Credibility Loss in Climate Science is Part of a Wider Malaise in Science

Guest Opinion: Dr. Tim Ball

climate-science-shredded

The corruption of climate science by some misguided individuals in the quest to “save the planet” is the most egregious example of the larger problems facing science in general. The problems are causing rapid erosion of credibility in science and environmental issues. Some are talking about the growing problems, but few even want to acknowledge them until it directly impinges their work and career. The public is becoming increasingly aware and angry about the intellectual and political elitism that is the source of the decline in standards and values. A central theme to the Brexit vote in the UK and the rise of Donald Trump is the rejection of the elite trio of the financial, political, and academic enclaves that are destroying people’s lives.

After 40 years of working, watching, and dealing with the misuse of climate science; studying the history of science; working to improve education at all levels, and dealing with real world issues, I developed a sensitivity and much wider awareness. I also adopted George Washington’s slightly less cynical than Machiavelli’s observation that

“We must take human nature as we find it, perfection falls not to the share of mortals.”

From personal experience and involvement with the education system from Kindergarten to post-secondary, I know the problems of science are entwined with and amplified by the failures of academia. The ivory tower of the University of East Anglia and the lesser ivory tower (minaret) of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) are examples of the problem. Read the leaked emails and see how they worked together to hide the truth. In most cases of academic malfeasance, the administration, mostly comprised of academics, cover up obfuscate and fail to hold the miscreants to account. I stopped going to department meetings when it was discovered that a colleague had taken a student’s term paper and used 97 percent of it word for word as the basis for a research study for which he received payment from the government. Over my protests they did nothing except to say unless the student made an accusation, there was nothing they could do. I spoke to the student who said he was not going to become known as the student who ‘fingered’ a professor because he wanted to go to graduate school. I fully understood having gone through that political exercise (fiasco).

I know from my experience and discussion with others that such stories are endemic throughout academia.

The major problem is the always present, but widening disconnect between universities and the real world. The Ivory Tower has divided into discreet specialized towers not able to communicate with each other but collectively inured against examination from the real world. They won the town and gown fight centuries ago, particularly at the Battle of St. Scholastica Day in Oxford on February 10, 1355, and haven’t been back to town since, except to demand more money or impose unrealistic theories and unworkable ideas. The public is increasingly resentful of institutions that promote illogical, unrealistic, theories that negatively affect their lives, including costing many lives.

There are a widespread malaise and loss of direction in western society promulgated by bizarre ideas and theories produced by completely unaccountable academics. How can anyone promote ideas that were so wrong and did so much damage, like Paul Ehrlich, yet continue to practice? Most non-academics know they would lose their jobs immediately. Of course, academics wrote the rules on tenure so they cannot be held accountable. It is another of those anachronistic ideas from the Middle Ages. As Prince Philip said, universities are the only truly incestuous systems in our society. Sadly, and devastatingly, all these academic ideas permeate and undermine society, and virtually none add to the greater good, including preparing young people for the real world. In every other phase of education, the person must be trained and qualified to teach, but not at the universities. They are hired on the basis of a research degree, which requires a level of introspection and character that is generally the antithesis of good teaching. Most pass off the teaching to more unqualified graduate students and a majority do very little research in the time made available. I know first hand how little most of them do. Even if they teach, it involves a few hours a week for about one-third of the year.

Lack of accountability is endemic among the financial, political, and academic elite trio. It is no wonder that the modern attitude, especially among the young, is that you only broke the law if you got caught. Even then, it is most likely nothing will happen to you or anyone who benefits from your absolution if you are in the elite trio. So the malfeasance expands as the practices and false rewards continue.

A misguided article titled “The 7 biggest problems facing science, according to 270 scientistsbegs a multitude of questions that speak to the wider problems. They begin with a quote from neurosurgeon Paul Kalanthi.

“Science, I had come to learn, is as political, competitive, and fierce a career as you can find, full of the temptation to find easy paths.”

