Climate science might become the most important casualty of the replication crisis

The replication crisis in science has just begun. It will be big.

By Larry Kummer. From the Fabius Maximus website.

Summary: After a decade of slow growth beneath public view, the replication crisis in science begins breaking into public view. First psychology and biomedical studies, now spreading to many other fields — overturning what we were told is settled science, the foundations of our personal behavior and public policy. Here is an introduction to the conflict (there is pushback), with the usual links to detailed information at the end, and some tentative conclusions about effects on public’s trust of science. It’s early days yet, with the real action yet to begin.

“Men only care for science so far as they get a living by it, and that they worship even error when it affords them a subsistence.”

— Goethe, from Conversations of Goethe with Eckermann and Soretclip_image001.

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Mickey Kaus referred to undernews as those “stories bubbling up from the blogs and the tabs that don’t meet MSM standards.” More broadly, it refers to information which mainstream journalists pretend not to see. By mysterious processes it sometimes becomes news. A  sufficiently large story can mark the next stage in a social revolution. Game, the latest counter-revolution to feminism, has not yet reached that stage. The replicability crisis of science appears to be doing so, breaching like a whale from the depths of the sea in which it has silently grown.

See these powerful articles in the past month about the crisis. The first four discuss egregious failures of scientific institutions — with large public policy consequences; the last two are among the few articles describing this crisis for a general audience.

  • A Study on Fats That Doesn’t Fit the Story Line” by the NYT, looking at the long-hidden research suggesting that animal fats are not worse than vegetable fats. See #12 below for links to these studies.
  • The sugar conspiracy” by Ian Leslie in The Guardian — “In 1972, a British scientist sounded the alarm that sugar – and not fat – was the greatest danger to our health. His findings were ridiculed and his reputation ruined. How did the world’s top nutrition scientists get it so wrong for so long?”
  • How scientists fell in and out of love with the hormone oxytocin” by Brian Resnick at VOX — “Scientists believed a whiff of the chemical could increase trust between humans. Then they went back and checked their work.”
  • Cancer Research Is Broken” by Daniel Engber at Slate — “There’s a replication crisis in biomedicine — and no one even knows how deep it runs.”
  • Big Science is broken” by Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry at The Week.
  • Best so far: “Scientific Regress” by William A. Wilson at First Things.

This crisis emerged a decade ago as problems in a few fields — especially health care and psychology. Slowly similar problems emerged in other fields, usually failures to replicate widely accepted research. Even economics, with its high standards for transparency — has been hit. The landmark 2010 paper “Growth in a Time of Debt” by Harvard professors Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff — used to justify austerity policies in scores of nations — was found to have serious errors in their spreadsheets. Even physics has been affected, as William Wilson notes:

“Two of the most vaunted physics results of the past few years — the announced discovery of both cosmic inflation and gravitational waves at the BICEP2 experiment in Antarctica, and the supposed discovery of superluminal neutrinos at the Swiss-Italian border — have now been retracted, with far less fanfare than when they were first published.”  {See this about the former and this about the latter.}

By now it’s obvious that there is a structural problem in modern science, a deterioration of the always sloppy (as with most social processes) self-correcting dynamics of institutional research. Only small scale research has been conducted so far, so we do not know how broad and deep this dysfunctionality extends. The available evidence suggests that “large” is the most likely answer.

The stakes are almost beyond imagination. It’s not just a matter of time and money wasted when bad studies send research down blind allies. Science is one of our best ways to see the world, and effective public policy requires reliable research on scores of subjects, from health care to climate change. Trillions of dollars, the world’s rate of economic growth, and the health of billions can be affected.

Actions and resistance

Talk precedes action, and there are have several high-level conferences about this crisis. Such as the February 2014 workshop by the Subcommittee on Replicability in Science, part of the Advisory Committee to the NSF Directorate for Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences. They produced this typically thorough report: Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences Perspectives on Robust and Reliable Science“.

Journalists describe the replication crisis as a “Whig history” — another step in the inevitable evolution and perfection of science. They seldom mention the scientists — and science institutions — resisting reforms, making the outcome uncertain (here’s an example in social psychology). This hidden side of the crisis is described by David Funder (Prof of psychology, UC-Riverside) at his website.

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“It’s not just – or even especially – about psychology. I was heartened to see that the government representatives saw the bulk of problems with replication as lying in fields such as molecular biology, genetics, and medicine, not in psychology. Psychology has problems too, but is widely viewed as the best place to look for solutions since the basic issues all involve human behavior.

“It makes me a bit crazy when psychologists say (or sometimes shout) that everything is fine, that critics of research practices are “witch hunting,” or that examining the degree to which our science is replicable is self-defeating. Quite the reverse: psychology is being looked to as the source of the expertise that can improve all of science. As a psychologist, I’m proud of this.

Backlash and resistance.

