Climate Change And The Human Condition: Is It Time To Reconsider Climatic Determinism?

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)

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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.

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Bill Parsons
August 10, 2014 11:08 am

Clovis Marcus says:
August 10, 2014 at 2:13 am
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.

There are “parts” and then there are “parts”. I like to stop and watch the bees in the park. But then I drive home – maybe take the long way sometimes. I don’t think thtat should bother anybody except my wife.

August 10, 2014 11:22 am

Born at 4:30 pm
Human beings are part of nature. We’re nature’s way of returning to the cycle of life the carbon improvidently sequestered by other life forms.
Let’s not frustrate nature’s purpose.

I’m with you, Joe. Carbon is the element of life, yet much of life has been sequestering it into limestones, dolomites, coal and peat beds, high total Organic Carbon shales for a billion years.
From a comment discussing paleoatmospheres in We Must Get Rid of the Carboniferous Warm Period WUWT, Oct. 6, 2013

How much carbon is accounted for in CO2 in the atmosphere compared to other places: (See Wiki: Carbon Cycle) in gigatons
Atmosphere: 720 GT
Fossil Fuels: 4,130 GT (90% coal and peat)
Terrestrial biosphere: 2,000 GT (living and dead)
Ocean organic: 1,000 GT
Ocean inorganic: 37,400 GT
Lithosphere Kerogens: 15,000,000 GT
Lithosphere Carbonates: more than 60,000,000 GT

There is 100,000 times more carbon locked in terrestrial Kerogen and carbonates than is in the current atmosphere.

I submit a limiting factor of 2,000 GT of Carbon in the terrestrial biosphere is the paltry 720 GT in the atmosphere. Most forms of life on this planet make it their business to sequester carbon into calcium carbonate, into bone, into carapace, into cellulose. Some of this carbon is returned to the atmosphere via volcanos, weathering, and termites. But it is not a steady state condition. For the past 650 million years, since life learned to make hard body parts, shells, and reefs, life itself has been sequestering carbon, the very element that makes life possible. 99.99% of all carbon that used to be in the biosphere is now locked up in stone or buried underground.
What species has made it’s business the recycling of sequestered carbon? Homosapian.
We humans are far from being a scourge, a curse, a virus on this planet. Instead, we are an essential link in the “circle of life”. By our penchant, our talent, our skill at unlocking the treasure of buried and sequestered carbon from kerogen shales, fossil fuels, and even limestone, we return carbon back into the biosphere. We coal-burning, gasoline-pumping, shale-fracking, cement-kilning humans are returning life-giving carbon to the atmosphere. Do you think the trees object?

August 10, 2014 12:12 pm

Bob Boder says:
August 10, 2014 at 8:26 am
“…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.”

Indeed, freedom that was so costly is just ceded back to tyrants without even a whimper.
Better a hot free man than a cold slave.
In the US the Legislature makes laws. supposedly.
IMO regulatory agencies that make regulations with an economic impact are unconstitutional.
Unfortunately, the Supreme Court disagrees.
Progressives hate progress (and humanity).

August 10, 2014 2:30 pm

From the brief forays into the subject I have made it seems climate was a cornerstone to the evolution of some if not many religions. It would be nice if someone with the inclination and time could do a good job researching the evolution of the new religion of climatisim just to see how many times it has evolved before and whether or not it formed the basis of any still practiced religions.