The article lists the seven problems. (My comments in regular font.)

1. Academia has a huge money problem.

No it doesn’t.

2. Too many studies are poorly designed.

True.

3. Replicating results is crucial – and rare.

True.

4. Peer review is broken.

True.

5. Too much science is locked behind paywalls.

True.

6. Science is poorly communicated.

True

7. Life as a young academic is incredibly stressful.

False.

The authors fail to note that most of these problems are self-inflicted. All these problems and much more exist in climate science. Remarkably, the authors conclude that “Science is not doomed,” which tells you what is wrong with academia and science.

Three of the issues, 2, 3, and 4 are so fundamental that unless they are corrected science is doomed. Also, they are not the only problems. A partial list would include;

· the use of science for political agendas;

· the willingness of scientists to produce science to support those agendas;

· the willingness of scientists to let their political bias color their science and their public activities – there is no better example than James Hansen;

· the willingness of scientists to participate in scientific research primarily to advance their career;

· the willingness of scientists to remain silent when they must, or should know that what the public is told is incorrect – I am unaware of any government or Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) scientist who challenged Al Gore’s movie and especially his claims about sea level rise;

· they mention poor communication of science to the public but fail to mention the constant stream of contradictions on almost every topic;

· they fail to mention the role and bias of the media or how some scientists exploit that bias;

· they fail to mention the failure to follow the scientific method of asking a question, carrying out a review of the literature, constructing a hypothesis, testing the hypothesis by gathering evidence, analyzing the data and reaching a conclusion;

· they appear to consider only the opinions of academic scientists when much of the damage is done by bureaucratic scientists

Items 1 and 7 mention funding and academia. In the article, they explain,

Their gripe isn’t just with the quantity, which, in many fields, is shrinking. It’s the way money is handed out that puts pressure on labs to publish a lot of papers, breeds conflicts of interest, and encourages scientists to overhype their work.

Today, many tenured scientists and research labs depend on small armies of graduate students and postdoctoral researchers to perform their experiments and conduct data analysis.

 

These grad students and postdocs are often the primary authors on many studies. In a number of fields, such as the biomedical sciences, a postdoc position is a prerequisite before a researcher can get a faculty-level position at a university.

 

These outlines the feudal system that exists in universities. You have patrician tenured faculty, most doing very little work. I know because I was there for 25 years. They use “graduate students and postdoctoral researchers” as feudal serfs. This is all confirmed at graduation ceremonies when they appear in their Elizabethan finery.

There is no shortage of money in academia in the US. One graph in the article illustrates the point by showing a steady increase since 1970 (Figure 1).

clip_image002

Figure 1

The problem is not adequate funding. It is too many people getting too much money for useless projects because there are too many people in universities. It is too many people going to university. The blunt truth is that for the majority of students it is a socially acceptable form of unemployment. Students getting less than a B average should not even be in university; for them, it is simply Grades 13, 14, 15, and (16). Some of this over attendance is because immigrant or newly successful middle-class families want their children to attend university. How many times do we here of graduates saying they are the first in their family to attend university? This creates the mentality that every child that enters Kindergarten is going to end up in university. Inherently, this makes any that don’t get there, failures.

One of many incorrect assumptions made in education is that it can increase a person’s Intelligence Quotient (IQ). The difference is between nature (IQ) and nurture (education). Aristotle defined the issue when he pointed out that you can have a mathematical genius of five years old, but you will never have a five-year-old philosophical genius. Aristotle’s point was that most of the subjects’ students study in school require life experience, which they don’t and can’t have.

A. E. Wiggan explained,

Intelligence appears to be the thing that enables man to get along without education. Education appears to be the thing that enables a man to get along without the use of his intelligence.

The academics also convinced the public that only their narrow definition of IQ is relevant. It is intelligence that has little or nothing to do with the real world. Most academic research is done purely to get degrees, promotion, and tenure. Most add nothing other than volume to the cacophony of incomprehensible data. The article quotes Michael Burel, Ph.D. student, New York University School of Medicine.”