“This issue came up only a couple of times and I wish it had gotten more attention. It seemed like nobody at the table (a) denied there was a replicability problem in much of the most prominent research in the major journals or (b) denied that something needed to be done. As one participant said, “we are all drinking the same bath water.” … {But} there will be resistance out there. And we need to watch out for it.

“…One of Geoff Cumming’s graduate students, Fiona Fidler, recently wrote a thesis on the history of null hypothesis significance testing {NHST}. It’s a fascinating read and I hope will be turned into a book soon. One of its major themes is that NHST has been criticized thoroughly and compellingly many times over the years.  Yet it persists, even though – and, ironically, perhaps because – it has never really been explicitly defended!  Instead, the defense of NHST is largely passive.  People just keep using it.  Reviewers and editors just keep publishing it; granting agencies keep giving money to researchers who use it.  Eventually the critiques die down.  Nothing changes.

“That could happen this time too.  The defenders of the status quo rarely actively defend anything. They aren’t about to publish articles explaining why NHST tells you everything you need to know, or arguing that effect sizes of r = .80 in studies with an N of 20 represent important and reliable breakthroughs, or least of all reporting data to show that major counter-intuitive findings are robustly replicable.   Instead they will just continue to publish each others’ work in all the “best” places, hire each other into excellent jobs and, of course, give each other awards.  This is what has happened every time before.

“Things just might be different this time.  Doubts about statistical standard operating procedure and the replicability of major findings are rampant across multiple fields of study, not just psychology.  And, these issues have the attention of major scientific studies and even the US Government.  But the strength of the resistance should not be underestimated.”

Conclusions

“But what a weak barrier is truth when it stands in the way of an hypothesis!”

— By Mary Wollstonecraft in A Vindication of the Rights of Womanclip_image001[1] (1792).

This just touches on the many dimensions of the replication crisis. For example, there is the large and growing literature about the misuse of statistics — and the first steps to understanding the various causes of replication failure (almost certainly from structural issues, perhaps common to many or all sciences today).

We can only guess at how many of the sciences have serious problems with replication — and the methodological problems that produce it.  This might be one of the greatest challenges to science since the backlash to Darwin’s theory of evolution. Depending on the extent of the problem and the resistance of institutions to reform, this might become the largest challenge since the Roman Catholic Church’s assault in the 15th and 16th centuries, putting the works of famous scientists on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum (e.g., Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo). But this time the problems are within, not external to science.

The likely (but not certain) eventual results are reforms which strengthen the institutions of science, but the crisis might have severe side-effects — such as a loss in public confidence. America has long had a rocky relationship with science, from the 1925 Scopes “Monkey Trial” about evolution to the modern climate wars. With our confidence in our institutions so low and falling, news about replication failures in “settled science” might have affect the public’s confidence willingness to trust scientists. This might take long to heal.

Many sciences are vulnerable, but climate science might become the most affected. It combines high visibility, a central role in one of our time’s major public policy questions, and a frequent disregard for the methodological safeguards that other sciences rely upon.

Watch for news developments in this important story.

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To learn more about this crisis in science

Some early articles about the crisis

  1. Most scientific papers are probably wrong“, Kurt Kleiner, New Scientist, 30 August 2005.
  2. Replication studies: Bad copy” by Ed Yong in Nature, 16 May 2012 — “In the wake of high-profile controversies, psychologists are facing up to problems with replication.”
  3. How science goes wrong: Scientific research has changed the world. Now it needs to change itself“, The Economist, 19 October 2013.
  4. An excellent intro to the subject: “The Replication Crisis in Psychology” by Edward Diener and Robert Biswas-Diener, NOBA, 2016.

Some of the many papers about the replication crisis

  1. An early warning that something was amiss: “Problems With Null Hypothesis Significance Testing (NHST)” by Jeffrey A. Gliner et al in The Journal of Experimental Education, 2002 — “The results show that almost all of the textbooks fail to acknowledge that there is controversy surrounding NHST.”
  2. Why Most Published Research Findings Are False“, John P. A. Ioannidis, Public Library of Science Medicine, 30 August 2005.
  3. Statistical errors in medical research – a review of common pitfalls” by Alexander M. Strasak et al, Swiss Medical Weekly, 27 January 2007 — “Standards in the use of statistics in

    medical research are generally low. A growing body of literature points to persistent statistical errors, flaws and deficiencies in most medical journals.”

