My report on the Cook talk in Bristol – attendees are invited to leave their impressions

LastWeekTonightI attended John Cook’s talk at the University of Bristol Victoria rooms last night at 6 PM. Besides myself, about 20 other climate skeptics also attended the talk, making up about 25% of what I saw to be about a 75% filled room. The talk itself was rather uneventful; there was really nothing new discussed and in fact the only new thing that I saw in Mr. Cook’s presentation is what you see in the photo above, which is an excerpt from a news pundit episode called “Last Week Tonight” with John Oliver.

Here is the video of that segment presented by Cook in full. The part on climate skeptic starts at about 50 seconds in and completes the entire segment. I don’t think Mr. Cook understands that this video, while referencing his infamous 97% contentious claim, makes the 97% look like a gang of bullies. See for yourself:

While this is obviously satire it was presented in parallel with other information that was considered by Mr. Cook to be scientific. I found this juxtaposition very odd, since it essentially disagreed with Cook’s own position on the public viewpoint percentages as well as trivializing and debasing the debate.

I took photos of every slide that Mr. Cook put up last night and I thought about repeating a number of them here but there really is no point since we’ve seen all of them before, having drawn them from his skeptical science website and from his publications. I will place up this one photo though it demonstrates that the parody video above and John Cook’s own assessment of the public levels of skepticism differ significantly:

Cook_20140919_piesHere are some of my impressions of the evening event.

First I wish to thank the people of the Cabot Institute for their assistance to me related to my hearing impairment. They went above and beyond to make sure that I was accommodated and were most gracious, and I am most appreciative. Second, I wish to thank the WUWT readership at large for assistance in getting me here in the first place.

Third, the event was quiet and reserved. There were no protest signs, and skeptics made no disturbances. In fact, there were no verbal clashes of any sort that I witnessed and overall it was a pleasant event as these events go.

John Cook himself made it a point to come up and introduce himself to me before the talk began. Actually he sat down right next to me in the front row seat that was reserved for made by the Cabot Institute people. I had not wanted to approach him because my goal was simply to observe and not to cause any sorts of disruptions and I didn’t know the in introducing myself would be seen as such.

We chatted about travel, family, and other pleasantries, and I found him to be pleasant and reserved as well as treating me with courtesy. Such types of meetings face-to-face are quite different from what one would expect to see in written commentary or blog chatter. There was no hint of condescension between either of us and we left on pleasant terms.

This sort of meeting underscores what I feel is the need for more one-on-one conversations. It is very easy to demonize your opponent from a distance on social media ( or as some might call it unsocial media) however, meeting one face-to-face humanizes your differences. Barry Woods who was there spoke of this effect in his dealings with the editors of the Frontiers Journal. He said he was unable to make any headway with e-mail exchanges but that when he spoke with the editors personally all of a sudden understandings were forged. We all owe Barry a debt of gratitude for his efforts in helping to get the “Recursive Fury” paper retracted.

I cannot say the same however for Prof. Lewandowski who was also there last night. He was aware of my presence and made no effort at contact nor did I. After what I consider glaring breaches of professional and personal ethics in his taunting (and now retracted) “Recursive Fury” paper I don’t think I would be able to have a civil conversation with him, so it was probably for the best that we did not engage in a conversation.

The question-and-answer period was quite interesting, with the majority of questions coming from skeptical commenters. One question that caught my attention was a gentleman who suggested to Mr. Cook that his viewpoint “reduced the question of climate change to a binary yes or no issue when in fact the issue is far more complex with many shades of gray”.

As the title indicates I’ll leave this forum open for those in attendance last night to relate their own experiences in the Q&A session to the comments section below which I will add to the body of this essay.

After the talk, about 20 climate skeptics walked over to Channing’s free house and  made merry, taking over a good portion of the tables. With a much reduced group we later went to a second pub of which I cannot recall the name.

I thank everyone who was there for their kind words and for keeping a drink in my hand. Though this morning as I write this in a somewhat British fog I will say that my thanks while sincere are now somewhat muted 🙂

For those who attended, feel free to leave your own impressions of the event below, and I’ll add to the body of the essay.

UPDATE:

Here are the comments from attendees:

Bloke down the pub

September 20, 2014 at 3:39 am

I think my impressions of the evening were pretty close to yours. Your comment on being able to talk one on one does strike a chord. I felt the frustrating part was knowing that many of the warmists or neutrals in the audience would have accepted as fact what Cook was saying, where one on one contact would have allowed weaknesses in the argument to be pointed out. I’m glad you had a good evening and I enjoyed meeting you and so many other names from here who I can now put a face to. Hopefully the Mann event will go as well.


David Holland

September 20, 2014 at 4:35 am

I agree with Anthony’s comments.

Cook tried to elicit from the audience their understanding of the physical basis of anthropogenic global warming and claimed to have received it from the answers given. However I do not recall the role of water vapour being mentioned from the platform or the floor and the slide he put up to show the answer implied that all the anthropogenic warming came from Carbon Dioxide only. If this were true there would be no significant warming. IPCC 1991 SPM says:

“The main greenhouse gas water vapour, will increase in response to global warming and further enhance it”

The entire AGW scare is based upon the assumption that a positive feedback mechanism exists where more warming produces more water vapour and that produces more warming etc. This mechanism, on which I could say more and the role of the atmosphere was not mentioned. ‘Pathetic’ was my overall impression.

I am glad that I did not have to pay for my ticket but was amply rewarded by the pleasure of meeting Anthony and so many good friends.


CarolineK

September 20, 2014 at 6:49 am

My impression, apart from agreeing with what Anthony and others said about the presentation, was that whilst the sceptic questions were very good, Cook’s slick technique was to say to each one words to the effect of ‘that’s a very good question’ – and then go on to give, like a good pollie, the answer to the question he would have preferred had been asked, so in effect, answered nothing satisfactorily, while giving the impression to those not in the know that he had.

The other thing that was very noticeable was at the end, there was a queue waiting to meet Anthony, while Cook and Lewandowsky were ignored on the whole. Anthony was indisputably the star of the evening, despite not having uttered a single (public) comment.


Jack

September 20, 2014 at 7:33 am

I attended this talk as a non-expert “believer” in AGW. My position mostly arises from being science-minded skeptic (in the untarnished sense). I have a good understanding of the scientific process/establishment (both its strengths and weaknesses), combined with an understanding politics, economics, ideology and psychology etc. that makes the world tick.

From the materials I’ve read over a few years (from both sides) I’ve found myself persuaded that the “basic science” is settled i.e. the climate is warming and we are largely responsible. So much so that’s I’ve lost interest in that area somewhat.