“Far too often, there are less than 10 people on this planet who can fully comprehend a single scientist’s research.”

 

And that is the problem, but it is the problem of Burel and science, not society. The inability of science to explain their work is the scientist’s problem. However, one of the reasons most people don’t “comprehend” is because most of science is of no consequence to people. If science wants the public to continue funding and prevent political exploitation the onus is with science to show the relevance of their work; and there it is, that dreaded word, “relevance.” The failure of academia is exposed by their argument that they don’t have to show how their work is relevant. Most of the science that benefits people is produced by business and industry.

The give away in the entire climate debacle were the actions taken before and after the emails were leaked. The resort to denial of freedom of information requests for data, use of intellectual property claims to prevent other scientists replicating results. The examples in climate science appear to be extreme. The list of seven indicates it is simply an exposed example of a widespread failure in academia, promoted and protected by the financial and political elite. This does not mean it is restricted to a particular political belief; it is equally problematic in institutions of the rich and poor, left and right because it is a complete society breakdown. Ironically, it was Osama bin Laden who said the West had lost its moral direction. He was right. The problem is I don’t want his moral system either.

We can solve many of our problems quickly by closing down 75 percent of our universities. Recognize that there are a multitude of skills and abilities far more important than those pursued by academia. Make those who remain in academia show the value and relevance of their work.

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July 24, 2016 6:43 pm

Excellent analysis, Dr. Ball. Academia has become increasingly divorced from the real world and corrupted morally and financially. When I was a freshman at Michigan, 1968, out of state tuition was
$770 a semester, which my middle class parents could afford. Now few middle class families can send their children to an elite school without student loans or scholarships. Academia becomes more and more a game, or perhaps a cult or priesthood, practiced inside its own walls, but subject to the god of government grants. Even back then, we used to call Ann Arbor “Twelve square miles surrounded by reality.” I studied math, physics, the history of science and philosophy, but dropped out when i saw the academic life wasn’t for me. Some of my classmates became college professors. I’m glad I didn’t go that way.

Asp
July 24, 2016 6:53 pm

With the school curriculum now in the hands of Ultra-left extremists, the move to pseudo-science in our education system starts early. There have been suggestions that when teaching mathematics in Australian primary schools, a portion of the time should be spent learning about ‘indigenous’ number systems.
Add this the highly enlightened policy of supplying each Australian school student with an obsolete laptop. Somehow, all this will make us a ‘smarter nation’.

luysii
July 24, 2016 7:00 pm

For an example of how poorly science can be done, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) with all those pretty pictures of the brain doing things is a real horror. Almost none of it is to believed — less than two years ago it was found that over half the subjects in studies were asleep after 5 minutes. The tools used to analyze the statistics were misapplied until this year. For the gory details please see — https://luysii.wordpress.com/2016/07/17/functional-mri-research-is-a-scientific-sewer/. It’s pretty technical but you should be able to follow most of it.

jake
July 24, 2016 7:24 pm

Great article and observation. Companies on Gov’t financed projects get contracts based often on how many PhDs they have on staff. The more, the better their chance. From my experience, in many such companies, some 1/3 are PhDs where none is needed for the type of work performed. Only a 1/2 a century ago, when I graduated from a technical high-school, among the 60 graduates, only two applied for a Un. education. There were several straight “As” among those 60. Today I hear most everybody goes to college. The national wealth lost due to the 4 + years of productive work not performed combined with the huge employment at the places of higher education, not just for professors, makes us all poorer. Then some go for a PhD afterwards for the lack of job offers.