  4. What errors do peer reviewers detect, and does training improve their ability to detect them?” by Sara Schroter et al in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1 October 2008 — Showed massive failure of peer-review on deliberated flawed paper submitted to the British Medical Journal.
  5. Reliability of ‘new drug target’ claims called into question“, Brian Owens, Nature, 5 September 2011 — Internal study at Bayer finds that in only 14 of 67 target-validation projects did results match the published finding. These projects covering the majority of Bayer’s work in oncology, women’s health and cardiovascular medicine over the past 4 years. See the paper: “Reliability of ‘new drug target’ claims called into question“, Asher Mullard, Nature Reviews Drug Discovery,
  6. Academic bias & biotech failures” at Life Sci VC, 28 March 2011 — “The unspoken rule is that at least 50% of the studies published even in top tier academic journals – Science, Nature, Cell, PNAS, etc… – can’t be repeated with the same conclusions by an industrial lab.”
  7. In cancer science, many “discoveries” don’t hold up“, Reuters, 28 March 2012 — About Amgen’s study, “Drug development: Raise standards for preclinical cancer research” by C. Glenn Begley and Lee M. Ellis in Nature, 28 March 2012. They tested 53 “landmark” papers about cancer; 47 could not be replicated.
  8. Weak statistical standards implicated in scientific irreproducibility” by Erika Check Hayden, Nature, 11 November 2013 — “One-quarter of studies that meet commonly used statistical cutoff may be false.” About “Revised standards for statistical evidence” by Valen E. Johnson in PNAS, 26 November 2013.
  9. Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science” by the Open Science Collaboration, Science, 28 August 2015. Part of The Reproducibility Project: Psychology of the Open Science Foundation.
  10. Records found in dusty basement undermine decades of dietary advice” by Sharon Begley at STAT, 12 April 2016. — Powerful but unpublished studies decisively refuted the consensus belief about dangers of animal fats. They were probably unpublished because they contradicted the ruling paradigm. The NYT also covered this. See these two papers in the British Medical Journal: “Re-evaluation of the traditional diet-heart hypothesis: analysis of recovered data from Minnesota Coronary Experiment (1968-73)“, 12 April 2016 — and “Use of dietary linoleic acid for secondary prevention of coronary heart disease and death: evaluation of recovered data from the Sydney Diet Heart Study {1966-73} and updated meta-analysis“, 5 February 2013.
  11. Investigating Variation in Replicability: A “Many Labs” Replication Project by the Open Science Collaboration. See a summary at National Geographic.
  12. List of replication attempts in psychological research. Many failed.
  13. The master website for anyone interested in this subject: Retraction Watch.
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thingodonta
April 22, 2016 9:07 pm

The standards of peer review are currently so bad that, to take an example recently, Michael Mann seriously argued that researchers should be able to pick their own statistical technique to get the outcome they want, concerning a paper about hockeystick temperatures in Australia over the last thousand years or so.
Thankfully, the reviewers didn’t agree with him, and the paper was withdrawn, but the mind boggles at just how badly entrenched this sort of corruption is, when scientists think that it’s perfectly acceptable to get publication in a journal by manipulating statistics to get a pre-determined outcome you want, rather than following universally accepted rules and procedures.

co2islife
Reply to  thingodonta
April 23, 2016 9:05 am

The standards of peer review are currently so bad that, to take an example recently, Michael Mann seriously argued that researchers should be able to pick their own statistical technique to get the outcome they want, concerning a paper about hockeystick temperatures in Australia over the last thousand years or so.
Thankfully, the reviewers didn’t agree with him, and the paper was withdrawn,

If that is the standard, everything Michael Mann had published is suspect.
https://youtu.be/QowL2BiGK7o?t=57m39s

April 22, 2016 9:14 pm

That they call the CMIP5 runs “experiments” is all that outside scientists (non-climate related) need to understand the lunacy and pseudoscience quackery of Climate modellers and their outputs taken as “data.”
http://cmip-pcmdi.llnl.gov/cmip5/experiment_design.html
They’ve been doing this way for 35+ years, so they don’t see their own insanity, it’s nonsense insanity institutionalized.
And the whole time the problem of reproducibility is staring them in the face with the graphical splay of possible temperature outcomes (their “data”) that range from stasis to thermageddon.

Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
April 23, 2016 4:40 am

Climate science is the science of data that aren’t and models that don’t.

BezorgdeBurger
April 22, 2016 9:23 pm

Richard Feynman says: “I told you people from ~1935 onward that science is derailing. Didn’t bother to listen, he! Who’s stupid now, hahahaha…….”
Cargo Cult Science (1974): http://calteches.library.caltech.edu/51/2/CargoCult.pdf
Michel Salomon says: “We did our best, at least we made an effort.”
Heidelberg Appeal (1992): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heidelberg_Appeal
Who’s next ?
Bezorgde Burger (Concerned Citizen) Greets from the Netherlands.
PS: I ‘m pardoned, signed the Heidelberg Appeal 🙂

