Full Disclosure – by Tim Ball and Anthony Watts
In a recent set of Tweets (seen in the image above) Dr. Michael Mann of ‘hockey stick’ infamy, accused Tim Ball and Anthony Watts of supporting the theories of Immanuel Velikovsky. He based his claim on an article about scientific elitism [Ball] wrote that Anthony Watts kindly published on his web site. Mann’s accusation is completely false and indicates he either failed to read the article or if he did, failed to understand its purpose. The objective of the original article and follow up was to show how self-appointed elitists hinder the advance of science. A majority who made written comments about the article understood and agreed with the premise.
The article examined the reaction and behavior of the scientific elite to anyone who produced ideas and information that challenged their views. It used the example of Immanuel Velikovsky as a person who was demonized by the scientific elitists because he hypothesized a different interpretation of planetary motion and interactions involving electromagnetism. Worse, he used historical records including the Bible to establish a database and time sequence of apparently natural events.
Neither Anthony nor I ever said we agreed with Velikovsky’s views on planetary motion. We pointed out that he worked with Einstein, who knew his claims and encouraged him. We also pointed out that some who initially attacked his work, like Professor Hess, later conceded that many of his predictions were confirmed. What Ball condemned was the nastiness and unsubstantiated basis of the attacks by high priests of the prevailing wisdom. The combined effect of the automatic rejection of new ideas with the character assassination of those who present them works to preclude steady advances in science. In other words, skepticism is not allowed, and skeptics are persona non grata. This results in mainstream science effectively claiming the debate is over, and the science is settled.
This is precisely what the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), of which Michael Mann was a member, did. Like Velikovsky, few of their conclusions were correct. More important, people can make judgments about Velikovsky because all of his data and ideas were available. The proper scientific method of presenting and testing a hypothesis was carried out in Velikovsky’s case. Unfortunately, the same was not true of the IPCC anthropogenic global warming (AGW) hypothesis, in which, as Richard Lindzen said very early in the process, the consensus was reached before the research had even begun.
Again, for the record, neither of us support Velikovsky’s views on planetary motion. Some of them are rightly labeled as ridiculous. However, to claim that we do, simply because the articles used him as an example of how some in science turn spiteful when confronted with ideas they see as threatening, is wrong, and the elitist premise is well illustrated by the ugly behavior of Dr. Mann and others.
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This looks like a great example to use if ever Mann is questioned about his truthfulness in any upcoming court case
The context of learning:
Good decisions come from wisdom.
Wisdom comes from bad decisions.
The guy’s a cretin, and a liar. Or maybe he just doesn’t understand plain English. He certainly knows nothing about the climate.
Something I learned decades ago is that people are stunningly BAD at reading. I got really tired of reading philosophy articles where X would criticise Y for alleging that X thought P when X’s previous paper clearly (hah) said not-P and then Y would accuse X of the same sort of thing. I even encountered a misreading by the holder of a PhD in English who misread a simple short letter as saying the opposite of what it did say. When our passions are engaged, our eyes slide along the text looking for pretexts to express our rage. It is really hard to read and understand what someone you’re at odds with wrote. I am no supporter of Mann, but in this case I think it was a simple typical misreading by someone who can read well enough normally. (I myself found the feminist glaciology paper almost impossible to read carefully.)
Richard A. O’Keefe March 9, 2016 at 3:01 am:
“I am no supporter of Mann, but in this case I think it was a simple typical misreading by someone who can read well enough normally.”
You are giving him far too much credit for actually having read something. Most likely one of his pals emailed him and said “Hey, look what I saw………………………” and he then just barfs it back up on his own Txxxxxxer account
Mann read it, and then decided he could smear Watts and Ball with a misrepresentation of what they said. Nothing wrong with his comprehension skills.
No, using a crackpot like Velikovsky to promote an argument against established science is a pretty big strategic blunder. Might as well advertise yourselves as flat-earthers. I can’t stand Mann but in this case, who wouldn’t jump on the opportunity presented?
Yet how are we to know that he, or anyone else for that matter, is a crackpot, unless we are able to discuss him? We’re supposed to just shut up and listen when other people slam the door on a topic with a label like “crackpot” or “flat-earther”? Hmm . . . where have I heard of that tactic being used before . . . maybe with the word “denier” . . . .
fwiw, Copernicus (for example) really was a crackpot. That he also happened to be right (at least in the big picture) doesn’t save him. He saw the heavens as “perfect” (a legitimate scientific concept in his day), and circles as “perfect”, and all his work was an attempt to free the celestial realm from the imperfections of messy epicycles and return to it the perfection of circles. I call him a crackpot because he was trying to force an ideology onto real-world observations, rather than discover what was really going on.
You are right that Mann jumped on it like a rabid hyena maliciously mis-representing the context. So when you ask who would not jump on those kind of opportunities to defame an opponent, I would say other than Mann and the people running as presidential nominees not many would.
Ironically Mann’s inflammatory rhetoric and incompetent to mediocre research could have his science reputation ending up in Velikeovshy territory; they both got a few things right and many other things horribly wrong.
Agreed w Legend. Anthony & Tim gave a freebie to Mann. Too easy. If the point was to promote the free market of ideas, plenty of other good examples were available. Velikovsky was a strange one. He was not a scientist in any sense of the word. He was no doubt brilliant, but, he looked to the bible and other ancient sources, and then tried to prove them to be accurate using science. Completely bass ackwards.
So, live and learn. Don’t offer own goals so easily.
Anyone who isn’t a liar. Anyone who conducts debates with the goal of discovering truth.
He wasn’t a crack pot, that is a label. Even if his investigations turned out a negative result, it rules out the possibility ergo science has advanced. Science advances when we find something to not be true, but given the weird emotion in your post, I’d say that is lost on you.
If we can rule out the theory as incorrect it is good for science. “Crack pot” doesn’t come into it unless you are one of those who just looks at science’s butt as it passes by.
I really dislike terms of character assassination, usually used by the scientifically illiterate as they snuggle up to preferred theory.
Velikovsky got some stuff right lets not forget, some stuff is out there but given the topic, should we expect anyone to be right 100%
Hawking said the whole universe was squashed into a point, a coordinate, 0 volume and infinite temperature. A statement that followed maths down the rabbit hole and ignored the basic laws of physics a 10 year old knows. There are plenty more examples of this ridiculous type of assertion from the Authority in astrophysics, many more.
@Kozlowski:
Whichever way you look at it, the bible comprises a set of historical documents. Riddled with error, allegory, corrupted to suit the whims of the powerful (like any other religious and many other historical texts) maybe, but also as good as it gets as far as insight into some past civilisations and events go. Corroboration and alignment of information between religious texts in an effort to reduce error and increase their value as historical documents is a completely reasonable exercise, and no less valid in helping to build up a hypothesised historical picture than comparing proxy measurements in paleo-climatology. FYI I say this as an atheist.