Back to the talk: What I got from it was that it’s ^this message (the message on “basic science”) which is still muddled in the public’s minds. Didn’t seem that controversial, given the history we have with trying to get the public to understand all sorts of complex issues over the decades (smoking, vaccinations etc)

I was very surprised at the end of the talk then, to find the majority of audience questions coming from staunch opponents to the thesis that Cook was putting forward! As I have since found out it there were a lot of WUWT readers in attendance ready to ask challenging questions 🙂

As usual in these types of confrontations (where “tribes” seemed wilful to misinterpret) it seems half the questions missed the point, and half the answers avoided the questions :-/ Cook himself mostly handled the questions without panic or aggression which I believe is the right approach. I think he himself said he thought taking on difficult questions but remaining civil was best for everybody. Not that he rebutted them to the extent I would have liked but.

After the Q&A I listened-in to an brief debate between a couple of skeptics and non-skeptics. Given how prepared, passionate and knowledgeable the skeptics seemed I was impressed and surprised to find one of non-skeptics to be equally so (a relief). Sadly we were ushered out of the room before the debate could make much headway.

I had a brief chat with a few of the skeptics and they all seemed like perfectly nice blokes (if a little too eager to exposes the history injustices against their cause!), and although I didn’t have much time it struck me very quickly that all sides seemed to agree on the “basic science” question. (Yet given that, I’m still confused why they come across as seeming so keen still to “prove the [basic] science wrong”?? Supposedly I was told that’s only a fringe group… but then squabbling soon return to whether its 0.3 or 0.15 degrees. I’m sure 6 or 7 years ago they were arguing over whether it was positive or negative…hmmm).

The real disagreements then seemed to come down to risk and policy…which I think are perfectly justified areas of debate (And often areas where science cannot give answers). I’m personally not aware or convinced that higher temperatures are bad. I can see there being potential upsides and downsides to climate change. And there are always costs in taking both action and inaction. I’ve not read the risk assessments but I can imagine this stuff is very difficult to assess so I can seem room for ideology to creeps in. Again I generally am in favour of low carbon as it has lots of other benefits (I like efficiency and don’t like smog) but then building solar farms in drizzly Cornwall doesn’t seem that smart to me either…. but disagreeing on this stuff doesn’t make one side “idiots” or not! There are genuinely justifiable yet alternative positions sensible people can hold on this stuff.

Like Anthony Watts says, I think the humanizing effect of face-to-face communication is vitally important and I’m glad that was able to happen last night and I hope it continues.


NeilC

September 20, 2014 at 7:33 am

Hi Anthony, it was good to meet you yesterday evening.

The way I saw Cook’s performance was, very well prepared, and had slides to back up any possible/likely questions from sceptics. The title of the presentation, “Dogma vs consensus: Letting the evidence speak on climate change, was rather apt, I thought. He presented 100% dogma, and 97.4% consensus. My only problem was the evidence, which was not convincing and “cherry picked”.

I don’t believe that dogma or consensus is always right, and of course has been proven wrong historically. The consensus thought the world was flat, until proved wrong. The consensus thought the sun revolved around the Earth, until proved wrong. The consensus thought tectonic plates did not exist, until proved wrong.

I thought his temperature graph about the pause, and saying global warming is still happening was interesting, starting in 1970 up till about 2010. As depicted on the chart “cherry picked”, he was right it was.

I never understand why they aren’t honest with temperature records. Using CET data, I know it’s not global, I know it wasn’t all that accurate in early years but it is the longest instrumental record we have. It reflects past temperatures much more accurately than the use of proxy data. If they were honest, they would tell everyone, the temperature has only risen 0.8DegC in 353 years. It also shows a cooling trend for the last 21 years. It is not surprising the temperature has been rising since the record commenced just after the coldest part of the LIA; it is the difference in the amount of rise and cause of the rise they suggest with which I argue.

Natural variation is vast, from an ice free planet to a snowball Earth (140 Deg C difference).

When I asked about how they measure temperatures in the deep oceans I was hoping to add, and how accurate and how long have we been measuring them, but didn’t get the opportunity.

In summary, yes it was all dogma, yes the 97.4% consensus was mentioned consistently, but the real evidence was not there.

Many thanks to the Cabot Institute for putting on this lecture.

Have a good weekend, and see you next week.

NeilC


Katabasis

September 20, 2014 at 8:17 am Edit

It was great to finally meet you in person Anthony, along with many other sceptics it was my first time meeting face to face. It was only a shame I couldn’t stick around for longer as I had to get the last coach back to London.

I greatly admire your calm and restraint in the face of people like Cook. I’m finding it increasingly harder to rein my temper in with these people and for you to be able to do so in the face of an astronomically higher number of slings and arrows coming your way than I’ll ever have to bear means you’re a far better man than I.

Cooks’ talk for me was highly offensive and equally laughable (and I did laugh). He happily struts around as a purveyor of the belief in some “conspiracy” of “d*niers” that I’ve yet to meet or encounter one member of, or anyone who vaguely resembles them. This would not be nearly so bad for the fact that he, Lewandowsky and others are able to provide work that is of such poor quality, if not outright fraudulent that is not only accepted by the academic establishment, but they are actively rewarded for it at the highest level with plaudits, fame, money.

Cook’s presentation was a long dribble of one fact-free ridiculous claim about “d*niers” after another and I find it both surreal and disturbing that it is (and was) not laughed out of the room by the numerous Bristol academics that were present. I’ve become utterly embittered by climate “science”, and the normalisation of this kind of activist-science in institutions that are supposed to be guardians of integrity and truth. It’s a disease that is now rapidly encroaching on other areas – as ably demonstrated by Lewandowsky’s pernicious influence now being felt in psychology and the social sciences.

I don’t see this situation improving any time soon. As a result, I’m most likely going to be departing academia in utter disgust, and returning to the private sector. I have a thin list of departments and researchers in the UK I’d be willing to work for in an academic setting, however those people have a foot in the real world where they actually have to deliver, and to deliver something substantial at that. Their work contrasts sharply with much of the “research” I’ve been embarrassed to even be in just the proximity of at the institutions I have worked at – it has mostly been vague hand wavy stuff that the taxpayer is gouged for. The covenant there is broken to my mind, even before the toxic reach of activist-science is felt.

