans. Global warming transmogrified into climate change, never mind climate has always changed, since the very beginning of this planet.
Those e-mails have a “settings” link at the top. I presume that you can turn off the e-mails by clicking it and changing the default settings.
“Social Science hypotheses invalidate themselves, because humans react to the predictions and alter the outcome.”
Agree, but that is only one of the problems. In the end, whatever you do to try to develop the “social sciences” into a science like the physical sciences, you end up with some form of political activism. And that is exactly what you see happening.
There is nothing wrong with politics, unless you try to put your politics beyond doubt as a “science”. That is the big problem with the “social sciences”. You cannot give a priori validity and normative responsibility to a research project you don’t know the outcome of yet. That would be very unscientific. But this is exactly what you have to do a priory towards other fellow human beings. So in this sense to approach the social science as “pure science” is unethical to begin with. That is the big caveat.
So my attitude towards a “social scientist” would be: be honest and admit in the end it is politics and I might listen to what you have to say as a socially or politically engaged person. And yes in that sense there is a lot to learn from a lot of writers or so-called “social scientists” and historians, journalists or whatever.
Look at how many new names have surfaced to fuzzy up the topic. The clear philosophical and poignant tones of the good Doctor’s word must have Google warning all those ‘climate’ determinants’, wallowers of some impending criticism of their innate and self-destroying believe and it must be stamped out.
Ah Prince Phillip, He will make a great king. With ears like the FA cup. Someone the Brits can revere.
The elite in Europe mostly avoided the plague by isolating themselves away from the cities. Phillip plans to do the same.
Warning to the Brits: don’t accept any free blankets from elitists/royals.
(Think Hernando De Soto in the New World.)
And so one is left to wonder:
All other things being equal and climate doing it’s usual thing.
If we would not have created a carbon based energy industry but kept it with wind and solar from the start, what would have been identified as the cause of climate change?
jimash1 says:
August 9, 2014 at 3:59 pm
A BILLION years ago really ????????? you should read little then come back ;>)
RobRoy:
At August 10, 2014 at 10:12 am you assert
Really? Where would that be? He is very distant in line to the British or the Greek thrones.
Richard
The only thing that makes a sunset beautiful is man. Without man it is just a sunset.
The same is true for the natural world.