There are three types of climate change denier, and most of us are at least one

From The Conversation

Last week, amid the cacophony of reactions to Greta Thunberg’s appearance before the United Nations Climate Action Summit, a group of self-proclaimed “prominent scientists” sent a registered letter to UN Secretary-General António Guterres. The letter, headed “There is no climate emergency”, urged Guterres to follow:

…a climate policy based on sound science, realistic economics and genuine concern for those harmed by costly but unnecessary attempts at mitigation.

The group, supported by 75 Australian business and industry figures, along with others around the world, obviously rejects the scientific consensus on climate change. But this missive displays remarkably different tactics to those previously used to stymie climate action.

The language of climate change denial and inaction has transformed. Outright science denial has been replaced by efforts to reframe climate change as natural, and climate action as unwarranted.

However, this is just another way of rejecting the facts, and their implications for us. Denial can take many forms.

Shades of denial

The twin phenomena of denial and inaction are related to one another, at least in the context of climate change. They are also complex, both in the general sense of “complicated and intricate”, and in the technical psychological sense of “a group of repressed feelings and anxieties which together result in abnormal behaviour”.

In his book States of Denial, the late psychoanalytic sociologist Stanley Cohen described three forms of denial. Although his framework was developed from analysing genocide and other atrocities, it applies just as well to our individual and collective inaction in the face of the overwhelming scientific evidence of human-induced climate change.

The first form of denial is literal denial. It is the simple, conscious, outright rejection that something happened or is happening – that is, lying. One Nation senators Pauline Hanson and Malcolm Roberts, among others, have at one time or another maintained this position – outright denial that climate change is happening (though Senator Hanson now might accept climate change but denies any human contribution to it).

Interestingly, former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull yesterday blamed “climate change deniers” in his own government for blocking any attempt to deal with climate change, resulting paradoxically in higher energy prices today.

It is tempting to attribute outright denial to individual malice or stupidity, and that may occasionally be the case. More worrying and more insidious, though, is the social organisation of literal denial of climate change. There is plenty of evidence of clandestine, orchestrated lying by vested interests in industry. If anyone is looking for a conspiracy in climate change, this is it – not a collusion of thousands of scientists and major science organisations.

The second form of denial is interpretive denial. Here, people do not contest the facts, but interpret them in ways that distort their meaning or importance. For example, one might say climate change is just a natural fluctuation or greenhouse gas accumulation is a consequence, not a cause, of rising temperatures. This is what we saw in last week’s letter to the UN.

The most insidious form of denial

The third and most insidious form is implicatory denial. The facts of climate change are not denied, nor are they interpreted to be something else. What is denied or minimised are the psychological, political, and moral implications of the facts for us. We fail to accept responsibility for responding; we fail to act when the information says we should.

Of course, some are unable to respond, financially or otherwise, but for many, implicatory denial is a kind of dissociation. Ignoring the moral imperative to act is as damning a form of denial as any other, and arguably is much worse.

The treatment of Thunberg, and the vigour with which people push away reminders of that which they would rather not deal with, illustrate implicatory denial. We are almost all guilty, to some extent, of engaging in implicatory denial. In the case of climate change, implicatory denial allows us to use a reusable coffee cup, recycle our plastic or sometimes catch a bus, and thus to pretend to ourselves that we are doing our bit.

Almost none of us individually, or we as a nation, has acted as we ought on the science of climate change. But that does not mean we can’t change how we act in the future. Indeed, there are some recent indications that, as with literal denial, implicatory denial is becoming an increasingly untenable psychological position.

While it is tempting, and even cathartic, to mock the shrill responses to Thunberg from literal and interpretive deniers, we would do well to ponder our own inherent biases and irrational responses to climate change.

For instance, we tend to think we are doing more for the planet than those around us (and we can’t all be right). We also tend to think literal deniers are much more common in our society than they in fact are.


These are just two examples of common strategies we use to deny our own responsibility and culpability. They make us feel better about what little we actually do, or congratulate us for accepting the science. But they are ultimately self-defeating delusions. Instead of congratulating ourselves on agreeing with the basic scientific facts of climate change, we need to push ourselves to action.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

HT/Clyde Spencer

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John Leggett
October 17, 2019 5:26 am

Well I am a fourth and fifth type of denier. I think that so far the evidence of what is happening during the Modern Warn Period is and has been beneficial. We are after all in the middle of the Pleistocene glaciation that started about 2.5 million years ago. I also think that the warmest part of our current inter glacial occurred around 9 to 5 thousand years ago during the Holocene Climate Optimum.

I also think that the basic solutions currently popular among those who think there is a serious problem are a mixture of totalitarian thought and magic thinking. If you do not want to reduce the standard of living to what it was 200 years ago and the resulting loss of most of the worlds population. At the current level of our technology the only possible way to reduce fossil fuel use is nuclear power. That the same people are opposed to.

John West
October 17, 2019 6:01 am

There are three types of “believer”.

1) Liar
2) Gullible
3) Scared

George Steele
Reply to  John West
October 17, 2019 6:23 am

“There are three types of “believer”.