SAMURAI
April 22, 2016 9:44 pm

CAGW zealots have abondoned the Scientific Method in pursuit of government grants, donations, fame, fortune and political agendas.
Under the rules of the Scientific Method, CAGW is already a disconfirmed hypothesis, because hypothetical global warming projections already exceed reality by 2+ standard deviations for 20 years, which is sufficient disparity and duration to toss the CAGW hypothesis in the trash.
In 5~7 years, the disparity/duration will exceed 3+ SDs for 25+ years, which is the point where it should be laughed and ridiculed into obscurity… But, alas…
The ONLY way to restore scientific integrity and return to a strict adherence to the Scientific Method is to completely end almost all public-sector funding of science and replace it with private-sector funding. Constitutionally, public-sector funding for advanced Defense Department weapon systems is fine, but other than that, all public-funded research must end. Period! (TM).
$TRILLIONS of private-sector wealth is being wasted on fraudulent public-sector funded “science” and on compliance costs of government policies implemented based on these contrived, unsupported and false “scientific” assumptions.

co2islife
Reply to  SAMURAI
April 23, 2016 9:01 am

CAGW zealots have abondoned the Scientific Method in pursuit of government grants, donations, fame, fortune and political agendas.
Under the rules of the Scientific Method, CAGW is already a disconfirmed hypothesis, because hypothetical global warming projections already exceed reality by 2+ standard deviations for 20 years, which is sufficient disparity and duration to toss the CAGW hypothesis in the trash.

The way to apply the scientific method to CAGW is by applying the scientific method to the data:
1) Null Hypothesis: Man is not causing CAGW
2) Test the hypothesis against the ice core data for the Holocene
You will see that the Null is not rejected, and that the temperature variation over the past 50 to 150 years is well within the norm of the Holocene, well within 2 standard deviations, far from the peak, and well off the bottom.

SAMURAI
Reply to  co2islife
April 24, 2016 3:55 am

OO2islife:
CAGW’s hypothesis is that manmade CO2 emissions will cause at least 3.6C of catastrophic warming by 2100 if fossil fuel emissions continue at current levels…
CAGW hypothetical projections (based on that premise) now exceed reality by over 2 standard deviations for 20 years. which is sufficient disparity and duration form reality to disconfirm the hypothesis. It doesn’t work…
The physics and empirical evidence show CO2’s forcing is most likely between 0.5C~1.0C per doubling by 2100, LESS the effects of the Grand Solar Minimum, which will likely start from 2035 and, plus or minus other natural variables..
Because CAGW’s hypothetical projections are so far off from reality, the hypothesis is statistically disconfirmed. In 5~7 years, the disparity/duration will likely exceed 3 SDs for 25 years, despite 33%+ of all manmade CO2 emissions since 1750 being made over the 25 years…
CAGW is already a joke..

Sunsettommy
April 22, 2016 9:57 pm

Gee I am shocked, totally shocked!
But I have noticed this problem years ago in Astronomy.with their many deduced mathematical abstracts. The big bang,dark matter,string theory and so on,all hypothetical entities without empirical support. Meanwhile they treated Halton Art like a leper for his fine work.
I lost interest in speculative Asstronomy after that.

johnofenfield
April 22, 2016 10:27 pm

“Truth never triumphs — its opponents just die out. Science advances one funeral at a time”
Max Planck

commieBob
April 22, 2016 11:10 pm

Men only care for science so far as they get a living by it, and that they worship even error when it affords them a subsistence. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)

This has been a problem for a very long time and yet it hasn’t stymied progress. I would say that once financial gain becomes an issue, science suffers. The poster child for this would be all the bogus drug trials.

Martin
April 22, 2016 11:12 pm

I urge everyone with an interest in the scientific method to read the guardian article referenced in the main article:
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/apr/07/the-sugar-conspiracy-robert-lustig-john-yudkin
I know. The Guardian. Amongst all the guff about “settled science” an article about how the scientific orthodoxy got it wrong for 50 years and how, when challenged they attempted to discredit the opposition. All without a hint of irony. The parallels with climate science are remarkable ( and here I am using the term science in its loosest sense).
Martin

Scottish Sceptic
Reply to  Martin
April 23, 2016 2:05 am

“discredit the opposition” – may I suggest you read my “book”: “The Academic Ape: boundary re-enforcing behaviour and aggression in academia (available free on my wbesite).

co2islife
Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
April 23, 2016 5:43 am

The Cassandra Effect describes the tendency of academia to reject any academic-like work from outside academia and that the more “academic” the contribution, the more strongly it is rejected and attacked.
This paper explores the implications of the Cassandra Effect and examines the likely reasons for the rejection of, and attacks on, academic outsiders. It proposes a hypothesis to explain the origins and causation of this Cassandra Effect based on the concept of the “Academic ape”: a primitive instinctual response by academia when its perceived intellectual territory is threatened which over-rides intellect and reasoning.

Listen carefully about what is said about Steve McIntyre in this clip.
https://youtu.be/QowL2BiGK7o?t=57m37s

Charlie
Reply to  Martin
April 23, 2016 4:00 am

Yes, the similarities are remarkable.