The fact that Cook et al, quite literally, draw a cartoon version of sceptics that they then proceed to “engage” with was made clear – yet again – when myself and Barry Woods were accosted by three students who demanded to know who we were. It is becoming increasingly tedious to go through the exact same motions every time – they are shocked to the core to find out that our main objections, as sceptics, are focused on the catastrophism and the feedbacks and that many of our positions are, if not identical, at least compatible with the IPCC. It is truly depressing and sad to realise that they don’t seem to be aware that Cook’s presentation, explaining how to “inoculate” people against “d*nialist propaganda” is itself a masterclass in propaganda. They’re going to be equally shocked every time they meet a sceptic in person until they realise that just because someone is on stage, just because they have fame and just because they have “Dr” in front of their name, does not make them a paragon of integrity.

All bar one of the points made from the floor to Cook were challenging in some respect to his – and the general alarmist’s – perspective. From my POV he airily dismissed all of them and implied strongly at the end that they should be ignored because they were obviously coming from this super sekrit conspiracy of “d*niers”.

For my part, I followed straight up on his complaining about the petition project. He said it should be ignored because most of the people who signed it, whilst many may be academics and researchers, were not climate scientists. Bizarrely he singled out ‘someone with a PhD in Computer Science’ as an example of someone who should not be trusted with regard to their opinion on climate science. I put it to him that his paper on “consensus” should be retracted on multiple grounds. One of which was that – in contrast to what he had just been saying – many of the papers listed in supposed support of “the consensus” were not only written by non-climate scientists, they also had nothing to do with climate science. I listed off some of the many examples identified by José Duarte [1], including papers on housing associations, television news coverage, cooking stoves, asthma, opinion polls etc etc.

Cook’s response? Er – that ‘proved his point’ apparently, because it “showed consensus across subject areas”. WTF?

A couple of Cook’s responses to others are highly notable however, and should definitely be recorded for posterity. In response to a questioner who pointed out that most objections regard catastrophism Cook said that the “consensus” was not about impending catastrophe but climate disruption. Not only do I think that is a fascinating shifting of the goal posts, but I’d also really like to know how he quantifies that because as most of us here area aware in terms of “extreme weather” the IPCC “consensus” certainly does not support this assertion.

A second response was, I think, in answer to the point from the floor about the issue not being black and white. Cook acknowledged that there are large swathes of the debate that remain unsettled – a point that seems to get people branded as a “d*nier” over at Sceptical Séance and then banned.

All in all the whole experience was more of the same and the best part by far was meeting some other sceptics in the pub.

[1] http://www.joseduarte.com/blog/cooking-stove-use-housing-associations-white-males-and-the-97

=====

Oh I should also mention that Cook is launching a MOOC (Massively Open Online Course) on “Making Sense of Climate Science D*nial”

https://www.edx.org/course/uqx/uqx-denial101x-making-sense-climate-4371#.VBxNu-c0phE


SuffolkBoy

September 20, 2014 at 8:46 am

I was at the meeting too. However, I must have missed the message about getting to Channings so had a lonely evening 🙁 followed by a trip back to Suffolk today. I didn’t recognize anybody, there was no obvious gang-formation, and there were no name-tags! I was expecting much more in the way both of the “science” and a useful or even lively debate afterwards. Instead it was just pie-charts with “97%” and that irritating graphic “how skeptics see global warming” repeating endlessly. Except for the mewling kittens, I found nothing new in the talk at all: it was just like the website, but with pop-up cartoons and added 3D. I don’t think Cook understands at all that the CAGW hypothesis has transformed into a religion. Banging on about how 97% of Catholics believe that the Pope exists isn’t going to win back any converts to the warmist cause. The Q&A session revealed more and more that the CAGW message these days is just a collection of soundbites without any joined-up message. Any sceptical comment was simply met with variations on “Read IPCC Chapter 4 Verse 3″: “and the seas shall be uplifted and the unbelievers shall be drowned”. I bet they have more exciting meetings at the Malvern Contract Bridge Club.

The only interesting part was being met with the pamphleteers asking me to support the LBGT March Against Climate Change and the walk home. During the walk I was struck by (compared to Suffolk) the disparity of life-styles in this bastion of LibDem country and Bristol Universty: every corner, closed shop entrance and cash-point was festooned with street-beggars asking for “change” from the passing latte-sippers and sushi-eaters. Amazingly, nobody blamed the train disruption (unprecedented flash-floods on the Lonodon-Bristol line) on “climate change”.

Anyone going to the Mann talk? Is there a pre-meeting beer or a post-meeting curry?


manicbeancounter

September 20, 2014 at 9:49 am

It was great to meet Anthony last night, along with many others.

I concur with Anthony’s comments above, except that the questions were nearly all from skeptics, not just a majority. The most pointed pro-consensus question was towards the end, on why most of the questions were coming from skeptics, when most of those in the room seem to be from the other side.

Of the talk, I would also add a final slide was adapted John Cook’s flickering “escalator” temperature graph from his website – only last night it had cherries on with the “cherry-picking”. It was left flickering away for about 15 minutes.

The link is at http://www.skepticalscience.com/graphics.php?g=47

This shows something important. A number of climate skeptics went to listen to someone who grossly misrepresents and maligns our views. There was no heckling, no abusive language or cross words – put there were pointed questions that were mostly met with politician-style answers. From John Cook there was not even a hint of an acknowledgement that the range of skeptical views posted at WUWT, and elsewhere, may have a hint of credibility to them. Rather than try to engage and understand other viewpoints, he makes up something totally false.

The gatherings in the pubs, before and after, were a complete contrast. We “skeptics” have a huge range of different views, but we listened and debated over the beer and cider.

Kevin Marshall – Manicbeancounter


flydlbee

September 20, 2014 at 10:03 am Edit

I felt Cook’s assertions about the 97% figure were laughable. He was obviously facing a more-than-usually cynical audience. He struck me as the “Alex Salmond” of climate science, articulate, but not reliable.

Nice to meet you, Anthony.

===============================================

UPDATE 2:

One of the slides in the Cook talk was about crossing a bridge and the 97%. The meme is typically phrased like this:

97% of engineers say a bridge will collapse, 3% say not to worry – would you still drive over it?