1) Liar
2) Gullible
3) Scared”

4) Uneducated.
In this category we find more than half the population of the world. They have been lead to see teachers as oracles. Teachers tell them what to memorize as true. When they have left their last classroom they know that when a credentialed scientist says it, he or she is teaching them data to memorize. If, perchance, a geologist speaks of climate he is discounted by this ilk because his degree is not in Climate Science. When a professor of computer science says the system is too complicated to model with today’s technology he is discounted because he is not a climate scientist.
Most folks don’t know what “logarithmic” means. Most folks find calculus mysterious. Most folks get their wisdom from elders of their tribe. This repetition of elder knowledge is exactly what gives humanity an advantage over other primates. It is human, very human, the essence of humanity itself to trust the experts.
When the experts are wrong to some degree (pun intentional) the public, category 4, are mislead.

tom0mason
October 17, 2019 6:52 am

I have no denial!
Climate is natural effect of a whole bunch of natural processes acting in concert. Humans effects are minimal with the largest effect coming from our land use changes.
HUMANS ARE PART OF NATURE!

The problem with all these climate worriers is that they wish to use an averaged figure for the earth’s temperature but then use this as an ‘instantaneous value’ or as an unaveraged thermal level, and for it’s effects on the planet.
The average temperature of the planet does not, can not, give anyone more information about unaveraged temperature effects on the planet’s surface, or unaveraged temperature effects within the atmosphere. It’s an average and as such has lost all specificity on both temporal and regional effects on the planet.
As I have outlined before —
In two cases suppose the average temperature was the same but —
Case 1. the poles warmed slightly as the tropics cooled slightly, – or –
Case 2. the poles cooled slightly and the tropics warmed slightly
The climatic effects between the two cases would be RADICALLY different.

The heat of the sun has a large and direct effect on environment regions and for particular times (diurnally, seasonally, and with changes in orbital parameters), it warms areas nearer the tropics more than the poles.
So called ‘back radiation’ has no observed effect on anything, it is pure (averaged) hokum.

Climate has always changed, humans have minimal effects on it outside of our land use changes — PERIOD!

posa
October 17, 2019 8:53 am

Attached below is the IPCC WG-1 debunking of claims of rising levels of Extreme Weather in AR-5, WG-1.. I’m curious how we label people who deny the IPCC findings.

“Current datasets indicate no significant observed trends in global tropical cyclone frequency over the past century … No robust trends in annual numbers of tropical storms, hurricanes and major hurricanes counts have been identified over the past 100 years in the North Atlantic basin.”

“In summary, confidence in large scale changes in the intensity of extreme extra-tropical cyclones since 1900 is low.”

“In summary, there continues to be a lack of evidence and thus low confidence regarding the sign of trend in the magnitude and/or frequency of floods on a global scale.”

“In summary, there is low confidence in observed trends in small-scale severe weather phenomena such as hail and thunderstorms because of historical data inhomogeneities and inadequacies in monitoring systems.”

“Based on updated studies, AR4 [the IPCC 2007 report] conclusions regarding global increasing trends in drought since the 1970s were probably overstated.”

Same finding as the National Climate Assessment: No trends in extreme weather.

JS
October 17, 2019 10:13 am

“Comments on this article will be open during business hours. This is to ensure we can actively moderate them in line with our community standards.”

Translation: “We call everyone who doesn’t agree with us deniers. We allow no opinions to the contrary to be published here so we can talk about how terrible it is that everyone denies what we believe and ask each other how they can all deny such a thing and shake our heads sadly without ever hearing an answer that might pop our bubble.”

Albert Reid
October 17, 2019 10:19 am

It would seem to me that anyone why believes that the current climate is changing solely based on man made sources of CO2 are, in fact, the true deniers. It implies that the climate has been stable/stagnant in the past, which we all know not to be the case. Climate alarmists are the true deniers.

Albert Reid
Reply to  Albert Reid
October 17, 2019 10:37 am

“anyone who believes”

Not Chicken Little
October 17, 2019 12:57 pm

I want to know why all the climate “scientists” who are pushing the Man-caused climate change scam, why they ignore the difference between the actual temperatures as recorded by by weather balloons and satellites, and the projected temperatures of most of the climate models – and why they don’t see this as a problem, a BIG problem, to rely on computer models which do not reflect reality.

This is not science. It’s fantasy. Yes, I was a fan of the magazine Fantasy & Science Fiction for a long time but I did not plan my life around it…

1sky1
October 17, 2019 3:54 pm

The likes of Stanley Cohen are forever staging displays of self-aggrandizing psycho-babble sans any compelling scientific evidence. The art of passing off such sorry spectacles as “academic rigor, journalistic flair” has become a congenital disease.

Solomon Green
October 19, 2019 12:41 pm

“The second form of denial is interpretive denial. Here, people do not contest the facts, but interpret them in ways that distort their meaning or importance. For example, one might say climate change is just a natural fluctuation or greenhouse gas accumulation is a consequence, not a cause, of rising temperatures.”

OR one might say that climate change was not a natural fluctuation and was caused by humans. Until there is proof of AGW the hypothesis that man has caused the climate to change is a denial of the known facts that climate has been changing long before humans walked the earth.

Hence, whichever side of the argument, sceptics or warmists, we are all deniers.

Johann Wundersamer
October 28, 2019 12:51 am

Fits the grand chamber spectacles of nature:

https://www.derstandard.at/story/2000030246109/island-aluminiumfabriken-gegen-naturschutz-im-niemandsland

– foreign aluminium smelters endanger Icelandic environment aims, makes Icelandic electricity dues the highest in the world.