Steve Fraser
Reply to  Charlie
April 23, 2016 9:51 am

This is the 5th time in this thread that you have posted this link. Would you please stop?

bit chilly
Reply to  Martin
April 23, 2016 3:46 pm

the cancer research link was surprise ,to me at least in terms of drawing parallels with climate science.
“Begley blames these failures on some systematic problems in the literature, not just in cancer research but all of biomedicine. He says that preclinical work—the basic science often done by government-funded, academic scientists—tends to be quite slipshod. Investigators fail to use controls; or they don’t blind themselves to study groups; or they selectively report their data; or they skip important steps, such as testing their reagents.”

betapug
April 22, 2016 11:15 pm

Well funded “Climate Science” has largely become a means to an end. Connie Hedegaard, speaking for the EU, spelt it out very clearly:
“Let’s say that science, some decades from now, said ‘we were wrong, it was not about climate’, would it not in any case have been good to do many of things you have to do in order to combat climate change?.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/environment/climatechange/10313261/EU-policy-on-climate-change-is-right-even-if-science-was-wrong-says-commissioner.html
As Eisenhower foresaw, the fire hose of funding deployed to save us from global warming has become the tool for fueling fear in a positive feedback loop that has now escaped all bounds of reason, let alone the scientific method.

April 22, 2016 11:21 pm

The problems around replicability and replication are, so far, confined to empirical studies. While it is true that the statistical standards in climatology are relatively low, the majority of climate research is model-based and thus unaffected.

Scottish Sceptic
Reply to  Richard Tol (@RichardTol)
April 23, 2016 2:03 am

What you are arguing is that because most of the “science” in climate isn’t based on what is actually happening it doesn’t have a replication issue.
But what do we find in the very few instances, where the models can be compared to actual data – I don’t think their is one predicted “outcome” that actually occurred from increasing floods, droughts, hurricanes, etc.
The only “predicted” changes are things like CO2 which are an input to the models not an outcome and for example everyone knows they failed on the single most important “outcome” which is global temperature.

John Harmsworth
Reply to  Richard Tol (@RichardTol)
April 23, 2016 3:30 pm

The models are the hypotheses of this “science”. Mother Nature shows no approximation of replication. Additionally, the modellers refuse to examine hypotheses that do not involve CO2 levels, thereby betraying their bias. They are attempting implication- not replication. Dozens of models that don’t replicate even with fudged data and outright lies -and no questioning of the underlying assumptions? C’mon, Mann!

Reply to  Richard Tol (@RichardTol)
April 24, 2016 11:41 am

The problems around replicability and replication are, so far, confined to empirical studies. While it is true that the statistical standards in climatology are relatively low, the majority of climate research is model-based and thus unaffected.

Well….no. Climate Science models have that “this” will happen in so many years. Those years have passed and “this” didn’t happen.
I understand that this post is concerned with replicating a result in a lab.
Climate models said “such and such” would happen. Nature did not replicate what the models’ said.
The output of a computer model in any field can be a valuable tool and asset. But their output is not “gospel”. When it doesn’t match reality, you should trust it less, not try to “adjust” reality to fit the model’s “virtual reality”.
I’m sure the “ambulance chasing” type of lawyers would love it if that approach was taken in designing and implementing safety features on planes, trains and automobiles.

exisle
April 23, 2016 1:05 am

I have a strong, visceral dislike of being told what to do for my own good – childish I know – but very few commenters here have discussed what could be the response of governments, funders, NGOs and other busybodies to this crisis on the conduct of science. It is possible that – since this crisis appears to be fairly recent – it has arisen out of the increasing involvement, Eisenhower-wise, of government et al in funding and regulation. Typically in such a situation the response from government is more oversight, regulation, rules and, of course politically correct ‘initiatives’. This, as the General said is ‘gravely to be regarded’ and we should be considering ways in which science itself can clean up its act without being sat upon…