commieBob
July 24, 2016 7:38 pm

There is an excellent book, The Master and His Emissary by Ian McGilchrist, a noted neurosurgeon. He goes a long way to explaining why too much university is bad for society (although he doesn’t put it in those terms).
Briefly, the brain’s left hemisphere is devoted to language and logic. The right hemisphere provides context. In other words, the right hemisphere is the brain’s BS filter. People with damaged right hemispheres will believe anything as long as it is not self-contradictory. They will usually underestimate the difficulty of tasks and will be disappointed with the results of their efforts.
University education privileges logic and analysis. In other words, students are forced to develop their left hemispheres. Their right hemispheres are left to lie fallow. They become very good at logic and sophistry and very bad at detecting BS.
Good liberals love their fellow humans. Bad liberals love a theory. I contend that university produces such bad liberals. In his book Voltaire’s Bastards, John Ralston Saul shows convincingly that logic and analysis have replaced reason. Society has lost its collective BS filter. The result may, in the long run, be the downfall of western civilization.

Marcus
July 24, 2016 8:32 pm

OT but interesting…
…N.Y. Times ……”Scientists: Pacific Ocean helps predict heat waves ”
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/29/science/heat-wave-predictions-weather.html?_r=0

observa
July 24, 2016 9:09 pm

This sort crap is typical of the genre-
http://www.news.com.au/national/academic-toilet-paper-opens-doors-on-dunny-business/story-e6frfkvr-1226266176545
Simple really. My parents called them toilets and you did your business and didn’t hang around in them. And the boofheads wonder why normal people have an increasing disconnect?
Then there’s the climate research scolds-
http://www.scotsman.com/news/uk/coffee-lovers-urged-give-up-filter-and-save-the-planet-in-an-instant-1-771229
Normal folks can only take so much taxpayer subsidised crap like that before they switch off completely and vote for anyone who gets right up their noses. What other form of protest do they have?

Clyde Spencer
July 24, 2016 9:10 pm

Something that didn’t get mentioned is that grade inflation started about the time of the Viet Nam war as a misguided attempt to help young men avoid the draft. When I taught at Foothill College in the ’70s, the professors gave an average of 50% As and Bs. That trend has apparently continued in an attempt to keep enrollments high and get more income to support the proliferation of administrators. I read recently that many universities now only give As and Bs! One of the consequences is that scientists and professors who got their education during the early period of grade inflation are now in senior positions and their early students are now mid-career. Many of them probably wouldn’t have gone on if the original 4-point grading system had been maintained. So, one might ask the question, to what degree are we saddled with climate scientists who probably should have gone into another vocation?

Gary Pearse
July 24, 2016 9:28 pm

These mod scientists have zero problem showing that their work has relevance. The Cambridge Arctic ice specialist Wadhams is far inferior to virtually all who post here on the subject (although he probably has become mentally ill, predicting Iceless seas every year and seeing assassins in the shadows killing off ice specialists!). Yet newspapers publish his obviously absurd predictions probably because of the alarmist hook. Hey he is from Cambridge the school of Sir Isaac Newton. We also have disciplines of Climate Change philosophy, psychology, sociology,… NASA is going to jack up warming 19%to match the models. Sec of State Kerry sees refrigerators and airconditioners as more dangerous than ISIS…. Only a Donald Trump can shut all this crazy Euro marxbrothers stuff off. Don’t look to science/academia to solve it.

RoHa
July 24, 2016 9:48 pm

‘The article quotes Michael Burel, Ph.D. student, New York University School of Medicine.”
“Far too often, there are less than 10 people on this planet who can fully comprehend a single scientist’s research.”’
How depressing. A Ph.D, student who does not know the difference between “less” and “fewer”.

Tim Hammond
Reply to  RoHa
July 25, 2016 10:12 am

Since they mean exactly the same thing and always have done, it’s your comment that’s depressing. The claim that “fewer” is somehow “correct” in this instance is based on a bizarre notion – that we at so point appointed somebody to make hard and fast rules on English usage. We didn’t. English speakers have used fewer and less interchangeably for as long as we have reliable records. The current fad for claiming a distinction is just ignorant snobbery based on a strange and obviously false assumption about fabricated rules.