I don’t remember much about Velikovski beyond what I read in the ‘Mysteries of the Unexplained’ books I loved as a kid, but as I understand it, he proposed some kind of ancient cataclysm involving a near miss with a large celestial object. This was based on his understanding of astronomy combined with historical research into religious texts of unconnected civilisations, using the themes common between them to build up a possible picture of the nature and timing of this event.
Obviously this involves post-hoc reasoning – Velikovsky started off with a conclusion, then looked for strands of evidence buried in a great deal of noise to support this. As such, he was prone to selection bias, and his results could not be presented as scientific fact. Using known physical properties such as planetary motion built in a sheen of respectability, which might have even convinced him that he was doing science rather than speculation. By holding Velikovsky up as the embodiment of pseudo science, Mann is ironically hurling some pretty big rocks around inside a flimsy greenhouse. As far as I know, at least Velikovsky didn’t attempt to bury his dodgy methodology in layers of bogus statistics and spurious averaging. This has been done in studies of religious texts, leading to ‘proof’ of biblical prophesy no less scientifically valid than the proxy-mangling of Mann and his cohorts.
Even if he was wrong in his conclusions and results, Velikovsky pursued them in a spirit of enquiry. They may yet turn out to be correct, even if by accident (there was no doubt some kind of historical cataclysm in the past 10,000 years – multiple lines of study including genetics confirm this), but it seems the speculative nature of his work meant it was never really taken seriously – especially not to the point where it became the cornerstone of a pseudo-scientific religion that would put a global economy was put in jeapordy. So why then the bile? His use as a piñata by the science establishment and the sheer sneeriness with which his name is used speaks more of the sneerers than of his work. To invoke another vague and generally unscientific branch of science, I would call that ‘projection’.
So you are saying that we shouldn’t give liars the chance to lie about us.
However since they are already known to be liars, wouldn’t they lie about us anyway?
Your argument makes no sense and advises surrender in advance on any topic which may be controversial.
Which is what the liars want us to do.
Out of context, sound-bite arguments. That’s Twitter for you.
Twitter may be new and in vogue but IMO it’s kids’ stuff.
It was a good strategy by Ball and Watts to suck Mann into exposing himself yet again as someone who does not let facts get in the way of pushing his ideology.
@ur momisugly Legend – I entirely agree – the premise of using Velikovsky in this context was deeply flawed. Yes we that are more open minded can see the inference understand the point made.
But given the known levels of ignorance and arrogance from the likes of Mann and his ability to bend the truth this was akin to widening your own goal posts to make it easier to have a goal scored against you.
Andy
Is it true that Michael Mann likes – say – marshmallows?
Or Malted Milk?
Or Milk?
Or mild and bitter?
And does that say anything about his science?
The questions – no, absolutely not!
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So Mann may be a proven liar who recklessly mis-represents his claimed nobel prize, his involvement in the cover of a Nature issue, the multiple “exonerations”, the data requests from Steve McIntyre, whether or not he performed certain statistical checks and many other things. Now he falsely claims something about an opponent, despite quoting directly from the paragraph where that person made his position clear.
Does that say anything about his science? That is for others to judge.
self-appointed elitists hinder the advance of science
Elite scientists are elite because their scientific work is generally accepted by the scientific community [sometimes wrongly – but such is real science]. To use Velikovsky as an example of an under-appreciated genius is beyond the pale. Fools like V abound in the current pseudo-scientific ‘discourse’ on blogs and forums. It diminishes WUWT to endorse such nonsense as examples of anything else than V’s foolishness. Now, I understand the common human response to defend putting foot in mouth and the current post is a good example of this.
As I said in a previous reply to Steve McIntyre on one of the other threads, I agree that a better example could have been used. I wasn’t all that familiar with Velikovsky nor had I ever read Worlds in Collision when Ball proposed the original article, and didn’t anticipate how the article would be received. Had I been more familiar, or had the time to research the controversy (the article was submitted over the weekend), I would have asked Dr. Ball to find another example, and if he couldn’t not run the article at all. As proprietor of WUWT, the error [in] judgment is mine.
But like anything in life or science, if you don’t make mistakes yourself, and learn from the mistakes of others, you never learn anything. For certain, this will be the last article on Velikovsky on WUWT.
Let us hope that Dr. Bell will learn from his mistake.
err… Ball.
I think you are being overly defensive here. In the politics of this it was a mistake to use Velikeovshy (although it did flush Mann out), but I didn’t think you used him as an example of an “unappreciated genius”. The point was that science needs to be able to dispose of these blind alleys in a dispassionate way.
See my response to GKarst. No, “unappreciated genius” is not a term I used, nor would I. Ball didn’t use it either and while I can’t speak definitely for him, I don’t believe he would have used a term like that either.
“The point was that science needs to be able to dispose of these blind alleys in a dispassionate way.” Well said.
I hardly think that facilitating a legitimate posting of an article that may be linked to wacky science constitutes justification for self-mortification on your part, especially at the hands of a tw@t like Mann who, under the veil of legitimate, peer-reviewed science, perpetrated a hoax on humanity at the level of the Piltdown man scandal.
On its face, humility is meritorious. But you “publish” any number or wacky articles from the CAGW crowd and you need not apologize for giving light to their BS. I think you ought to retract your mae culpa for a lapse in judgement. I don’t think you ought to read, understand, judge, and assume responsibility for every article on this blog. The comment section serves as adequate opportunity for scrutiny and condemnation. IMO.
Mann is trying to put you in a box. A box you don’t belong in. This blog is fantastic because it is open and not a Procrustean bed of conformity.
Out of curiosity, I downloaded ‘Worlds in Collision’. I took one look at it and asked for a refund. 🙂
Why is everyone so sanctimonious? Crikey, can’t we discuss what is right and good about someone now and then, even if they are wrong 9 times out of 10? Mr V was not wrong 90% of the time and it drives people crazy apparently that he was right about anything at all. It is the ‘I have never been wrong’ attitude particularly of academics that makes them such boring dinner guests. Why not use the example set by Einstein who encouraged what was sensible and ignored what was not.
All this pontificating about who was ‘wrong once so he must be a nutter’ smacks of elitism and self-aggrandizement. What an unforgiving and hypocritical attitude. Why is Newton forgiven his nuttiness? Einstein was wrong about several things. We still find him venerated as a demi-god. Cantor couldn’t even get the very basics of infinite series right and undermined all of modern mathematics, yet we find him lauded and his errors are still taught as gospel.
How many times do you have to be right to make a contribution the progress of humanity? Once, in my book.
I don’t think you need to apologize at all. As I pointed out in my rather overlong comment downthread, Velikovsky was a polymath and scholar with a fascinating mind, with a long history of asking interesting questions in a variety of fields before his Worlds in Collision.