Cook_bridge_20140919One of the attendees, Michel, has written commentary about this, it is worth reading:

One analogy too far

 

 

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NeilC
September 20, 2014 7:33 am

Hi Anthony, it was good to meet you yesterday evening.
The way I saw Cook’s performance was, very well prepared, and had slides to back up any possible/likely questions from sceptics. The title of the presentation, “Dogma vs consensus: Letting the evidence speak on climate change, was rather apt, I thought. He presented 100% dogma, and 97.4% consensus. My only problem was the evidence, which was not convincing and “cherry picked”.
I don’t believe that dogma or consensus is always right, and of course has been proven wrong historically. The consensus thought the world was flat, until proved wrong. The consensus thought the sun revolved around the Earth, until proved wrong. The consensus thought tectonic plates did not exist, until proved wrong.
I thought his temperature graph about the pause, and saying global warming is still happening was interesting, starting in 1970 up till about 2010. As depicted on the chart “cherry picked”, he was right it was.
I never understand why they aren’t honest with temperature records. Using CET data, I know it’s not global, I know it wasn’t all that accurate in early years but it is the longest instrumental record we have. It reflects past temperatures much more accurately than the use of proxy data. If they were honest, they would tell everyone, the temperature has only risen 0.8DegC in 353 years. It also shows a cooling trend for the last 21 years. It is not surprising the temperature has been rising since the record commenced just after the coldest part of the LIA; it is the difference in the amount of rise and cause of the rise they suggest with which I argue.
Natural variation is vast, from an ice free planet to a snowball Earth (140 Deg C difference).
When I asked about how they measure temperatures in the deep oceans I was hoping to add, and how accurate and how long have we been measuring them, but didn’t get the opportunity.
In summary, yes it was all dogma, yes the 97.4% consensus was mentioned consistently, but the real evidence was not there.
Many thanks to the Cabot Institute for putting on this lecture.
Have a good weekend, and see you next week.
NeilC

dmacleo
September 20, 2014 7:39 am

when people say the science is settled I respond and say you mean the models are settled.
and since the settled models don’t match the literal data the science isn’t settled.
then i get called all sorts of names.

Reply to  dmacleo
September 20, 2014 12:07 pm

Well, what do you expect when you deliberately try to confuse the issue with facts and logic?
/grin

dmacleo
Reply to  JohnWho
September 20, 2014 3:26 pm

LOL 🙂

Reply to  dmacleo
September 20, 2014 1:59 pm

Well in that case respond in the only way a respectable scientist should respond, call them even worse names and walk away.

dmacleo
Reply to  tomwtrevor
September 20, 2014 3:27 pm

I usually then try to make them apoplectic and red faced.
sometimes it works

LearDog
September 20, 2014 7:42 am

I am glad you were able to attend. My guess is that your presence changed the tone of the presentation. If you had not been there I am guessing they would have had quite a different approach.

pokerguy
September 20, 2014 7:52 am

“With a much reduced group we later went to a second pub of which I cannot recall the name.”
Had to laugh. Well hell, at least you remember going.

September 20, 2014 8:11 am

Very clever way/video to depict the 97% climate scientist consensus number. As long as Cook defends and tries to drill that number into people’s heads, he is either the victim of massive cognitive bias, blinding him to a reality or the perpetrator of a massive scam, intending to mislead people with propaganda and convince them that only 3% of climate scientists are skeptical of CAGW.
Even if he thinks the number is really 85% or 91% or 95% and is pushing 97% to advance his agenda, then he is a complete scientific fraud. Authentic scientists don’t alter science for a cause, not even 1%.
I find it almost impossible to believe that only 3% of scientists are skeptical of CAGW after the last 15 years of empirical data have been gathered.
Many of the papers that Cook used were a decade or longer old. We have learned a great deal since then. Using these “older” papers to represent the view of scientists “today” , would be like siting a study on scientists views of heliocentrism(earth revolving around the sun) in the 16th century and calling Capernicus, Kepler and Galileo 3 skeptics, while the other 97% of scientists believed the sun revolved around the earth.
While that example is an exaggeration, it makes the valid point.
How long does a study based on scientific views in a particular time frame remain valid, when the scientific information has advanced, with resulting adjustments to the views/theories being widespread?
If one doesn’t think that adjustments have been widespread, then one is oblivious to such things as the many speculative explanations for the missing heat or slowdown/pause in the warming rate that was occurring in the 1980’s/90’s.
Even if that 97% number did represent views at some point in time, for it to be presented in an authentic manner, it should state that XX years ago, 97% of scientist believed but today, YY% believe the same thing……clearly a lower number.
This would be the truth. Hiding the truth by using old numbers that represent a time before new knowledge has changed the understanding of a theory is fraudulent.

September 20, 2014 8:17 am

It was great to finally meet you in person Anthony, along with many other sceptics it was my first time meeting face to face. It was only a shame I couldn’t stick around for longer as I had to get the last coach back to London.
I greatly admire your calm and restraint in the face of people like Cook. I’m finding it increasingly harder to rein my temper in with these people and for you to be able to do so in the face of an astronomically higher number of slings and arrows coming your way than I’ll ever have to bear means you’re a far better man than I.
Cooks’ talk for me was highly offensive and equally laughable (and I did laugh). He happily struts around as a purveyor of the belief in some “conspiracy” of “d*niers” that I’ve yet to meet or encounter one member of, or anyone who vaguely resembles them. This would not be nearly so bad for the fact that he, Lewandowsky and others are able to provide work that is of such poor quality, if not outright fraudulent that is not only accepted by the academic establishment, but they are actively rewarded for it at the highest level with plaudits, fame, money.
Cook’s presentation was a long dribble of one fact-free ridiculous claim about “d*niers” after another and I find it both surreal and disturbing that it is (and was) not laughed out of the room by the numerous Bristol academics that were present. I’ve become utterly embittered by climate “science”, and the normalisation of this kind of activist-science in institutions that are supposed to be guardians of integrity and truth. It’s a disease that is now rapidly encroaching on other areas – as ably demonstrated by Lewandowsky’s pernicious influence now being felt in psychology and the social sciences.
I don’t see this situation improving any time soon. As a result, I’m most likely going to be departing academia in utter disgust, and returning to the private sector. I have a thin list of departments and researchers in the UK I’d be willing to work for in an academic setting, however those people have a foot in the real world where they actually have to deliver, and to deliver something substantial at that. Their work contrasts sharply with much of the “research” I’ve been embarrassed to even be in just the proximity of at the institutions I have worked at – it has mostly been vague hand wavy stuff that the taxpayer is gouged for. The covenant there is broken to my mind, even before the toxic reach of activist-science is felt.
The fact that Cook et al, quite literally, draw a cartoon version of sceptics that they then proceed to “engage” with was made clear – yet again – when myself and Barry Woods were accosted by three students who demanded to know who we were. It is becoming increasingly tedious to go through the exact same motions every time – they are shocked to the core to find out that our main objections, as sceptics, are focused on the catastrophism and the feedbacks and that many of our positions are, if not identical, at least compatible with the IPCC. It is truly depressing and sad to realise that they don’t seem to be aware that Cook’s presentation, explaining how to “inoculate” people against “d*nialist propaganda” is itself a masterclass in propaganda. They’re going to be equally shocked every time they meet a sceptic in person until they realise that just because someone is on stage, just because they have fame and just because they have “Dr” in front of their name, does not make them a paragon of integrity.
All bar one of the points made from the floor to Cook were challenging in some respect to his – and the general alarmist’s – perspective. From my POV he airily dismissed all of them and implied strongly at the end that they should be ignored because they were obviously coming from this super sekrit conspiracy of “d*niers”.
For my part, I followed straight up on his complaining about the petition project. He said it should be ignored because most of the people who signed it, whilst many may be academics and researchers, were not climate scientists. Bizarrely he singled out ‘someone with a PhD in Computer Science’ as an example of someone who should not be trusted with regard to their opinion on climate science. I put it to him that his paper on “consensus” should be retracted on multiple grounds. One of which was that – in contrast to what he had just been saying – many of the papers listed in supposed support of “the consensus” were not only written by non-climate scientists, they also had nothing to do with climate science. I listed off some of the many examples identified by José Duarte [1], including papers on housing associations, television news coverage, cooking stoves, asthma, opinion polls etc etc.
Cook’s response? Er – that ‘proved his point’ apparently, because it “showed consensus across subject areas”. WTF?
A couple of Cook’s responses to others are highly notable however, and should definitely be recorded for posterity. In response to a questioner who pointed out that most objections regard catastrophism Cook said that the “consensus” was not about impending catastrophe but climate disruption. Not only do I think that is a fascinating shifting of the goal posts, but I’d also really like to know how he quantifies that because as most of us here area aware in terms of “extreme weather” the IPCC “consensus” certainly does not support this assertion.
A second response was, I think, in answer to the point from the floor about the issue not being black and white. Cook acknowledged that there are large swathes of the debate that remain unsettled – a point that seems to get people branded as a “d*nier” over at Sceptical Séance and then banned.
All in all the whole experience was more of the same and the best part by far was meeting some other sceptics in the pub.
[1] http://www.joseduarte.com/blog/cooking-stove-use-housing-associations-white-males-and-the-97