Scottish Sceptic
April 23, 2016 1:49 am

Thanks Anthony.
I was trying to explain to an academic why engineers are better scientists – and for obvious reasons they were finding this difficult to understand – because they have been brought up in the modern anti-engineering culture of Universities (& media like BBC) which asserts that only academics are “scientists” and engineers are very third rate jobs which are scientifically illiterate.
A much better term would be “Highly scientifically educated professional practitioners”, a group that would also include medical practitioners, engineers, weather forecasters. My post went as follows:
Engineers are scientists who can make science work in practice.
It takes far more skill and knowledge to be a good engineer than an academic. Indeed, you can take any wet behind the ears post graduate and turn them into a PhD in three years, but it would take 20 years for them to learn how to be a good engineer.
That’s because there is far more to engineering than just knowing the science. It also involves economics, sociology, quality, people skills, organisational skills.
The best engineers are by the nature of their job extremely self-reliant as they tend to be amongst the few people in the world with their expertise – but for commercial reasons there can be no co-operation with other similar experts, so they have to be very competent. They also shoulder the welfare and future job prospects of thousands of people on their shoulders. If they make a mistake people die, or at least lose their jobs.
In contrast, if an academic makes a mistake – they just withdraw the paper. There is no come back, there is no need for high quality standards.
So, the culture and ethos of engineering & other similar professional like medicine is extremely high – no mistakes are tolerable.
In contrast, academics can and will make mistakes all the time. They can and do use poor quality data, they don’t care [or don’t know] who suffers when they use poor quality advice based on poor quality data. [They don’t care] Because they FALSELY think that the law of negligence doesn’t apply to them.
That was true, until academics started doing the engineering role of giving life and economic critical advice. Now, all those academics with their extremely poor quality standards and very narrow focus on a small bit of the science, have left themselves open to be sued for a $1trillion lawsuit.
That’s why engineering science is so cautious. That’s why engineers are inherently hostile to new untried, untested, poor quality work with significant amounts of fraudulent work/data as we see in the area of climate.
The whole ethos of engineering is “do your science in a way you can prove you are not negligent in court”. That is something that becomes second nature to engineers … good science, securely backed up by data.
The whole ethos of academia is “no one is going to sue us for being wrong on the science”. That has allowed many to “adjust” what they say to match their own personal politics. Engineers can’t afford to dabble in politics – their strength is the data, their integrity and neutrality – it’s a weakness to dabble in politics.
When this global warming scam finally goes to court – as it will inevitably do so given the constant assertion that “you must follow our (poor quality) advice from academia” … and the massive amount of money involved and the cost when the advice is even mildly wrong … academics will discover they can be sued just as easily as engineers.
But unlike engineers … they lack the necessary “defence culture” to win in court and for example, they will not have the necessary documentation to prove they were not negligent and they will have a mass of evidence of poor quality, low standards and general lack of care that will damn them.

Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
April 23, 2016 4:49 am

I believe that Mann’s approach to sharing data and code and his “slow walking” the legal process to delay/avoid discovery demonstrates that he understands potential culpability.

Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
April 23, 2016 9:32 am

Everyone I knew over the years respected the engineer or the practitioner of whatever. If some subject came up in my group that had little or no real consequence we would say it was merely accidemic. Not worth a hill of beans in other words.
A few academics come along in each century that make a big difference. Just a few. (I have heard some say only one in a 1,000 years but that seems a little over the top to me)

Warren Latham
April 23, 2016 2:08 am

Mr. Kummer,
There is no such thing as “climate science”: there is only science.
What you refer to as “climate science” is (as stated by Samurai) a “disconfirmed hypothesis”. It was and still is a waste of life itself.
Regards,
WL

April 23, 2016 2:10 am

This article has put into words exactly how I have been feeling about science the institution.
I knew Physics Astrophysics and particle physics were and are in big trouble.
As Tesla said, and I hope it was actually a real quote 🙂 that scientists stopped performing repeatable experiments and built their world from mathematics instead, which is to me, trading the real world for a virtual reality, and obviously if your science resides is within the confines of a concept, it can never disprove it
Why is no one bothered by the fact the Higgs Boson was never detected yet Nobels were handed out?
CERN dont share their data and technical information, no one can repeat their experiment either.
The “god ” particle is most likely utter nonsense, two extra photos were all that were confirmed, no particle was ever seen
The supposed particle doesn’t even exist long enough to be detected and it is claimed it was detected.
A long standing law of of thermal equilibrium which planck also incorporated into his quantum theory has been invalidated.. yet the scientific community carries on like it never happened and we will have to literally wait for all the big hitters to pass away before the scientific institutions accept new data.
Imagine trying to convince people Hawking Gal-Yam and Einstein are wrong when the whole NASA Astrophysics enterprise is founded on those theories, no chance.

April 23, 2016 2:12 am

Most scientists today are the most morally weak of humans, but then again most of us dont build careers on misconceptions we later have to defend 😀

ralfellis
April 23, 2016 2:12 am

Well Climate Hustle is due for release on My 2nd, and that may well stir things up a little in the field of climate discussion and criticism. And the attempts to rubbish Morano and the film will be good too, as the shrill cries will demonstrate the warmists fear of criticism. CFACT have a new trailer for the film too, which is better than the last efforts:
http://www.climatehustlemovie.com
Although I prefer the extended trailer that was in the Daily Mail article, as it it much more informative:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3554461/The-man-Climate-Hustle-antidote-Al-Gore-s-Inconvenient-Truth-worked-Rush-Limbaugh-counts-Sarah-Palin-fan.html
R

John Harmsworth
Reply to  ralfellis
April 23, 2016 3:43 pm

Who was the genius that put Sarah Palin on the bill here? That’s the equivalent of Ronald McDonald commenting on nutritional science. Total fail there!