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 24, 2016 10:23 pm

Today [25th July 2016] the daily newspaper “The Hindu” presented a story titled “The sullying of scientific literature”. The story is given as follows:
In a rare and highly commendable move that has sent out a strong message to the Indian scientific community, the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research has dismissed a senior scientist working at its Chandigarh-based Institute of Microbial Technology (IMTECH) over serious charges of data fabrication in at least seven papers published in peer-reviewed journals. At least three papers published in 2013 in the journal PLOS ONE were retracted once preliminary investigation carried out at IMTECH revealed that the data were cooked up. Though Swaranjit Singh Cameotra was not directly involved in data fabrication, his complicity in the scientific misconduct became clear. The scale of misconduct by Dr. Cameotra is way lower in comparison to the South Korean stem cell researcher Hwang Woo-suk and the Japanese stem cell researcher Haruko Obokata, but it is nevertheless significant. A senior member is responsible for data produced by his team. As the U.S. Office of Research Integrity (ORI) has laid down, being complicit in multiple instances of scientific misconduct merits firm action. An editor of one of the retracted papers said the reviewers were unable to spot the fabrication as the “data appeared solid”, though all the three papers had the same theme of a bacterium isolated from a natural environment metabolising certain chemicals. It is, however, quite surprising that no one at IMTECH suspected any foul play as the scientist published 15 papers in 2013.
The only bright spot in the otherwise sorry episode has been IMTECH’s readiness and willingness to get to the root of the problem rather than brushing the allegations under the carpet, as many scientific institutions in India regularly do. One of the biggest handicaps that journal editors face when confronted with evidence of scientific misconduct by Indian researchers is non-cooperation by institutions in thoroughly investigating such matters. This is the reason why certain fraudulent practices by Indian scientists have seldom been exposed. One of the best ways to tackle this ill is to set up a nodal body on the lines of the ORI in the U.S. Any case of scientific misconduct brought to its notice should be investigated by the respective institutions and the matter taken to its logical conclusion. A body on the lines of the ORI should also be actively involved in “preventing misconduct and promoting research integrity through expanded education programmes”. This will go a long way in reducing instances of misconduct by scientists. It will also greatly help to reduce the amount of trash that sullies scientific literature and prevent other serious researchers from wasting their time repeating meaningless experiments.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

Wim Röst
Reply to  Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 25, 2016 1:14 am

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy: “One of the best ways to tackle this ill is to set up a nodal body on the lines of the ORI in the U.S”
Can anyone tell, which position the ORI takes in respect to the tampering of the temperature data? Any action?
P.S. In Holland, Belgium and Germany scientists are dismissed after fraude with data.

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
Reply to  Wim Röst
July 26, 2016 1:24 am

Few years back, a young girl submitted her research papers to a top journal in the area of medicine. The papers were sent peer review. The so-called peer asked his students to read them. He rejected the papers. Later he published the same with some changes along with his students. The girl noticed this and brought to the notice of medical council. In fact the peer hold top positionin medical council. If am correct the paperswere with drawn and the peer was removed from the medical council.
I submitted a paper to an international journal in early 90s. One reviewer gave critical observations and recommended for publication. Another reviewer gave excellent comments and at the end said, it can also be fitted linear curve. The regional editor rejected the paper based on this one line. Both the reviewers are familiar with me. In fact on second peer, I made same observation on his paper [departmental internal review].
Based on that I was very angry. I wrote 100 page letter to the editor-in-chief on peers and their poor quality publications in the journal. The editor-in-chief sent my letter to three regional editor, who agreed with me. Later editor-in-chief asked me to divide the paper in to three different articles, which were published along with the authors comments [in two papers]. Later editor-in-chief asked me re-submit my paper. I didn’t do that as I published that in my book — book review was published in that journal.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

Wim Röst
Reply to  Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 25, 2016 1:35 am

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy: “One of the best ways to tackle this ill is to set up a nodal body on the lines of the ORI in the U.S”
Can anyone tell which position the ORI takes in respect to the tampering of temperature data?
P.S.: In Holland, Belgium and Germany scientists are dismissed because of data fraud.