Reply to  Katabasis
September 20, 2014 9:30 am

Bizarrely he singled out ‘someone with a PhD in Computer Science’ as an example of someone who should not be trusted with regard to their opinion on climate science.

====================================================
So he thinks that someone with a degree in computer science isn’t qualified to speak about a computer generated climate model?
Is that because they might be able to see just what “The Fudge Factor” in the HarryReadme file actually did? They might know the difference between reality and virtual reality?
In the field I work in an observant child could tell that the water sample I just collected was contaminated if I didn’t at least empty the the bottle before I collected it. They don’t need to know how to run the analyses to know the results aren’t what’s in the water.

AndyZ
Reply to  Gunga Din
September 20, 2014 10:48 am

As a computer scientist myself the models are hugely problematic. There are so many inputs, outputs, and unknown feedbacks (all of which operate differently at different levels none the less), it is silly to rely on them as anything more than possibility. Certainly the more we learn the better they will get, but given they have failed at predictive power so far, I find it odd anyone considers them accurate world representations.

Fen
Reply to  Gunga Din
September 20, 2014 1:44 pm

“the sum of two squares is increasingly negative!”
But computer scientists shouldn’t weigh in…. hah
How about mathmeticians?

Reply to  Gunga Din
September 20, 2014 2:18 pm

It is amazing how people like Cook, Mckibben and Gore who aren’t scientists at all can get away with saying that sceptics are not qualified to comment on these matters.

Reply to  Katabasis
September 20, 2014 10:18 am

I was hoping if someone would bring up the non-climate papers and reviews that Jose Duarte chronicled.
Of the some 11,000 papers reviewed by Cook’s team, how many were written by “Climate Scientists?”

John Whitman
September 20, 2014 8:24 am

I agree with WUWT’s host about the importance of personal one-on-one meetings and discussion with those we have profound intellectual disagreements with. It creates a basis for common human respect that allows a greater possibility for more productive argument.
It has been my experience at AGU meetings that it was rare that those who I consider CAGW alarm intellects were not cordial.
John

September 20, 2014 8:24 am

Oh I should also mention that Cook is launching a MOOC (Massively Open Online Course) on “Making Sense of Climate Science D*nial”
https://www.edx.org/course/uqx/uqx-denial101x-making-sense-climate-4371#.VBxNu-c0phE

defpumpkin
Reply to  Katabasis
September 20, 2014 12:06 pm

Of the dozen or so faculty, it appears that only one is a climate scientist.

defpumpkin
Reply to  Katabasis
September 20, 2014 1:08 pm

I take it back. Dr. Keah Schuenemann has 4 peer-reviewed papers. It appears 3 were from her graduate research (the last one appearing in 2010). Since then, she’s published exactly one (breathtakingly groundbreaking) paper:
Using Student-Generated Blogs to Create a Global Perspective on Climate Change
http://nagt-jge.org/doi/abs/10.5408/13-065.1

Glen Martin
September 20, 2014 8:25 am

Upcoming course at http://www.edx.org : Making Sense of Climate Science Denial. Personnel involved:
John Cook, Daniel Bedford, Gavin Cawley, Kevin Cowtan, Sarah A. Green, Peter Jacobs, Scott Mandia, Dana Nuccitelli, Mark Richardson, Keah Schuenemann, Andy Skuce, and Robert Way.

Reply to  Glen Martin
September 20, 2014 12:12 pm

What? Bill Nye didn’t make the cut? How rude!

Reply to  Glen Martin
September 20, 2014 12:21 pm

I thought that it was a joke, but indeed John Cook & Co are really giving such a course… beginning March next year. Maybe some skeptic should follow it and comment on it at WUWT, where he is “economical with the truth”, a nice English expression to avoid libel cases…
Nice reports from Anthony and all (non-)skeptics attending Cook’s talk. Some years ago that I was in Bristol… I had attended if I wasn’t busy working on the renewal of the old house (~1870) our youngest daughter’s bought in the middle of Antwerp…
In some of the media here there was an interesting item, relayed from the US: Carol Pierson Holding at the news site of The Huffington Post said in her blog that only giving bad climate news and vague statistics will not convince people of climate change and that the “Green” media are loosing the debate.
I responded in our local newspaper that the problem was not the packaging of the message, but the message itself: if there are record CO2 increases but no warming at all for 1.5 decades, it is hard to convince people of the catastrophic properties of CO2…