Scottish Sceptic
April 23, 2016 2:14 am

Just to add to a few comments. There was a dramatic change in the way science was conducted after WWII. Before WWII, science was largely a “gentleman’s club” – that got by whilst engineers and manufacturers did the main development such as the Spitfire.
As a result of WWII – and probably seeing the way the Germans had nearly produced some extremely advanced weaponry and how atomic weapons became reality through science and fearing the USSR, Science was turned into the modern “sausage machine” process.
Before WWII, much of the emphasis of “science” was on the philosophy of the subject. So, e.g. Physics was called “Natural philosophy”, after WWII – the philosophical element was removed – and along with it any skill at judging the ethical or philosophical basis of “truth”.
So, WWII was a significant change and resulted in a large “dumbing down” of science in order to allow it to be scaled up. So very much from a “cottage industry” at a few select & prestigious Universities to a “production line” of “effective” but not very “thinking” … “drone” workers. People who can perform the mechanistic actions of science, without necessarily understanding why they are important (and who in subject like climate can convince themselves they are not important).

Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
April 23, 2016 2:21 am

I think this is true for the UK, the government took over scientific research for the war and never relinquished control
The fed gov funds 75% of research and much of that is provided by the pentagon with first dibs on results.
I blame De Grasse Tyson, and others like Kaku for dumbing down science for the public. You used to get physics (even if you didn’t understand it all) but now you get ludicrous analogies that mean nothing and hide the problems with theory. Discovery science actually has a lot to answer for, for pushing theories as fact and leaving out competing theoretical ideas, this has been science media all over.
If you are going to educate someone on a theory for educational purposes you must provide all alternative scientific explanations and science media never does this.
Some of the tosh I read on science daily is an eye opener, or Phys.org.
Science media is a very big part of the problem as it pushes scientific narratives on the public as the only possibility.

Russell
April 23, 2016 2:21 am

Science is not about consensus. It’s about disproof, disbelief and skepticism. It’s not about consensus. When you’ve got consensus, you’ve got trouble”

co2islife
April 23, 2016 3:09 am

The landmark 2010 paper “Growth in a Time of Debt” by Harvard professors Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff — used to justify austerity policies in scores of nations — was found to have serious errors in their spreadsheets.

You just gotta love the selective moral outrage of Fabius Maximus. There are countless garbage economic paper supporting Maxsist/Socialist economics and he picks the one free market smaller government paper that had a small error in a formula that then fixed showed no material difference. Does anyone really think government debt, spent on welfare and other productivity reducing incentives helps growth? Did building Solyndra and inefficient wind and solar farms help growth? Did shutting down fracking, coal, oil and rail help growth? Did shutting down the SUVs to build Volts help growth? Did driving the price of gas and electricity through the roof help growth? There are no reproducible studies in climate science because there are no studies, all they have is a theory and computer models, and MODTRAN shows that CO2 has no impact on the lower atmosphere, zero. Simply double the level of CO2 looking down from 100 meters. BTW, the editor of the Fabius Maximus website justifies he support for climate change because the IPCC’s has deemed it so. He clearly hasn’t ever bothered to study the results of their models.
http://www.nber.org/papers/w15639

More importantly, Ms Reinhart and Mr Rogoff point out that they did not stress any single number in their analysis, but consistently used several calculations. They computed the average over both the post-war period and the two-century time span. They also presented “median” growth rates across thresholds, as well as mean rates. In their 2010 paper, the median growth rate above the 90% threshold is 1.9% during the 1790-2009 period and 1.6% in the post-war period. Those results are in the same ballpark as the Herndon-Ash-Pollin figure, argue Ms Reinhart and Mr Rogoff.
Both sets of authors turn up a negative association between debt and growth.

http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21576362-seminal-analysis-relationship-between-debt-and-growth-comes-under

Science or Fiction
April 23, 2016 3:23 am

I find the following article amusing in that it unwittingly reveal much of what is wrong with United Nations climate panel, It is written by a proponent of IPCC, but well worth a read.
As summarized by Jungletrunks at climate etc. “Although the intent of this piece was to serve up an apolitical chronological history describing the roots of climate science, it also illustrates the path leading up to how the scientific method became hijacked. One can readily see in this essay how consensus building and standardization in science began and how it evolved to cooperate synergistically with politics, including persuading governments to spend billions on research.” Here´s a link:
The Evolution of International Cooperation in Climate Science by Spencer R. Weart, American Institute of Physics.
A little golden nugget found in the article: “A steady diet of fresh scientific perspectives helps to maintain regular doses of funding, helped in turn by an endless round of conferences”

April 23, 2016 3:24 am

“replication crisis”
I have been following the crisis in modern “science” in several fields. Medicine, big-phrama, and biology have been the areas that I have spent the most time reading about and looking at papers.
We live in an era where government money and the influence of industry money has all but ruined science. These forces set the dogma and woe unto the poor young scientist that ever says, “wait, none of this even passes the laugh test!”. They learn early, “don’t rock the boat kid”.
I have read accounts of experiments and studies that could only have been designed to push one particular answer or we would have to believe that utter morons were in the lab working on the problem. No, they are not morons — they are bunco artists.
I wager that most of what I have been told about human health in my lifetime is junk science.
.
.
.
Well, got to go take 10 expensive pills now. ( /sark )