It was that book that so inflamed the small circle of academic astronomers that they forced his publisher to withdraw the profitable book and give it to another (non-academic) publisher. Dr. Ball might have chosen a less controversial example, but it was perfectly appropriate for him to cite the astronomers’ outrageous display of elite arrogance as an archetype of the vile misbehavior of the Climatist elite today. It is illustrative of their small-mindedness that they seize upon the opprobrium still associated with Velikovsky’s name to try to disparage you and Dr. Ball. Don’t fall for it.
/Mr Lynn
Use J Harlen Bretz (geologist): coined the term “channeled scablands” in a series of papers written in the 1920s. This is long story but fits perfectly.
“Mr V was not wrong 90% of the time”
But it does matter when he is ‘right’ for the wrong reasons. Basing your ‘science’ on ancient texts isn’t the way to discover the truth.
It’s like saying because Nostradamus was ‘right’ about something that he should be taken seriously. Much if that can be attributed to chance & interpretation.
The Wikipedia article is here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J_Harlen_Bretz
An excellent example, of which I was unaware, of the resistance of establishment elites in science to anything that challenges the prevailing ‘conventional wisdom’ of the field—in this case, the dogma of uniformitarianism, which had originated in part in contradistinction to Biblical tales of floods and catastrophes:
Interestingly, the same uniformitarian doctrine, under which geological changes always took crept along at a glacial pace (as it were), also inflamed the extreme reaction to Velikovsky’s ideas. As an example of how entrenched this dogma was, it took over half a century before J. Harlen Bretz’s work was rewarded, when he was 96:
Let’s hope the doctrine of Catastrophic Global Warming by Anthropogenic Emission of CO2 is not so long-lived.
/Mr Lynn
This is a response to Kozlowski:
“But it does matter when he is ‘right’ for the wrong reasons. Basing your ‘science’ on ancient texts isn’t the way to discover the truth.”
Ancients are not dumb. They have, in their own way, without using computers and without the concept of the mathematical zero, were still able to calculate heavenly calendars. We could learn from them. The bible is actually an eye opener and how “Moses” could actually be an accomplished medical practitioner.
I think you’re being too defensive here Anthony, I’ve read “Worlds in Collision” and found it interesting in so far as the questions he, Velikovsky, raised. I didn’t believe his theory but didn’t feel that he was a “crackpot”. He had (still) unanswered questions about Venus, like why it’s axis and rotation are in retrograde to other planets, he came forward with an explanation that Venus was a comet of Jupiter that had come into near collision with the Earth, and physicists, in particular Carl Sagan, proved that the known physics didn’t support that explanation. Wiser heads than Sagan, like Einstein, were more tolerant, presumably because he’d seen a shift in the paradigm of “known” physics twice in his lifetime and encouraged Velikovsky in his work. And why not? He wasn’t after all doing anyone any harm, and was largely ignored.
There was another crackpot around during the 17th Century produced a book call Principa – Newton was incensed by the widespread scepticism of his peers, but eventually won out.
His scientific exploits are now, of course, legendary, but they were almost an aside to his real life’s work which was to figure out how to make gold our of heavy metals. I’d be careful calling anyone a crackpot until all the facts are in.
You shouldn’t be apologising either for yourself or Dr. Ball, who may have been better quoting the reaction to Newton’s Principia, or indeed his white light was the result of mixing many colours which the Royal Society refused to publish, as examples of scientific intolerance. Newton won because he was right, at least until Einstein came along. Velakovsky and Fred Holye lost because they were wrong, at least for the time being. You never know in science, so in my view it’s always best to take on others ideas and respond with grace rather than ridicule, like Einstein.
Well said Anthony. I have certainly learned a lot from this thread alone and a massive amount from WUWT over the years. Thank you.
So when the heat is turned up you self-censor? This is real progress…where thesis and antithesis collide and produce synthesis. Velikovsky did what all scientists do. He observed (historical observations) and tried to explain the observations. That is what Newton did. J. Harlen Bretz used this when he studied scab land formation in 1923 but his theories were not accepted until much later. Marshall and Warren broke the settled science of stomach ulcer formation in 2005. Alfred Wegener was ridiculed for the theory of continental drift. In 1847, Ignaz Semmelweis proposed hand-washing to prevent infections in obstetrics, He was placed in an insane asylum and shortly thereafter beaten to death by the guards. The list goes on and on; settled science does not like to be upset.
Take the heat because the lime light produces it. Don’t let your enemies control the script.
Here is one more study that seems to break a modern consensus.
http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/cover_story/2016/03/ego_depletion_an_influential_theory_in_psychology_may_have_just_been_debunked.html
I don’t think using Velikovsky was a mistake at all. Just as referring to Telsa wasn’t a mistake. It raised a lot of good comments.
I have a brother-in-law who is an engineer and a teacher. He loves to take the “contrarian” position in discussions at times to draw people into a discussion to try to prove their point (even if he actually agrees with their position). It forces folks to actually THINK about what they are saying.
Since the article made it’s point regardless of the reference, and clearly caused a whole lot of thinking, it was a success.
Further, looking at where the “man’s” Twxxt went, it was very effective in demonstrating the point of the article.
I don’t understand the invective.
Seems to me the point has been well made.
The best example from recent times of overturning an established consensus against overwhelming opposition; where the ideas had to be published in privately produced publications because of resistance from journal editors and reviewers and the work could not be pursued in established institutions but necessitated establishing a private research facility is surely the story of Peter Mitchell and Chemiosmotic theory for which he eventually won the Nobel Prize. Some would say that the sheer complexity of biology which doesn’t easily lend itself to the application of overarching physical laws is the reason that controversies like this can arise in this discipline. Complexity being a major issue in this context – with some work it could have made a rather nice example – rather than this Velikovsky nonesense. The story behind chemiosmotic theory is in any event a fascinating one.
“Elite scientists are elite because their scientific work is generally accepted by the scientific community [sometimes wrongly – but such is real science].” General acceptability is mostly a function of the political environment of the times and one can always follow the money, employment opportunities and social status associated with being on the correct side of an argument. Never looked into Velikovsky, but he’s not the point. Open discussion is the point. Self appointment can be accomplished by ensuring that one does not rock the boat.
“Elite scientists are elite because their scientific work is generally accepted by the scientific community [sometimes wrongly – but such is real science].” General acceptability in science is most times a function of the political emphasis and direction of the times and one can always follow the money, employment opportunies and social status given to those on the correct side of an issue. Self appointment to the elite can be accomplished by consistently being on the right side.