August 10, 2014 3:50 pm

Dr. Ball’s thesis is against environmentalism. Evolution, it argues, should be allowed to proceed apace with man and his technology included in the natural forces. The essay suggests that when IPCC determined, “We must modify our behavior, mitigate the warming, or die by the millions”, that was environmentalism. The essay ambiguously links that IPCC-type modification to “climatic determinism”, which “should not have been discredited or abandoned.”
Determinism has two opposing meanings, and the essay uses both interchangeably. Determinism 1 is the notion that behavior is causally determined by external factors. It is the left’s doctrine today of victimization. It is countermanded in religion and Western law by the concept of free will by which to hold individuals accountable for their acts. It is social science. Determinism 2 is the state of being determined, as in the hypothesis that an asteroid impact caused the extinction of the dinosaurs. It is the conjecture of the climate with AGW the agent. It fits in science.
In Determinism 1, the external world affects man, and in Determinism 2, man, for example, effects changes in the external world. Between the two, the arrow of causation is reversed.
The essay refers to “climatic determinism, the idea that human behavior is dictated by climate.” That is Determinism 1. But when it asks whether “making the climate a demiurge of social universe”, coupled with “the omnipresence of anthropogenic climate change”, constitutes a “revival of climatic determinism”, it is talking about Determinism 2.
The essay says,
>>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.
The observation about predictive success in science is correct. And to the extent that a social science can predict anything, it is a science. However, social sciences fail because social concepts, whether individual or collective, almost universally resist reduction to facts (observations reduced to measurements and compared to standards). Intelligence and antisocial behavior are examples of such unmeasurable concepts. The presumption of free will is an argument against Determinism 1. The failure of the AGW conjecture and the GCMs to validate AGW is an argument against Determinism 2.
The appeal to free will says nothing about the existence of AGW. Free will is an argument with religious overtones. So, too, are the several references to belief in evolution. The essay refers to “[the Club of Rome, UNEP, and the IPCC] belief in evolution”. It refers to “advocates of socialism” “who totally agree with Darwin”. And it refers to “the theory sacrosanct to [environmentalists] belief in Darwin.” By these remarks, the writer sets himself apart from the theory of evolution, an observer rather than a participant. The result smacks of an appeal to the notion that belief in evolution is a pejorative, and an inconsistency to hang on environmentalists who would halt some concept of evolution.
That concept is tested in the final paragraph, where the essay completes the finesse of evolution from Darwin’s model for the species into a dubious evolution of the environment, including life and climate. The latter evolution, the essay urges, is what the environmentalists would halt, given the power to do so. That cessation would be Determinism 2, stopping man from effecting change in the environment. By arguing irrelevantly against Determinism 1, the essay urges Determinism 2 should be reconsidered and preserved.
The thesis would thus allow humans to continue to change the environment as the greater, natural good. The essay concedes that AGW exists, it’s just not so bad. This is the same concession used by others. Bjorn Lomberg comes to mind. It is a concession that fuels environmentalism, and it is counterproductive because it is unobservable and not a fact.
Science is a mapping of facts onto facts. The effect of humans on climate is too small to be measured. Thus it is not fact, notwithstanding the Greenhouse Effect and CO2 emission models. AGW is not deterministic of climate. It is not a fact, and as a scientific proposition, AGW does not exist.

August 10, 2014 4:03 pm

As I stated earlier regarding these religious climate deterministic fanciers. Out about in droves as the sample above demonstrates. Others commented that the good doctor should not be quoting from of the good book. Are these the same people that fail to condemn the terrorists and anything that happens in and by palestinians by any chance?

Sleepalot
August 10, 2014 7:14 pm

“Is It Time To Reconsider Climatic Determinism?”
No.

Sleepalot
August 10, 2014 7:30 pm

Stephen Rasey & Jeff Glassman.
My compliments. You both produced essays more edifying than that of Dr Ball.

NZ Willy
August 10, 2014 8:30 pm

The author’s historical accountings are so dismal that I have no confidence in the remainder of his article, or, indeed, his work in general.

Al
August 10, 2014 10:02 pm

Boder, I said those in the middle should educate those extremists. Not the other way around. Before calling others a fool, one should first look in the mirror.

August 10, 2014 10:24 pm

David Graber
“Somewhere along the line – at about a billion years ago – we quit the contract and became a cancer.”
Assuming you meant a Million years, you are still wrong because there were no homo sapiens sapiens a.k.a. modern humans a million years ago. Therefore it is uncertain at that time if we will evolve at all, much less dominate the world. Note the Neanderthals became extinct despite similarities with us.
“Until such time as Homo Sapiens should decide to rejoin nature, some of us can only hope for the right virus to come along.”
I’m not aware that humans divorced nature in the first place. We still eat plants and animals. Are they not part of nature? We still use minerals, metals, woods and fossil fuels. All from nature. Environmentalists need not hope for the right virus to come along. Man is the only animal species known to commit mass suicide. You can save nature.

Vince Causey
August 11, 2014 10:01 am

For all we know, intelligent technologically endowed civilizations may be extremely rare in the universe. Maybe we are unique. Contemplate a universe where the only intelligent species is eliminated. Who would want that?

rgbatduke
August 11, 2014 12:28 pm

Somewhere along the line – at about a billion years ago – we quit the contract and became a cancer.