April 23, 2016 3:34 am

Along the same lines as the topic of this post is a post by Mike Smith going over some topics covered by Steve Mcintyre.
More Climate ‘Science.’ Moving the Goalposts
“When Secretariat defeated the field in the 1973 Belmont by 25 lengths, even contemporary climate scientists did not dispute that Secretariat ran faster than the other horses. –Steve McIntyre”
This is a great read, and at the end he urges you to read Mcintyer’s article in full. I think most here would enjoy reading Mike’s short synopsis.
http://www.mikesmithenterprisesblog.com/2016/04/more-climate-science-moving-goalposts.html

Russell
Reply to  markstoval
April 23, 2016 5:34 am

I was their only 3 hour ride from Montreal. Saratoga Racetrack, for his second stakes win in as many tries. Sept. 16, 1972: … Feb. 26, 1973: With Secretariat having been named Horse of the Year.

co2islife
April 23, 2016 3:35 am

By now it’s obvious that there is a structural problem in modern science, a deterioration of the always sloppy (as with most social processes) self-correcting dynamics of institutional research. Only small scale research has been conducted so far, so we do not know how broad and deep this dysfunctionality extends. The available evidence suggests that “large” is the most likely answer.
The stakes are almost beyond imagination. It’s not just a matter of time and money wasted when bad studies send research down blind allies. Science is one of our best ways to see the world, and effective public policy requires reliable research on scores of subjects, from health care to climate change. Trillions of dollars, the world’s rate of economic growth, and the health of billions can be affected.

That is why I’ve been promoting these ideas:
1) Scientific Transparency, the Open-Source Temperature Reconstruction and Climate Model Project. Allowing overtly biased individuals like Michael “Hide-the-Decline” Mann and “Jim “chain me to a bulldozer with Darrel Hanna” Hansen is simply insane. A single person, Steve McIntyre, destroyed the most critical chart in the field of climate “science,” the Hockeystick. Imagine what would happen if these models and data were opened up for all the world to see. It would be like Toto looking behind the curtain.
2) A oversight agency to verify through double blind testing the validity of government funded research. Right now “peers” with conflicts of interest determine the “validity.” We need an SEC/FDA/FTC style agency to police the funding, granting and validity of research funded by the tax payer.
BTW, Eisenhower warned about what we are seeing happen today. I tagged the Eisenhower clip (it starts a 1 h 2 m and 6 s), but the entire last 30 minutes of this video are worth watching regarding this subject.
https://youtu.be/QowL2BiGK7o?t=1h2m6s

April 23, 2016 4:25 am

After the warmest month evah, it is pelting heavy snow in Helsinki right now, I can see no further than 200 years from my window atm.
No doubt NOAA will cook up some heat from somewhere, like smearing one data point over 1200sqm of area on their maps.
They cool an area by 2c with adjustments and claim it is now 2c above normal. Hilarious.

Reply to  Mark
April 23, 2016 4:48 am

Hi Mark
Well at least you can enjoy a snowball fight.
Here in UK forecast for next week is two degrees C below normal and no one is talking about imminent onset of a new Ice Age.
If a forecast was 2 degrees C above normal I don’t need to say what media headlines would be screaming about.

Marcus
Reply to  vukcevic
April 23, 2016 5:39 pm

Ontario, Canada has been running 6 degrees below normal all of April !!

M Seward
April 23, 2016 4:55 am

I was lalking with a professor of environmental science some weeks back who proudly told me how they were actively teaching ‘science communications’ at universities as it was so important to ‘communicate’ their work to the wider world, particularly via the media.
In partial response I expressed some skepticism about the wisdom of that approach beyond a certain point, i.e teaching students to be able to do a competent presentation etc and then made a comment about the potentially corrupting influence of the least publishable unit (LPU) culture where funding was attached to published papers and so the LPU was monetarised.
It appears to me that after some natural selection generational cycles we have a culture in cetain parts of science where there is a detachment from science for the sake of the science and it is now overwhelmingly about the careers of the scientists as the prime focus and how their career advancement translates to the benefit of their institutions. PhD’s are the new black.
I think we are trending towards a situation where a large section of the science cadre is a bit like the disconnected staff officers who unleashed the slaughter of WW1 a centuruy ago largely due to their utter disconnect from the visceral experience of combat and having advanced in their careers from within the ‘staff ‘ sheltered, privileged system set up in the late 19th century.
A connection to one side of the political elite is a clear symptom of this defective arrangement. The arrogant and roghteous self reference of mush of the work and use of terms like deniers to characterise those of a differeing opinion is another and far more telling sign.