“Elite scientists” are humbug, pure and simple. Scientists either play by the simplest of rules: observe, hypothesize and share, so that others can evaluate the hypothesis in light of the claimed observations, or they pretend to have achieved the final answer and “see no need” to share. Scientists in any field feel not infrequently that defending a “perfectly good” theory against “anecdotal claims” [observations contrary to theoretical expectation]. The solution is to marginalize the originator of the alternative views or contrary observations, or, if you are attempting to establish a new view, to demonize and accuse “main stream” supporters of conspiracy and corruption. The intensity of this contest is a sound measure of just how poorly we actually understand the relevant science. A conclusion easily reached is that we are and will remain profoundly ignorant for the foreseeable future.
There’s a difference between rationalization and trying to make oneself properly understood.
Dr. Ball chose an ‘interesting’ example. He has adequately demonstrated that some so-called scientists are less interested in discussing ideas than they are in smacking down people who espouse ideas they don’t like.
I’m currently reading “Galileo’s Middle Finger’ by Alice Dreger. It has examples that make Michael Mann look like a nice guy.
Yes, see anything on Tom Dillehay:
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/10848/title/Monte-Verde-Archeologist-Prevails-In-Dispute-Over-Settlement-s-Age/
Here is a guy who was obviously an expert, but it took over a decade for a paradigm to even start to shift.
Sound familiar?
BTW, the Old Guard are still fighting:
http://www.uky.edu/Projects/MonteVerde/monteverde.pdf
Sound familiar?
I couldn’t get one link to work (because of my paranoid security settings) and the other looked like a 49 page rant. 🙂 I wimped and went to wiki.
Summary: For a long time Clovis was considered to be the oldest human settlement in the Americas. Anyone who suggested differently was treated to the usual contumely and disrespect. The controversy concerns a site in South America that predates Clovis by a lot.
commieBob March 8, 2016 at 1:45 pm
Sorry ’bout that, Chief.
Yes, the PDF is a bit of a (well deserved) rant, where Dr. Dillehay rips one particular critic (Fiedel) a new one for basically being a dishonest and Mannian in his non-scientific “science” review:
“…he selected passages and data to support his position, compared preliminary statements made ten to
fifteen years ago with those in the final report and accused us of changing our minds about
the data, and took quotes out of context to indicate that our analysis was chaotic and
inadequate.”
and
“Why wasn’t the Fiedel essay reviewed properly? We cannot escape the conclusion that the appeal of translating science for public consumption and for expanded readership was too tempting for Discovering Archaeology and Fiedel. There is no scholarly and scientific reason why this type of erroneous, misleading, and inflammatory review was published. We encourage constructive scientific discourse and review of major publications, but in refereed scientific journals, not popular, unjuried magazines.”
lsvalgaard- why did you read (and quote) exactly what was said, and then respond to something else? The quote you opened with is “self-appointed elitists hinder the advance of science”. The you said that “Elite scientists are elite because their scientific work is generally accepted by the scientific community”.
Do you NOT understand that a “self appointed” elitist differs from one who truly is “elite”? Then you follow that by putting Velikovsky in a context that neither Anthony nor Ball did-calling him an “under-appreciated genius”. Why is it that the vast majority of readers and commenters on that post got the gist of what Ball was saying perfectly clearly, but you and Mann and others seem to have missed the whole forest for one tree?
It is my opinion that neither Bell nor Anthony put their “foot in their mouths” here, and in all honesty, I find those who took a mere mentioned example meant to highlight a greater point-and made THAT the object of scorn and ridicule to not only lack personal introspection, but to almost perfectly define THE ACTUAL POINT of that article! It’s petty, irrational, and completely UNscientific to make assumptions about what someone else thinks, without ANY evidence to support them, and then chastise that someone else based on your own false assumptions.
You don’t get the privilege of deciding or declaring what “diminishes WUWT” in my eyes or to anyone else. You don’t get to define what is “beyond the pale” to me or others. Your opinions are entirely your own and that’s about as much value as they have in my eyes no matter who you are or how “elite” you might be.
10,000 likes !!!
Aphan – well said. I agree with Marcus “10,000 likes !!!”
I’ve seen it before. They can’t win on scientific reasoning, so in comes the emotional blackmail in the form of disapproval and disappointment in an attempt to control what gets posted on this site.
well said aphan
Because he is self-appointed, maybe?
Thank you Aphan a million likes, on the day of that blog the Dr was not nice.
Errr… Ball. Hahaha
“Elite scientists are elite because their scientific work is generally accepted by the scientific community.” Do you see it happening in climate science?
It is interesting to me how the name “Velikovsky” continues to endure after all these years, and how someone now dead and so thoroughly discredited can engender such powerful characterizations as being a “fool” and that the very mention of his name “diminishes WUWT.” My goodness! What, in fact is there to fear from his ideas after all? Perhaps it isn’t so much the content of his ideas as it is the fact that he was willing to think outside the box and not accept the dominant scientific dogma of the times. Some of the greatest strides in science are made by unconventional thinkers, not by the conformists.
Hmm. Interesting. You do realize your definition of ‘elite’ is a self-referencing corollary? It’s the sort of thing I’d expect an elite scientist to pick up on. As a curious aside I discovered that Dunning-Kreuger’s favorite children always regard themselves as the brightest and best. It has made me wary about every regarding myself that way.
Well…Velikovsky predicted the retrograde rotation of Venus, which was scoffed at by the scientific elite. Guess what? We know today that he was right. Maybe his postulation of cause was wrong, but I do not know that. What is t he current explanation? Is it any better?
glad a couple here arent dissing him
I read it and found it to be as acceptable as any other premises about far past events as many other theories
he didnt just use biblical refs
he used many other nations/tribes etc historical records and to me the global nature of the natural disaster so many went through wasnt too bad in trying to puzzle out wtf? happened
and yeah explain Venus spinning the wrong way.
every cluster of humans that could leave records do seem to have had the same epic event in their remains..so why cant Velikovsky be right?
So the “elite” form a self-confirming circle of acquaintances and only those who agree with the current elite are entitled to become elite themselves.
And you actually approve of this?
Dr Svalgaard,
The critical part of the sentence you quote is “self-appointed”. Elite scientists do not set themselves up as such – they become elite because their peers appreciate their contributions and ask them to present their work or to collaborate with them. The issue with “climate science” is that this has become a small self-appointed group who have set themselves up as arbiters of what is accepted or acceptable – or far far worse – what can even be debated.
What we have learned over the various investigations is that the IPCC process was undermined in its infancy by a small group who promoted colleagues of like mind and created a set of people who were – by definition – a self-appointed elite. The work done by scientists outside this group has shown ample evidence that the publications of the climate science “elite” are often very poor and certainly not refereed with anything like sufficient rigour.
I appreciate this post is about attacking the premise because the author used an example you disagree with, but I think the point of the original post is still perfectly valid – even in light of your own contribution above.