TA
Reply to  Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 25, 2016 4:49 am

Thanks for that article, Dr. Reddy.
From the article:
“As the U.S. Office of Research Integrity (ORI) has laid down, being complicit in multiple instances of scientific misconduct merits firm action.”
Where have these guys been all this time? They ought to be crawling all over the climate departments of NASA and NOAA.

observa
Reply to  TA
July 25, 2016 8:52 am

You’ve somehow misconstrued what firm action means. A rapid promotional shift into climastrology with The Firm. Can’t have all that talent going to waste.

July 24, 2016 10:26 pm

Great article, Dr Ball. It confirms what many have thought, or even known, for a long time.
I cannot see see a quick way out of this quagmire. It operates along the lines of a closed loop system. The government(s) are hooked on gaining more power, control and tax dollars – presented to them (on a plate) by the early scare-mongering scientists (and people like Gore) who gave them the utterly perfect target for demonization: CO2 – and the means to gain even more control over the public while raking in vast amounts of extra taxes. They are not going to give this up without a battle royal.
The government influences, nay directs, scientists and educators to support them by way of grants to provide them with supportive junk science research. This is strongly supported by all the eco groups and NGOs who benefit from increased subscriptions (and power through lobbying).
The media follows along, like a tail-wagging dog, happy to print all their doom-laden speculative nonsense in the knowledge that scare stories sell.
And at the bottom of the chain, or loop, is the gullible public who, if they did but know it, really hold the reins of power by way of their democratic vote.
How long though is it going to take before a majority of the public realises what is going on?
We can all assist by doing what we do on here so well: spreading the words of truth.

July 24, 2016 10:59 pm

If Greenland is melting, why is the ice coverage all the way down to the southern tip of Greenland?:
As of July 24th 2016:
http://www.natice.noaa.gov/pub/ims/ims_gif/DATA/cursnow_asiaeurope.gif
I think it should be melted at least 20% up from the southern Greenland if this arctic melting is real…

David S
July 24, 2016 11:53 pm

The education process has been corrupted not just at university but also at primary and secondary levels. The domination of the left has ( in Australia) led to propagander and brainwashing a process that is being rebelled against by the older generation of voters who have not been subjected to this Politically correct brainwashing. Academia has a lot to answer for in trying to convert the non committed to their way of thinking and the lack of tolerance for opposing ideas is a disgrace. Hopefully the wheels of change is upon us and maybe if it was to become fashionable to be a skeptic the world may be a better place.

TA
Reply to  David S
July 25, 2016 5:02 am

“The domination of the left has ( in Australia)”
It’s everywhere. Unfortunately. The Left has hijacked the education system.

drednicolson
Reply to  TA
July 25, 2016 7:44 pm

It was the Left’s idea to begin with. Literacy in the US just before the advent of public schools and compulsory education is estimated to have been in the 90th percentile. The old system of “communities handle the education of their kids” was working just fine. Public schools were shilled as a solution to a non-problem, with the ulterior motive of putting a degree of separation between schoolchildren and their communities, to facilitate re-education/indoctrination.

Reply to  David S
July 30, 2016 12:02 am

Im part of a small group in Australia who are working Are addressing the science education disintegration in Australia and then elsewhere. See copy and paste from my recruitment email below
To summarise the group project.
We plan a nationwide coordinated series of very public ‘Formal Complaint’ submissions to the State Departments of Education. The subject will be the poor standard of Science Education at all levels in Australia. The submissions will be filed by individual residents of each state on either the same day or sequential days, sometime hopefully within the next 6 months. Slowly, but surely is the way we want to go.
We want to attract media attention via (1) letting the media know in advance (2) copying all media into the public submissions (3) Maybe, hand delivering a written version if we can get media coverage (4) Any other suggestions ……………..
If you are interested in joining our effort here in Australia please email me at judyryan@grapevine.com.au. …with the subject line. FORMALCOMPLAINTS RE SCIENCE EDUCATION DEGENERATION

Reply to  David S
July 30, 2016 12:05 am

The Montessorie education system may not be as polluted as the public or the establishment private schools.