September 20, 2014 8:43 am

This post and some of the comments point out our biggest problem.
Those skeptical of Catastrophic global warming have the facts on our side … Mother Nature is helping us out tremendously. What we don’t have is the vast, powerful array of propaganda avenues of the state backed alarmists.
How to get the facts to the pubic? That is the question. I know for a fact that the elementary schools are pushing catastrophic man-made global warming (the word anthropogenic is not used much with children) all the time. If a child grows up believing in CAGW it gets harder year by year to cure his delusions. In addition, the public at large is propagandized by the mainstream media all the time — even to the point of them saying that warming causes cold. Warming causes it to be colder! Jesus, Joseph, and Mary!
I am not sure there is a place of middle ground where the two sides can meet. Heck, look at the mainstream skeptical side and those of us who think that the net effect of CO2 is so tiny as to be undetectable. We get called names by our own side! This is politics and politics can be very dirty.
What I would like to see out of our side is a discussion on how to present our side to the public. What is our best course? Is letting Mother Nature cool the planet for the next quarter century enough? Will the state minions at NASA (and elsewhere) be “adjusting” the temps to where it looks like it is 80F even though we look out the window and see snow?
What to do is worth some civil discourse I think.
~ Mark

Rud Istvan
Reply to  markstoval
September 20, 2014 9:09 am

Mark, a very good point. Complicated by the fact that there really are prominent ‘deniers’ like Senator Imhofe who make easy targets for the warmunists. I have made two personal contributions.
One is a 2012 ebook called The Arts of Truth, about critical thinking. The penultimate example uses climate change for the wrap. There you will find Senator Imhofe’s pronouncements.
The other is an ebook called Blowing Smoke, now at the,publisher. It is a collection of essays on specific energy and climate topics. It does not get much into policy (well, renewable costs and nuclear options), but does try to correct a large number of factual misrepresentations. For example, an essaymthatntakes on the 2014 Narional Climate Assessment and shows how biased and wrongmthe introductory chapter is. Pure propaganda of themsort one woild expect from PRAVDA, not the OBama administration….Forward by Dr. Judith Curry.
Goal is to have it available before the US elections. Advance ‘copies are being sent to a number of key governors (Jindal), Congressmen (Barton), and Senators (Rubio, Paul,…) and their staffs. Some of the examples, for example Marcott’s scientific misconduct, Science refusal,to address the issue, and climate.gov refusal to reconsider using Marcott because Science had not addressed the issue. Make for some political hay in states where the war on coal or the KxL punt matter.
Looking forward to your reactions. I already know Wilis will object strongly to some essays. But then he will have to come back with alternative factual analysis, which will,get him thinking more precisely about those particular issues, which is the whole point of the book. Will be interested to learn your reactions.

Reply to  markstoval
September 20, 2014 9:26 am

markstoval on September 20, 2014 at 8:43 am
“. . .
What I would like to see out of our side is a discussion on how to present our side to the public. What is our best course? . . .
. . .
What to do is worth some civil discourse I think.”

– – – – – – – –
markstoval,
What if there were 10,000 venues as openly intentioned and well moderated as WUWT in all major languages in most countries? What if thousands do what our WUWT host did?
I think that would saturate the general culture with fundamentally critical views of IPCC alarmist false claims about climate science.
Tactically: Show the IPCC intellects as not having much valid scientific reasoning then the Cook’s of the world will intellectually starve with no intellectual material to copycat.
John

DirkH
Reply to  markstoval
September 20, 2014 12:53 pm

“If a child grows up believing in CAGW it gets harder year by year to cure his delusions.”
Not so. It is very easy to completely destroy the belief system of a warmist in a minute.
Simply show him that he’s an imbecile.
a) Ask him what the most important greenhouse gas is. Most of them don’t know that it’s H2O.
b) Next ask him how CO2 can then have a large impact. All of them can’t answer this. It’s the conjectured positive water vapor feedback of course.
After you have thus shown them that they do not have a basis for anything, you can now demonstrate that nowhere ever has the positive water vapor feedback been found in reality.
e.g.
“A clear prediction of the CO2AGW theory is that positive water vapor feedback should occur AND that the radiating top layer of the troposphere that radiates most of the IR to space should rise.
Both predictions can be tested, have been tested, and fail:”
http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.co.uk/2012/03/simple-disproof-of-runaway-greenhouse.html
or
http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2014/01/25/ir-expert-speaks-out-after-40-years-of-silence-its-the-water-vapor-stupid-and-not-the-co2/comment-page-1/#comment-312899
Basically what you do is use a cult deprogramming technique. Cults operate by controlling the information reaching the victim.
Show understanding for the victim; give him the lacking information; show him that what he has been told is a big fat lie.

Bobl
Reply to  DirkH
September 21, 2014 5:46 am

This won’t deprogram a believer, to do that you need to undermine the moral basis of their faith. For example by talking about the millions of children that could have been saved with just the money from windmills alone. How children are dying because the cult wants their food converted to ethanol. That indigenous families have been murdered to make way for carbon offset forest Plantations, that grannies are dying from green induced fuel poverty. That their irrational desire is to return us to a preindustrial temperature that resulted in the deaths of half the population of Europe, a temperature we are a mere 0.8 degrees away from, and that logic tells us we should put a few extra degrees between if we can. That cold kills many time that of warm, and cold kills the very young especially babies disproportionately
Ask them if they are truly happy with that happening, or that perhaps it might be better to provide the poor of the world with the true basis for raising themselves from poverty, cheap reliable energy! Ask if it’s more sensible to combat hurricanes in the Philippines with cyclone shelters for Philippinos or windmills in England.

phlogiston
Reply to  markstoval
September 20, 2014 6:10 pm

Talking about global impact – is there a Chinese versionof WUWT on alibaba or something?

SuffolkBoy
September 20, 2014 8:46 am

I was at the meeting too. However, I must have missed the message about getting to Channings so had a lonely evening 🙁 followed by a trip back to Suffolk today. I didn’t recognize anybody, there was no obvious gang-formation, and there were no name-tags! I was expecting much more in the way both of the “science” and a useful or even lively debate afterwards. Instead it was just pie-charts with “97%” and that irritating graphic “how skeptics see global warming” repeating endlessly. Except for the mewling kittens, I found nothing new in the talk at all: it was just like the website, but with pop-up cartoons and added 3D. I don’t think Cook understands at all that the CAGW hypothesis has transformed into a religion. Banging on about how 97% of Catholics believe that the Pope exists isn’t going to win back any converts to the warmist cause. The Q&A session revealed more and more that the CAGW message these days is just a collection of soundbites without any joined-up message. Any sceptical comment was simply met with variations on “Read IPCC Chapter 4 Verse 3”: “and the seas shall be uplifted and the unbelievers shall be drowned”. I bet they have more exciting meetings at the Malvern Contract Bridge Club.
The only interesting part was being met with the pamphleteers asking me to support the LBGT March Against Climate Change and the walk home. During the walk I was struck by (compared to Suffolk) the disparity of life-styles in this bastion of LibDem country and Bristol Universty: every corner, closed shop entrance and cash-point was festooned with street-beggars asking for “change” from the passing latte-sippers and sushi-eaters. Amazingly, nobody blamed the train disruption (unprecedented flash-floods on the Lonodon-Bristol line) on “climate change”.
Anyone going to the Mann talk? Is there a pre-meeting beer or a post-meeting curry?