I wonder what, if anything, Mann thinks there is to be learned from the Galileo case?
As seen on liveScience ..”science”…hmmm
http://www.livescience.com/33673-tree-rings-sound-record-player.html
Yet another artist makes up data using tree rings. I wonder if he is related to Michael Mann? Mann’s nature trick was… art.
Wait till time stamp 0:30…
https://vimeo.com/traubeck/years
It looks like Mann took the bait and Gobbeled it all up. Res ipsa loquitur.
“Gobbeled”
I see what you did there.
Excellent allusion.
Carl Sagan was one of the establishment scientists attacking Velikovsky. Funnily enough, he botched his attack badly.
Sagan calculated the odds of the Velikovskian near-collisions and arrive at the figure of a trillion quadrillion to one. One tiny problem — in this calculation Sagan neglected the force of gravity! In response Dr. Robert Jastrow (of NASA’s Goddard Institute of Space Studies (and a science writer as well) wrote in a letter to the NY Times:
“Professor Sagan’s calculations, in effect, ignore the law of gravity. Here, Dr. Velikovsky, was the better astronomer.”
Beautifully irony… which seems to curse all those who dismiss Velikovsky outright. GK
Apparently Velikovsky and Sagan (and Jastrow) released their data.
There’s a lesson there somewhere.
Some of Immanuel Velikovsky’s ideas are as inexplicable and in the same genre as the extreme catastrophism advocated by a small but very active number of climate scientists.
That is a very valid point.
Hansen’s “The oceans will boil” comes to mind.
Exactly. I don’t accept you lapse in judgement apology. Mann is attempting to influence your freedom to publish anything critical of the 97% mind set.
An editor’s job is to do his/her best to find/anticipate any problems with an article. Given the wild controversy surrounding Velikovsky, I could have easily anticipated how such an article would be used as political fodder had I known more about it or had read Worlds in Collision. The article was received on the weekend, while I was in the middle of family time. Rather than defer it until I had more time, I chose to publish it because on the surface, I didn’t anticipate any problems with it.
Both Dr. Svalgaard and Steve McIntyre were critical of the decision to run it, I defer to their better informed opinion.
I don’t accept
===========
There is no need to apologize. Mann is arguing the man, not the facts, because the facts are not on his side. These are the tactics of a bully. By reacting, you have encouraged Mann to bully you in the future.
The question is not whether Velikovsky is right or wrong. 1000 years from now, virtually everything that any of us today believe to be true will be found to have been false. Future scientists will laugh at our ignorance, just like we laugh at the ignorance of scholars that lived 1000 years ago.
Yet the people that lived 1000 years ago were just as smart as us, and they were just as convinced in the correctness of their beliefs. In almost every aspect they were exactly like us today.
Do you remember when you were growing up and being told that margarine was healthier than butter? Now you are told that butter is healthier and margarine contains dangerous hydrogenated fats. And that is only over the past 50 years.
Why think that anything else we believe will be different?
“Both Dr. Svalgaard and Steve McIntyre were critical of the decision to run it, I defer to their better informed opinion.”
Why Anthony? It’s YOUR blog. You don’t have to defer to anyone. Not one single person who reads and comments here regularly suddenly joined some Velikovsky Astronomy Cult simply because the name was mentioned on WUWT. We are NOT the blind, stupid, sheep we so often get accused of being. We are open minded, thoughtful, intelligent human beings capable of reading Velikovsky’s theories (if we were interested enough) and coming to our own conclusions about him. Those opinions about HIM are completely irrelevant to the article entirely, because the article was about how he was TREATED…not what he BELIEVED.
What you or Ball BELIEVE was also not the point of the article, not mentioned in the article, and has been mistakenly and arrogantly ASSUMED by others and then ridiculed as if correct. Its the very mind set that the article was trying to highlight as being harmful to scientific discussion!! Don’t apologize for not fitting precisely into a mold someone else thinks you need to! Not even if those people are on the same side of the climate debate you are on! For crying out loud, we can SEE and HEAR their groupthink in every word they say….please don’t let group think on THIS side start to creep in as well! We loathe it from all sources.
” I could have easily anticipated how such an article would be used as political fodder had I known more about it or had read Worlds in Collision.”
Yes you could have, I suspect. I just don’t think that it is reasonable for you to have to read the works, bio’s and criticisms of every Tom, Dick and Harry, all the time. That logical steel trap is a juvenile one, appropriate for the likes of Mann. For heaven’s sake the criticism is from a man who claimed to be a Nobel Prize winner. I trust your editorial judgement and will abide but it is worth asserting that the value of WUWT resides in the critique of mainstream conventions. Lewandowsky would love to play the political card of appropriate skepticism = derangement, at every turn. Politics is politics. Not science. You will feel the effects of politics at the hands of Mann et al, even though they themselves claim to be robots of science. I hope, and I believe that I am not alone, that your editorial judgement is not influenced by a documented compulsive li@r. You think that this is a science blog. It isn’t just that. It is a TRUTH blog. Science has lost its luster at the hands of the politicians at the UN, Hadley CRU, NOAA, NASA etc etc. Truth-telling is a tighter tightrope than “science” these days.
If Velikovsky is persona non grata for being incorrect I look forward to never seeing Mann referred to again in this blog for the same reason (and no more photos of him – HOORAY!)
Anthony, please don’t give in to the emotional bullying. This “disapproval” and “disappointment” expressed has begun to pop up every time you get too close to the bone. They can’t fight you any other way. They seem to have used it successfully to stop you reporting on Pachauri (as one example that I’ve noticed) and so they will use it again and again in every area they don’t want to see supported.
Your article was about elitism and bullying. Mann’s response (and others’ in comments above) are precisely that and – yes – an example of the very thing you were highlighting. Don’t let them herd you or undermine you. Your readers have no problem with this blog, your choices, nor with truth. We are adult thinkers here.
My guess is that behind the scenes you’ve been bombarded by “disapproval”. Please recognize the game they are playing and the levers they are pulling. And the reasons they are so keen to stop you!
AW, I agree with most posters in this part of the thread that no apology is needed.
I have two points to make:
1. Your esteem in my mind was increased by you essentially saying that “the buck stops here”. I appreciate greatly someone who is willing to stand behind his work and decisions. But I still think that no apology was needed and on this point you should reexamine. I agree with others that this is bullying and it seems you might be falling into the same trap those who blame themselves rather than the bully.
2. If you have to detailed expert background knowledge about a potential post prior to you deciding to publish it, that will slow down the content on here drastically. I come here because of not only quality, but quantity as well. I certainly don’t agree with all the topics (or how they are presented sometimes) that appear here. But I very much appreciate being treated like an adult and having the chance to decide based on each post’s merits. So, keep it going as is, in my humble opinion.