Science or Fiction
July 25, 2016 12:15 am

United Nations writing and review process for IPCC is an extraordinary good example of how science has become politicized:comment image
And anyone thinking that IPCC is unbiased should have a look at how heavily biased IPCC was from the very beginning:
Report of the second session of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 28 June 1989
The Principles governing IPCC work are more or less free from sound scientific principles – no mentioning of scrutiny or application of a sound scientific method there.
Rather than imposing scientific principles on IPCC, United Nations allowed IPCC to be governed by:
– the unscientific principle of a mission to support an established view(§1)
– the unscientific principle of consensus (§10)
– an approval process and organization principle which must, by it´s nature, diminish dissenting views. (§11)
And – while I am at it – Guidance Note for Lead Authors of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report on Consistent Treatment of Uncertainty shows how subjectivism has been introduced and endorsed by IPCC. That is the document behind the laughable subjective confidence terminology used by IPCC.
I suggest that all interested in how United Nations and IPCC use the name of science should have a look at the documents I linked to above. And if anyone wonder if the principles, processes and guidance notes governing IPCC complies with sound scientific principles, I suggest to have a look at the first 26 soothing pages of the following work: The logic of scientific discovery.
Ironically, by promoting and using unsound scientific principles, United Nation has become a kind international problem of cultural character that it was put up to achieve international co-operation in solving:
Article 1
The Purposes of the United Nations are:
3) To achieve international co-operation in solving international problems of an economic, social, cultural , or humanitarian character, and in promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all …
Within their charter – United Nations could have:
– Discouraged strong politic influence on science
– Promoted openness and scrutiny within science
– Discouraged attempts to silence opponents and free exchange of thoughts
Rather than promoting freedom, openness and scrutiny within science – United Nations is leading the decline in standards and values.

Wim Röst
Reply to  Science or Fiction
July 25, 2016 3:35 pm

Thanks Science of Fiction!
About the Graphics above:
1. “Governments, organisations nominate experts”. WR: Governments.
2. “Authors prepare final drafts of report and SPM”. WR: I am missing the (extensive) Technical Summary, text made by the scientists. The text of the (small) final SPM, the Summary for Policy Makers, is rewritten by governments. And read by the Media, who THINK that they are reading ‘the scientific point of view’. But it IS the Government’s point of view. From governments, with their own agenda.
In this way the public is tricked.

Wim Röst
Reply to  Science or Fiction
July 25, 2016 3:36 pm

Sorry, Science or Fiction – typo

Reply to  Wim Röst
July 26, 2016 5:10 am

Not a bad typo! It got a chuckle from me. 😉

John Francis
July 25, 2016 12:23 am

Absolutely agree!

Johann Wundersamer
July 25, 2016 12:35 am

On this day in history in 1355, took place the St Scholastica Day Riot.
Some of the students made derisory comments on the quality of the beer, as students are wont to do, nothing much has changed over the centuries.
The king, Edward III, ordered an investigation, which found in favour of the University. The Mayor and Bailiffs were ordered to walk bareheaded through the town and attend a Mass for the souls of the dead, on every subsequent St Scholastica’s Day, and to swear an oath to observe the University’s privileges, and, if that were not enough, to pay an annual fine of 63 pence to the University.
________________________________________
Wrong answer! Right answer: “Reinheitsgebot”!
________________________________________
It’s not about the kings students, and not about beer – it’s about contaminated water, about poorly maintained wells – and that threatens the king and his men, the mayor, the landlords and all the women in his reign. In an area without sanitation, without sufficient knowledge about health precautions.
________________________________________
The only thing the people knew:
You live longer when consuming refined, or heat treated water:
The families tea, the men ‘on the streets’ since centuries got the ‘fastdrinks’ whine and beer.
________________________________________
Not the first battle about nutrition. But obviously a milestone – however poor handled.
________________________________________
Thanks for the link – interesting read!