September 20, 2014 8:51 am

Anthony,
Thanks for making the effort to travel to this meeting and it was good to meet you.
It was actually me who made that remark from the audience. In John Cook’s world there are only two possible positions on global warming. Those that accept anthropogenic CO2 decreases slightly OLR, and those who don’t. 97% of climate scientists accept the CO2 radiative transfer calculations are correct and just 3% don’t. Even among sceptics the consensus on this would probably be > 60%. Willis Eschenbach would be included in Cook’s 97% consensus, and so would I. However that does not mean we accept the IPCC’s more extreme predictions, nor their implied policy to decarbonise western capitalism forthwith, or how that could even be achieved. Global warming is more a political issue than it is a scientific issue.
Whether the overall response to CO2 forcing of the climate system is negligible or dangerous is not directly of relevance to Cook. That is because his goal is not science but political lobbying and PR – at which he is very successful. So for example, any criticism of the AR5 attribution statement or arguing that the hiatus has reduced climate sensitivity, places you firmly in the 3% denier/loony category. His really is a binary world – a bit like Scottish Independence.
Cook also made a ‘song and dance’ about satellites having confirmed the predicted energy imbalance. This is actually untrue. CERES admit that their measurements are not accurate enough to measure such small imbalances ( 0.4 W/m2). Instead the results are normalized to agree with model predictions. So Cook’s argument there is circular. Those billions of absorbed atomic bombs depend just on the ocean heat content data, and these are based on measuring temperature changes of tiny fractions of a degree.
Good luck on tuesday !

Carbon500
Reply to  Clive Best
September 21, 2014 4:17 am

Clive: I note with interest your comment “Cook also made a ‘song and dance’ about satellites having confirmed the predicted energy imbalance. This is actually untrue.”
I have Roy W. Spencer’s book which was published in 2010 ‘The Great Global Warming Blunder’, and on p48 he comments that “Our satellite instruments still do not have the absolute accuracy to measure the small imbalance from Earth orbit that is believed to exist from more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, so we cannot even directly measure the mechanism that supposedly causes global warming.”
Given Dr. Spencer’s expertise in the technology and science of satellite monitoring, this is well worth knowing, and it of course supports your comment nicely.

Reply to  Carbon500
September 21, 2014 1:21 pm

Basically the satellite TOA measurements are ‘adjusted’ so as to agree with models and OHC. (The OHC data are not reliable either – but that is another story) To quote from NASA
“The CERES EBAF-TOA product was designed for climate modelers that need a net imbalance constrained to the ocean heat storage term”

Despite recent improvements in satellite instrument calibration and the algorithms used to
determine SW and LW outgoing top-of-atmosphere (TOA) radiative fluxes, a sizeable imbalance
persists in the average global net radiation at the TOA from CERES satellite observations. With
the most recent CERES Edition3 Instrument calibration improvements, the SYN1deg_Edition3
net imbalance is ~3.4 W m-2

, much larger than the expected observed ocean heating rate ~0.58 W
m-2 (Loeb et al. 2012a). This imbalance is problematic in applications that use Earth Radiation
Budget (ERB) data for climate model evaluation, estimations of the Earth’s annual global mean
energy budget, and studies that infer meridional heat transports. The CERES Energy Balanced
and Filled (EBAF) dataset uses an objective constrainment algorithm to adjust SW and LW TOA
fluxes within their ranges of uncertainty to remove the inconsistency between average global net
TOA flux and heat storage in the Earth atmosphere system.

see : http://ceres.larc.nasa.gov/documents/DQ_summaries/CERES_EBAF_Ed2.8_DQS.pdf

George A
September 20, 2014 9:02 am

Perhaps one-on-one is the way to cajole true believers into debating. Ideological believers know not to debate facts, which they know will side with their opponent.

Sciguy54
September 20, 2014 9:03 am

“Making Sense of Climate Science Denial”
Ha! The course title is taken directly from the old trial lawyer’s question “Is it true that you are still beating your wife, yes or no?”
The oldest propaganda method is to define your opponent as illogical and destructive while holding yourself up as taking the high road. So they are “making sense” while the other side is made up of denying deniers, with “toothless, ignorant, and killers of future babies” simply inferred.

Barry Woods
September 20, 2014 9:18 am

Chatting on twitter with someone that attended (they seem open minded just unaare of Cook paper’s wider story)
https://twitter.com/BarryJWoods/status/513360873516449792
@JoseSci @cabotinstitute
note in talk Cook boasted about the presidential tweet, yet he was happy for it to misrepresent his work ‘dangerous’ without any comment to the audience.
From the Bishop Hill discussion (Prof R Betts, Met Office, Head of Climate Impacts)
http://bishophill.squarespace.com/discussion/post/2125495
“I’ve replied to Obama’s twitter person to tell them that the Cook paper didn’t actually mention ‘dangerous’. They need to get their facts straight.” – Betts
Richardabetts
@BarackObama Actually that paper didn’t say ‘dangerous’. NB I *do* think #climate change poses risks – I just care about accurate reporting!
http://bishophill.squarespace.com/discussion/post/2125495
yet, Cook, quotes Obama tweets in the media and publicly like at the Cabot Institute and never correct the misrepresentation, that his work found 97% of scientist agreed ‘dangerous’ –
just who is spreading ‘misinformation’ – sceptics or Cook?

Chris B.
September 20, 2014 9:33 am

The math was wrong. They only needed 32.3 scientists total to represent the supposed 97%.

manicbeancounter
September 20, 2014 9:49 am

It was great to meet Anthony last night, along with many others.
I concur with Anthony’s comments above, except that the questions were nearly all from skeptics, not just a majority. The most pointed pro-consensus question was towards the end, on why most of the questions were coming from skeptics, when most of those in the room seem to be from the other side.
Of the talk, I would also add a final slide was adapted John Cook’s flickering “escalator” temperature graph from his website – only last night it had cherries on with the “cherry-picking”. It was left flickering away for about 15 minutes.
The link is at http://www.skepticalscience.com/graphics.php?g=47
This shows something important. A number of climate skeptics went to listen to someone who grossly misrepresents and maligns our views. There was no heckling, no abusive language or cross words – put there were pointed questions that were mostly met with politician-style answers. From John Cook there was not even a hint of an acknowledgement that the range of skeptical views posted at WUWT, and elsewhere, may have a hint of credibility to them. Rather than try to engage and understand other viewpoints, he makes up something totally false.
The gatherings in the pubs, before and after, were a complete contrast. We “skeptics” have a huge range of different views, but we listened and debated over the beer and cider.
Kevin Marshall – Manicbeancounter

Reply to  manicbeancounter
September 20, 2014 1:40 pm

What they don’t show you on that escalator graphic, is that the global temperatures were higher in the 1930’s. (before adjustment/homogenization or what ever you want to call it).