Mann has thereby provided support for at least one of the Delingpole Conjectures: http://cliscep.com/2016/02/17/the-delingpole-conjectures-are-they-plausible-do-they-matter/
‘What I really should have said is that these [alarmist climate scientists] are a bunch of lying, cheating, scum-sucking, bottom-feeding, third-rate tosspots who don’t even deserve the name “scientists” because what they practise isn’t really science but data-fiddling, cherry-picking, grant-troughing, activism-driven propaganda.’
The “Mann” seems to actually be quite frightened. Couldn’t happen to a nice guy…
Defending yourself from such obvious trivia is a mistake. It only undercuts you intentions and makes you appear weak. This is the 3rd article on this subject and repeating yourself only makes you sound weak and erodes confidence of your position. Some attacks should be ignored especially when the attack merely hurts your ego. My 2 cents. GK
I agree, this series is obviously an ego-trip. Perhaps Dr. Ball compares himself to Velikovsky and would also have liked a better reception of his ideas from the scientific community…
Perhaps Dr. Ball compares
==============
that is a cheap attack and speaks poorly for your own character.
Funny, every time you open your mouth, you sink lower into the cesspool of egotistical elitists !
Marcus, I’ve met Dr. Svalgaard on more than one occasion and I find him to be open and engaging. Using “elitist” is an irrational label for the man based on my experience.
..Maybe his ONLINE personality seems a little more arrogant then ?…or maybe I need more coffee !
Anthony,
“Marcus, I’ve met Dr. Svalgaard on more than one occasion and I find him to be open and engaging. Using “elitist” is an irrational label for the man based on my experience.”
Can you show us any examples of him being “open and engaging” here? I’ve never seen or experienced anything remotely resembling “open and engaging” from the man . .
I recently sent a private email to Dr S. He took the time to answer as if we had known each other for years. He may seem harsh on this blog but not if you use facts and figures and avoid speculation or junk science. During the years I have been reading this blog, Dr S will always give references and links for those who show a genuine interest in learning. Remember he is a working scientist who takes time out of his busy schedule to post here for the betterment of those who are wise enough to take advantage of his knowledge.
It seems to me that some, quite possibly including Anthony, think “elitist” means can’t or won’t be reasonable to anyone . . but it means can’t or won’t be reasonable to regular folks, to me.
I see clear evidence of elitism around here in the way many react to something like the notion that anyone with wealth/power must be excluded from any potential “conspiracy” . . there are many thousands of people in prison as we speak, convicted of various forms of conspiracy, so how in the world could a truly scientific thinker accept that they don’t occur?
Every gang, mafia, cartel, crime syndicate, etc,which obviously exist in large numbers is by definition conspiracy ridden, and every revolution or coup is as well . . and yet otherwise rational people around here act like it is crazy to even consider the possibility that any “elites” might engage in any form of conspiracy . . That’s elitism to me, plain and simple.
The more you speak about this topic the more I understand why Tim Ball wrote the article in the first place.
Your behaviour has been absolutely pathetic and is doing you more harm than good because people are just going to treat you with contempt if you carry on like this.
If my ego was bothered by such attacks, you’d see an article like this regularly. I have a pretty thick skin from years of experience. Case in point: my Internet Stalker Miriam O’Brien aka Sou/Hotwhopper writes ugly and spiteful articles about myself and contributors here on an almost daily basis. It has become her life’s mission it seems.
In this case Mann did something with specific intent, and it was clearly wrong. It needed to be refuted.
Perhaps a law suit is whats needed from you guys since such an attack is meant to really smear you? Dont know if I am trying to be funny or not given the way things are today. But such claims certainly are intent to damage you and Dr Bell. I honestly can’t understand Dr Mann’s attacks sometimes. Why does he want to get into it with Stein, etal, given his lofty position in the movement. Its like using your king to attack in chess. Its not as if the AGW movement is not funded to the max, or given the current enso driven global spike, there is not reason for other lines of parry. Cretins like me ( have grown to accept my status, and it wasnt hard, even with my supposed ego) have a tough time understanding this, as it seems to be really not even an effective, ( yet alone accurate) vehicle.
Anthony Watts , Joe Bastardi
There may be an more effective way. Open a conversation with the Trusties of Penn state. Also the Ethics department of Dr Mann’s College
Give them copies of the blog article and comments.
Ask how could Dr Mann come to the conclusions that he did, and do they think he is properly represent their University
This maybe a better avenue and possibly more fun .
michael duhancik
Just an FYI for readers,
There’s an “Alan Cates” commenting on this thread who isn’t the real Alan Cates, but is using that identity. We know who is doing this, and are prepping to deal with this person. This is just a note for anyone that might wonder where that comment went. It went into our evidence file.
Seconded. “Twitter” to me seems like a platform for Tourette’s-like blurtings which no one should take seriously. Total waste of time.
Velikovsky’s ideas are useful as a case study in the disconnect between academic freedom of speech and academic censorship, just as Lysenko’s ideas are useful as a case study in the perils of politically sanctioned ‘science.’.
You might like to pretend that people are open to discussing the ideas of Velikovsky, but in fact anyone who goes against gravitational “consensus” is just as hated as AGW skeptics.
Electromagnetic forces do everything on earth but do nothing once out of the atmospheric envelope. Gravity rules supreme in space. Any other theory is heresy.
This whole thing might have been avoided if Dr. Ball’s article was taken as the thought experiment that it was.
However, the Manns of this world would still use it for political mud, as they really are confused by both “thought” and “experiment”.
For a compelling history of blind recourse to scientific ‘authority’ readers are pointed to the early 20th century story of Imamura and Omori, both practicing professors in the early field of seismology. Circa 1905 Imamura predicted a good chance that an ‘overdue’ earthquake would hit Tokyo in the next 20 years and the subsequent firestorm would kill 100,000. He suggested the government bulk up fire fighting capabilities to lessen the pending disaster.
Officials deferred to Omori, a couple of years senior to Imamura and head of the professional society. Not wanting to be upstaged by his junior, Omori dismissed the warning and no action ensued.
In 1923 the big one hit and you guessed it, 100,000 were incinerated.
The double tragedy is that in 2007 researchers suggested that Japanese nuclear plants were underdesigned for tsunamis but it was decided by the plant operators that further study was needed. We all know what happened at Fukushima Daichi in 2011.
Exactly zero people died from the “nuclear plant disaster”. About 16,000 people died as a result of the tsunami.
No one was even hurt by radiation. Nuclear power plants like everything else are designed to certain expected design criteria. For example, school buses could be designed to get children home in a flash flood but we do that because it would be too expensive. Instead we train bus drivers not to drive into water.
In the nuclear industry we use emergency plans to deal with the unexpected. When new experience such as the events in 2007 change the design basis, nuke plants are either shut down or modified.