Jeff (a different one)
July 25, 2016 2:55 am

The academic science model is a lot like a Ponzi scheme, where young (new) researchers are exploited for the benefit of the (tenured) ones who got into the system early. I left academic research when I saw 125+ applicants for every open job in my field, most of whom were well qualified. I had small aspirations- I didn’t want millions of dollars to start an Institute for the Study of Something-Or-Other- and it was obvious that was going to kill my shot at a job. The schools want that beautiful, beautiful overhead (spending a dollar from my small grant meant the university took another 60 cents for itself). Luckily, I found a job teaching science at the high school level, and it’s paradise compared to the university environment. It doesn’t bring the prestige of calling myself “professor” (or the salary), but I’m using my PhD well, and it pays off the moral debt I owe society for funding my education.

tadchem
July 25, 2016 4:26 am

One serious side effect of the proliferation of money in academia is that encourages group-think. Those seeking money imitate those who have successfully acquired money. This leads to hordes of researchers all pushing the ‘frontiers’ in the same direction. innovative thinking is left behind.

TA
Reply to  tadchem
July 25, 2016 5:06 am

A good point, tadchem. It sounds like the state of Climate science today.

Dave M
July 25, 2016 4:34 am

There may be a larger problem in science but only climatologists engaged in widespread manipulation of data and a pattern of “shutting up” legitimate voices who didn’t agree with their crusade.

Reply to  Dave M
July 30, 2016 12:20 am

the evidence against some of the pseudo scientists in Australia for fraud is strong. The government won’t do anything. We need to find a lawyer who will take on legal,action for us on a no win no pay basis. If we can’t find that then we need funding from the Coal industry. Then we need the good fortune to go to,court when there is an honest judge on duty. If this happens the evidence will show that whatever the climate is, or is not doing. People like Karoly, Dargaville are hiding the true evidence from the people. In a just worldly, they will be held accountable by the law.. If you know a lawyer pls put him in touch with me judyryan@grapevine.com.au. Il show him/her the evidence

Mrgaret Smith
July 25, 2016 4:38 am

I see that all or most of the doctorates connected to ‘climate science ‘ become professorships these days. What are the criteria for this title as it seems writing papers of drivel gets you one?
I used to think it was excellence rather than pleasing the ‘progressives’.

David Cage
July 25, 2016 6:10 am

Life as a young academic I regret to say is stressful as hell for some. The behaviour of some like Pachouri is regrettably more prevalent that many would like to admit and once the student has built up a significant debt to get the degree some are abusing the leverage of the next grant to broaden the services they expect from their young researchers.

July 25, 2016 6:43 am

Typo in the paragraph below Figure 1:

How many times do we here of graduates saying they are the first in their family to attend university?

Should be “hear”.
Thank you Dr. Ball. Having worked in and around post-secondary education for a long time, I agree with you. I have witnessed it first hand. The arrogance and indeed ignorance at that level is astounding, and shows no signs of abating.

July 25, 2016 6:59 am

I was always amazed that Carl Sagan consistently wrote of the failures of the education system, but lacked the courage to specify current examples that might implicate the sitting academia — it was always some ancient examples or otherwise vague generalizations.

July 25, 2016 7:21 am

Of the three demographics you mention; politics, finance and science, the first two never really generated as much respect and trust as the latter. In a practical way, subverting it for political ends made perfect sense. Also, I think it was a cynical trend that will come back to bite them very hard.
https://thepointman.wordpress.com/2013/08/02/why-would-anyone-believe-a-single-word-coming-out-of-their-mouth/
Pointman