September 20, 2014 10:03 am

I felt Cook’s assertions about the 97% figure were laughable. He was obviously facing a more-than-usually cynical audience. He struck me as the “Alex Salmond” of climate science, articulate, but not reliable.
Nice to meet you, Anthony.

DirkH
Reply to  flydlbee
September 20, 2014 12:45 pm

More like the David Cameron of climate science. (The vote counters work for him.)

John Boles
September 20, 2014 10:52 am

Anthony, I would like to send some money to help support WUWT, I can send a check, do you have a PO box? I do not have pay pal. I am in Michigan. I can send fifty bucks, not much but I want to help.

Mike Singleton
September 20, 2014 11:13 am

I align with Pointmans view.
Some of the apparent “nicest” people I’ve met later revealed what can only be described as a “Jekyll and Hyde” personality. First impressions are not always the best, especially those formed of individuals with ulterior motives.
Time will tell.

Man Bearpig
Reply to  Mike Singleton
September 20, 2014 12:47 pm

Yeah I agree. I remember those photos found on sks website. If he is still around perhaps some coukd ask him, then we might see the reak cook

Sam Hall
Reply to  Mike Singleton
September 20, 2014 2:00 pm

Most people say that it is the intellect which makes a great scientist. They are wrong: it is character.
Albert Einstein

mpainter
Reply to  Sam Hall
September 20, 2014 3:58 pm

Good quote. It is indeed character. This becomes obvious when one examines the dubious scientist behind the dubious science.

Owen in GA
Reply to  Sam Hall
September 20, 2014 5:38 pm

I always love quotes from Einstein and Feynman on the nature of the practice of science. Simple and to the point!

John Whitman
Reply to  Sam Hall
September 21, 2014 8:03 am

Intellectual character is important in an intellect (scientists are a included in the broader set of intellects).
John

EternalOptimist
September 20, 2014 12:03 pm

There is a simple , polite, amicable, non confrontational question
‘Mr cook. what does concensus have to do with science ?’

Randy
September 20, 2014 12:28 pm

While the “consensus” is nowhere near as high as cook posits, it is still higher then available data seems to warrant. We have over 4 dozen papers trying to explain why it is not warming as predicted, and while this shows us the science is NOT settled, it also shows us that in most of these papers they ARE often still making the case co2s role is unchanged from earlier assessments, it is some other variable we got all wrong.
This is alarming. Where does this bias come from? what are the chances that when things do not go as we thought they would, that Im aware of no major names that simply reversed their stance, you know like following the data. I am sure there are several, but there must not be alot of these people. In reality Id think the FIRST thing you questions is the perceived role of co2, NOT every factor EXCEPT co2 is now in question. This is backwards. WHY??? Personal bias? agenda? rent seeking? what is it? Its definitely not objective unbiased science whatever it is.

defpumpkin
Reply to  Randy
September 20, 2014 1:57 pm

“That Bernoulli’s theory prevailed for so long is even more remarkable when you see that, in fact, it is seriously flawed. . . . The mystery is how a conception that is vulnerable to such obvious counterexamples survived for so long. I can explain it only by a weakness of the scholarly mind that I have often observed in myself. I call it theory-induced blindness: Once you have accepted a theory, it is extraordinarily difficult to notice its flaws. As the psychologist Daniel Gilbert has observed, disbelieving is hard work.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-25/bias-blindness-and-how-we-truly-think-part-2-daniel-kahneman.html

Ian Schumacher
Reply to  defpumpkin
September 20, 2014 2:54 pm

“How we truly think” i.e. irrationally – would have been so much better without this long narrative about Bernoulli’s theory. Social sciences are so ‘weak’ because of the difficulty of measuring ‘anything’ social, what-so-ever. The ‘theories’ and stories weaved behind the theories are so fantastic that they often seem to belong right beside ancient culture mythologies (Fraud’s ‘theories’ for example).
This leads to proxies and statistical approaches leaving the area ripe for pathological science and seeing whatever you want to see.
Irrationality is more interesting when it is blatant. It hard to get too worked up when someone prefers one ‘fantastic’ story over a slightly different ‘fantastic’ story, however it’s a lot easier to see the mind’s unwillingness to bend to data when data is ‘hard’ and irrefutable (i.e. evolution theory for example).

scf
September 20, 2014 1:33 pm

To me, Cook is a despicable man. I could not stand to be in the same room with him. It’s true that he may be pleasant in person, but the same can be said of some of the most horrible people in human history. pleasantries allow such people to fool most of the people most of the time, especially gullible and naive college students.

Reply to  scf
September 20, 2014 2:56 pm

Indeed. Anth0ny, if you ever fall into a snake pit with John Cook and a venomous cobra and you only have one bullet left in your gun ……..
… need I continue ?

Reply to  philincalifornia
September 20, 2014 4:18 pm

Why, I do believe we’ve found a snake lover!
LOL

Ian Schumacher
Reply to  scf
September 21, 2014 12:50 am

Who hasn’t had polite conversation with a co-worker where there strong mutual animosity? That’s the nature of civilized society (we hope anyways). Just don’t end up on a deserted island with them though. 😉

Ian Schumacher
September 20, 2014 2:38 pm

No offense to you Anthony, or to any others that attended, but why did you go exactly? It seems like it was a non-event devoid of information, argument or anything of value. Well, other than you got to be cordial with Cook and I ‘suppose’ that is worth ‘something’. However, you could have just gone out for a beer with him anywhere.

Ian Schumacher
Reply to  Anthony Watts
September 20, 2014 3:20 pm

Oh okay. Good to hear it. 🙂

Daryl M
Reply to  Ian Schumacher
September 21, 2014 9:23 am

I was going to ask the same question. Cook’s antics were insulting and juvenile. Why be fodder for his ridicule?

Mark
September 20, 2014 5:39 pm

I went hoping to hear some clever arguments. Instead I heard nothing clever at all, just an acolyte with limited imagination and small ability in power point presentations. Hubris and endless appeals to authority seemed to be the mainstay. I wonder if he would have so discounted Prof. Feynman’s analysis of the shuttle disaster when he was not, after all, a “rocket scientist”…