I am a nuclear safety expert. Our job is to make sure no one is hurt by following established design criteria (see 10CFR50 , App B) including plants in Japan. We have a perfect safety record with regards radiation.
Retired Kit P
So, you’ve solved the nuclear waste storage problem!
Fantastic – what is it?
Chip, like you, I am not a nuclear safety expert. You may be able able to help me – what are technical problems with the Yucca Mountains depository?
I’ve been a nuclear engineer for 40 years, many of which were spent in safety analysis. I can say with authority:
1) Fukushima Daichi was a tragedy. About 1,000 to 2,000 of the 100,000 people evacuated from the Fukushima Prefecture died an early death due to loneliness (their grown children avoided them over fear of radiation – ‘Don’t visit me in Tokyo for the protection of your grandchildren!’), despair, and depression. This has been documented. You would be depressed too if the government forced you to leave your home and live in a steel box with no return date to your now abandoned town.
2) Fukushima Daichi was a disaster for Tokyo Electric. It will cost the company and Japanese government in excess of $50B $US.
3) Fukushima Diachi was bad for the credibility of the nuclear industry, severely hurting public support in Japan with spillover to Korea.
4) Fukushima Daichi was avoidable if the Japanese people had learned from their history of the Imamura-Omori debate a century earlier.
The MSM here in Australia consinually state that 3 reactors at the plant went in to “meltdown”, which is entirely wrong!
Robert, it sounds like a portion of the tragedy you describe was and is the overblown fears associated with the word “radiation”.
“Exactly zero people died from the ‘nuclear plant disaster’” and the nuclear plant disaster was not caused the reactor or its fuel. The backup power for the cooling pumps failed when the tsunami flooded the diesel powered generators.
There are no logical reasons to oppose nuclear power.
All of the high level nuclear waste produced by electricity generation over the last 50+ years could be safely disposed of for less than a penny per kWh. Nuclear waste disposal is a 100% political problem. The successful WIPP facility in New Mexico is proof that high level nuclear waste can be safely geologically sequestered. Salt layers are just one of many ideal geologic repositories…
Even the most high-level and toxic waste can be safely disposed of geologically…
The entire inventory of high-level radioactive waste produced by US nuclear power plants over the last 50+ years could be safely disposed of for about $71 billion.
From 1965 through 2011, nuclear power plants generated 22,219.57 TWh of electricity (22.2 TRILLON kWh). $71 billion works out to 0.3¢/kWh… One-third of one penny per kilowatt-hour. And that cost would decline over time as technological advances deflate the real cost of drilling.
The New Mexico site had to overcome a lot of NIMBY’ism (Not In My Back Yard ‘ism)…
However this facility has been a huge success. Three counties in the Permian Basin (Eddy & Lea, NM and Loving, TX) are competing for a second facility.
The ideal geologic repository is Yucca Mountain, Nevada… Currently the “poster child” for green mental illness & NIMBY’ism.
The only “cons” are of a political nature.
Carl Sagan said essentially the same thing as both Anthony and Dr. Bell. If he’d said it today, would the smear campaign have been the same, I wonder?
“Many hypotheses proposed by scientists as well as non-scientists turn out to be wrong. But science is a self-correcting enterprise. To be accepted, all new ideas must survive rigorous scientific standards of evidence. The worse aspect of the Velikovsky affair is not that his hypotheses were wrong or in contradiction to firmly established facts, but that some who called themselves scientists attempted to suppress Velikovksy’s works. Science is generated by and devoted to free enquiry: the idea that any hypothesis, no matter how strange, deserves to be considered on its merits.”
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45122/45122-h/45122-h.htm#Page_190
Every true Science is like a hardy Alpine guide that leads us on from the narrow, though it may be the more peaceful and charming, valleys of our preconceived opinions, to higher points, apparently less attractive, nay often disappointing for a time, till, after hours of patient and silent climbing, we look round and see a new world around us.
PROFESSOR MAX MÜLLER
I love Velikovsky. His is a very elaborate theory, consistent with lots of observations, yet completely bonkers. A stark example of genius out-of-the-box crackpot theory.
And that is perhaps the best description of Velikovsky. I read ‘worlds in collision’ in about 1973. I was impressed by some of the research and it raised interesting questions about various space originating catastrophes, but I dint buy the whole cigar. Occams Razor. It was too complex really,.
“This is precisely what the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), of which Michael Mann was a member, did. Like Velikovsky, few of their conclusions were correct.”
It’s unfortunate that the “elites” who correctly ridiculed the good Dr. V were somehow unable to protect us from the far more destructive catastrophic global warming pseudoscience. Where are those damned “elites” when we need them?
Gary, good point,. Thanks.
Gary
Lot’s of them there supposed “elites” have their hand on (or in) your wallet.
The political “elites” do; their will is backed by men with guns. Scientific “elites” only do to the extent that they can persuade the political “elites” to fund them with taxpayers’ money.
I’m glad you’ve made your position clearer, but I’m still curious. If your position is that
why didn’t you simply point this out when he was first introduced as an example? It would have saved a lot of confusion. Instead there are plenty of mentions of Sagan getting things wrong, but nothing about Velikovsky’s errors.
Also when you say some of his ideas on planetary motion are ridiculous, are there any you don’t find ridiculous?
See my responses upthread, they should answer your questions.
His prediction that Jupiter had radio emissions and Venus had retrograde rotation are a couple that were true.
Solution………………don’t bite
Unfortunately, you can get the right answer sometimes and not get the right questions. That’s why “showing your work” is so important. I work with large data sets, and if the answer is “4”, I still have to check if the question was supposed to be “2+2” or “6-2”. The answer and at least one datum could be correct, but that “6” is the issue.
Caligula, 2+2=5… for large values of 2.
Sorry, the question was more directed at Dr Tim Ball than you. I think it’s clear that you don’t agree with Velikovsky, but Tim Ball’s previous articles come across as rather more supportive than this post suggests.
I’m also puzzled why there was so much hate directed at Carl Sagan when all he was doing was pointing out how ridiculous Velikovsky’s theories were.
As to the predictions about Jupiter and Venus – they’re are not really examples of his theories on planetary motion. They are just consequences of them, and if his theories were wrong the correctness of these predictions can only be accidental.
you can get the right answer sometimes and not get the right questions
==========================
few if any scientific theories get the right question. they simply predict with better accuracy than a pair of dice, which makes them useful. you don’t need to know what causes gravity to predict its effects.
“Why” something happens is a matter for philosophy. The true mark of science is predicting “when” and “where” something will happen, and “how big” it will be.
“I’m also puzzled why there was so much hate directed at Carl Sagan when all he was doing was pointing out how ridiculous Velikovsky’s theories were.”
It’s not hard to figure out.