A billion years ago? I always wondered what National Park Service employees did in their spare time, out there in the forest. Apparently it is harvesting and consuming hallucinogens, as one would expect an educated NPS employee to have a clue about the evolution of the human species, especially the timescales involved. A billion years ago there wasn’t much in the way of organized animal life at all, and recognizably human life is at least 3 or 4 orders of magnitude more recent than that, the last million years if not the last hundred thousand (depending on where one draws various lines). Human civilizations only seem to have occurred well within the Holocene, that is to say the last 10,000 years, and the ruins of the oldest recorded urban centers are even younger than that, perhaps 6000 years old.
Humans are a “cancer” in the same sense that any successful species is a cancer.
It is just sad that employees of the US Government would openly state that they hope for a world-spanning plague to occur that wipes out most of humanity. But if they are serious, can I — in equal seriousness — suggest that they not wait? They cannot ethically kill anyone else, but they are at all times welcome to reduce the human population and its drain upon world resources by one — themselves.
But then again, this is just another example of the Gore hypocrisy. Wishing for Ebola to depopulate the world — but not themselves or or their own family or friends, to them “the world” are other people that they don’t know. Calling upon all the people of the world to sacrifice things like cheap electricity and food and convenient transportation to avoid a future disaster while living in huge houses, driving large cars, and flying all over the planet. Sacrifice (to the nameless “green” nature gods they appear to believe in) is always something for somebody else to perform, imposed on them by force and sanction, not a self-accepted obligation.
Personally, I agree that growing world population is putting the hurt on many species and ecologies, and even agree that this is generally an undesirable thing. The solution, however, is to create more wealth for everybody, not less for most people and the same or more for the select few. Wealthy people tend to reproduce much more slowly than poor people (worldwide). A secondary solution is to implement sane public policies and international projects to protect the commons without starving the people that live around it or condemning them and their children to a life in perpetual poverty. One of the greatest tragedies of the IPCC and the climate fiasco is that it has successfully distracted the human race from seeking things like: World Peace, an economically fair world, an end to global poverty, an end to the de-facto slaughter of children, lost to starvation and disease that could have been prevented with more, cheaper, energy.
rgb

August 11, 2014 2:29 pm

While the David M Graber comment is quoted in full in many places, there appears to be original source. Maybe, just maybe, the “billion” was a transcription, or even typographer’s error.

August 11, 2014 2:30 pm

Bummer! That should have been no original source.

August 11, 2014 2:54 pm

I should have waited for the coffee to take full effect and restored my Google-fu:
http://articles.latimes.com/1989-10-22/books/bk-726_1_bill-mckibben/2

Walton Francis
August 11, 2014 4:03 pm

Such a delight to see a retrospective about the University of Durham in the memories of Professor Clarke:
https://www.dur.ac.uk/geography/alumni/50year/
I was a “junior year abroad” student at Durham in 1962-63, in PPE (government & economics), in University College. At the time, we wore academic gowns to dinner and there were no female studies in the male colleges and vice versa. Recently, I visited the campus and could not believe the number of female students resident in Durham Castle. Some bishops and professors must be turning in their graves.
That winter was the coldest and snowiest throughout the British Isles in several decades, or more. This was just before the global cooling scare took hold. Apparently the superstitious among us are afflicted with such superstitions from decade to decade. And apparently the superstitious are ever more prevalent, despite the valiant efforts of sane men such as Professor Fisher

Brian J in UK
August 12, 2014 5:44 am

Walton Francis says:
That winter (62/63) was the coldest and snowiest throughout the British Isles in several decades, or more.
You obviously were not around in the Winter of 1947 which was far worse. I experienced both – as a 7 yr old trying to walk to primary school in Yorkshire and as a 22 yr old cycling to Nottingham University every day. In 1947 the entire country was frozen up for three solid (!!) months – Jan, Feb & March. Nothing like that in ’63.
BJ in UK.

Bob Boder
August 12, 2014 10:13 am

Al says:
August 10, 2014 at 10:02 pm
Boder, I said those in the middle should educate those extremists. Not the other way around. Before calling others a fool, one should first look in the mirror.”
the ones in the middle need to educate them selves. one of the “extremes has it right”
I apologize for the fool comment that is not like me.
You do need to stop assume that just because there are two “extremes” that that means there are two sides with an agenda. As I said one “extreme” in this argument has an agenda that has nothing to do with the argument. the other “extreme” in this argument wants to preserve Liberty.
two extremes yes, both educated, one is evil and the other is not. the middle unfortunately at this point doesn’t really care what is going on. One side wants to keep it that way.
There where two “extremes” or more during WWII. that doesn’t mean both were wrong.

August 20, 2014 12:09 pm

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