They basically complain about the way V was treated and then proceed to do the same with Sagan, Hansen, Mann, ect etc etc.
Read through the comments on any article.
Commenters dont practice skepticism.. they practice knee jerk rejectionism
Mother’s comment being a perfect example of said behavior.
Velikovsky predicted “Jupiter had radio emissions” – but Einstein had said “no way”. Einstein died just several weeks after Einstein was shown to be wrong and Velikovsky right when ELECTRICITY was discovered on Jupiter. http://www.varchive.org/bdb/week.htm
Astronomers fooled Egyptologists with bogus Sothic Chronology and caused a bogus insertion of 5 centuries called the Greek Dark Age. http://www.varchive.org/dag/sumup.htm
Velikovsky’s “Oedipus and Akhnaton” has extensive support.
http://www.velikovsky.info/Oedipus_and_Akhnaton
The point about Velikovsky is that the attack was personal. Just like Mann’s attack on Ball and Watts at the lead-in.
Science requires that you attack the idea, not the man. As soon as you attack the man you are engaged in Politics.
Mann’s lawsuit against Mark Steyn is proof he doesn’t understand analogy.
ignore this – just following comments
Your mission to provide what you consider to be authentic information that represents what you consider objectivity and reality is evident and much appreciated.
Being held responsible for knowing all and seeing all, related to points or references in every article is unrealistic. However, your response is more than adequate in providing your readers with a clear statement about how you actually feel on the topic.
I am not a fan of psychoanalytical archaeology or V.. Always check what the myths say from primary or good secondary sources. People should be wary and would do well never take what a Vkovskian says the myths and sacred texts say at face value. Read them yourself.
But, I will buy a Josh calender for anyone who posts a list of all the instances of planetary migration, capture, and orbital changes now accepted into celestial mechanics for our solar system–and for the exoplanets.
It was for changes in planetary orbits and for capture that V was really vilified.
Now changing orbits are regular astronomical fare, and are used to explain all kinds of retrograde spins and orbits, and for gas giants that are either too close or too far from their primary stars.
Reading Velikovsky is entertaining. Was he correct overall on cosmology? No. But as long as someone is playing the game normally – throwing out ideas, having them be hashed out, and occasionally getting brilliant insights from these brainstorming activities, is too valuable to lose by the insistence upon a scientific hierarchy of high priests.
Over in the comments about the Hubble telescope seeing the earliest object evar, a great discussion shows that there is great variation in the views on early cosmology, red shift, and the expansion of space.
The discussion has been fairly civil. Cosmology will not advance as long as one group of high priests declares the truth, and does not allow alternatives to be voiced.
When one of my sons was born, the obstetrician tried to encourage my wife into having the Essure procedure done – nicle coil inserted into fallopian tube to scar and block fallopian tube, thus rendering sterility. I searched the literature and figured out that there was no great system for gathering adverse outcomes, that women with nickel allergy were probably suffering undiagnosed, and that, overall, the whole idea was not worth it. Also, for the clinical trials reported, they reported failure of the implant, but had no accounting of where the coils had gone – out into the toilet? lodged in the fallopian tube? traveling around the abdomen? perforating an intestine? All of these things have happened, but with the outcome being “failure” to block a fallopian tube, the attendant problems were glossed over.
That was years ago. Our OB knew nothing of all of this.
Later, Erin Brokovich took up the issue, and the mounting evidence is suggesting that a portion of women have had terrible experiences – often which were not decently diagnosed because “everyone” thought Essure was benign.
In 2015, the FDA poo-pooed the idea that there might be any harms.
Now, in 2016, a more discerning analysis says that the FDA method for detecting deaths may be a weak method…
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2016/02/18/fda-likely-underestimated-fetal-deaths-from-essure-analyst.html
The medical establishment was also whole-hog in love with estrogen-replacement therapy and poo-pooed the idea that the estrogen was causing endometrial cancer. In 1975-1977, this was disputed, but overturned. Then, they progressed on to believe that the estrogen-progesterone combo was benign. And, even cardioprotective. Just about every single woman over the age of 50 was prescribed HRT. Until a randomized clinical trial showed HRT to be a risk for cancer.
Because a DSMB was an inherent part of that study, in advance, with pre-specified harms to watch for and pre-specified trip-wires for halting the study, the dogma was easily over-ridden. Otherwise, the harms would likely have, yet again, been diluted in various ways, and scoffers would have been belittled.
Nowadays, there are several decent analyses indicating that broad mammography causes more harm than good….
Right now, in the medical field, there are plenty of accepted beliefs that are leading to harms because alternative views are being ignored (not alt-medicine views, just regular disagreements about the evidence base for and against recognised practices). So, right now, the prevailing powers are in “belief” mode, and are not open to contrary evidence. The one common aspect in all of these issues is that there is money to be made.
It is a classic pattern for those in the position of power to ignore alternate views, and criticisms. That is unscientific. Ideas should be attacked, not individuals. If skepticism of AGW is so obvious, then there will be little problem carrying out a take-down of any view advanced by skeptics, and no character assassinations will be needed.
Seems to me the criticisms of using the then science establishments actions toward Velikovsky’s ideas, reveals an appalling lack of reading comprehension on the part of your critics.
Almost as if Velikovsky is a swear word, that bruises some tender wee ego’s.
Tim Balls original post had nothing Anthony Watts need apologize for.
The critics have demonstrated your point beautifully.
“Silence, I am the expert”.
Rather pathetic appeals to authority, self identifies persons lacking humility and the state of mind true discovery seems to need.
Without wonder, no new questions can be seen.
The old joke about being a legend in ones own mind seems applicable.
Blinded by the light of ones Ego.
Hey, that sounds just like lsvalgaard !! LOL…” Bow down you [pruned] ” !
..Yea, I need more coffee !
Marcus, friend I understand Dr lsvalgaard can be hmmm, scalding, but he does know his stuff. On a thread dealing with the new sun spot numbered I opened a conversation with him. He told me to read. and provided a link. Marcus I turned my first telescope to the heaves at age 11. The people and problems with the records I understood. I conceded the need for the corrections. and we drifted into a separate conversation of the 1970s and U.S. CCCP. exchange programs.
Marcus to understand Dr S, you must go to H.G Wells preface to War of the Worlds.
“Yet across the gulf of space, minds that are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us.”
It is not wise to take a knife to a gun fight. Worst to take a cap gun to a Atomic war.
With Dr S gut feelings and educated guesses don’t count, Just cold hard facts. Unless I can prove him wrong I will not challenge him. Astrophysicists are very very Conservative people.
michael
Lol stay away from that coffee…
Trap for young players, Anthony. But one thing I’d be pretty sure of, and that is that Mann wouldn’t have had a clue about Velikovsky either, being outside of his own area. He would have been filled in about this by some Gavin or other.
Yep.