
What’s Natural
Guest post by Jim Steele,
Published June 30, 2020 in the Pacifica Tribune
It’s curious how we find threads of good fortune interwoven with tragedy. Over a month ago I suffered a “widow-makers” heart attack, but I was graced with good luck. Just 2 hours earlier I was hiking on San Pedro Point. If the attack happened there, they would have carried my corpse off the mountain. As it was, the doctors still doubted my survival. But fortunately, one of the best heart surgeons was operating. But after 24 hours, he called my wife offering his condolences, telling her he did the best he could. Even in my drug-induced dreams I lay dead in a dark casket. But again, I was lucky. The surgeon’s best was just good enough. The next day he called my wife to say I was suddenly making progress.
Lying in ICU for 15 days, I reviewed my life and wondered if I would ever see family again. The COVID lockdown prevented all visitors, and my electronic devices were all home. I conjured up 60 years of friends, hoping to see their faces or hear their voices one more time. Sometimes a wave of melancholy would visit, thinking my passing would ultimately make little difference in their lives. But when I came home, I found hundreds of cards, email messages and texts wishing me well and I wept with heart-felt appreciation.
I was struck by friends who said that they “knew” I couldn’t die. Some because I was such a stubborn SOB. Others repeated I had so much more to give and my earthly mission was not complete. I confess loving to hear such sentiments, but they were just kind words. How could they know what my mission was? But then again, I had been on a solemn mission for 50 years.
In the late 1960s, I dropped out of ROTC and Engineering school not wanting to contribute to the horrors of the Vietnam War. After a few years of community organizing, I knew I had to go back to college, but for what purpose? In keeping with my love for nature, I had adopted some native American spirituality, so I went on my “vision quest”. The idea was to strip myself of all attachments to better know myself. I fasted in the middle of the wilderness for 4 days with just a blanket and bottle of water, then spoke to the universe about what I wanted. Amazingly, many lofty words only echoed back pathetically, but when I said I wanted to be a liaison between nature and people, my words rang strong. So, I enrolled at San Francisco State University in ecology and began my mission.
I embraced the beliefs of a great 1800s scientist, Thomas Huxley. He became known as Darwin’s Bulldog for his avid defense of many of Darwin’s theories. Studying fossils Huxley was first to theorize birds had evolved from dinosaurs. Relevant to my mission Huxley advised, “The improver of natural knowledge absolutely refuses to acknowledge authority, as such. For him, skepticism is the highest of duties; blind faith the one unpardonable sin.” Or as Einstein advised, “Never stop questioning.”
As director of SFSU’s Sierra Nevada Field Campus I expanded the environmental studies program. To know nature, we immersed students in nature. I began a 25-year study of how natural climate and landscape changes affected wildlife. When a meadow we were monitoring dried up and birds declined, many blindly blamed global warming. Avoiding Huxley’s unpardonable sin, I dug deeper. It became clear the real problem was stream flows had been disrupted over 100 years ago. By restoring the streams, the meadow became more resilient and the wildlife improved better than before. Judicious skepticism had made me a better environmental steward.
Unfortunately, researchers’ dramatic conclusions too often go unexamined. Fearful conclusions make us abandon our critical thinking and valid contrasting research gets ignored. Too often research gets designed to fit prevailing fears so that science now suffers from a “replicability crisis”. Ten years ago, Stanford epidemiologist tested over 400 research published claims and only one could be replicated and validated. The editor of Europe’s top medical journal, the Lancet, speculated half of their published research was likely false. Outside the laboratory, claims about ecology and climate are far more difficult to verify.
As science becomes more politicized, we get blinded by our beliefs. Honest points get dismissed as fake news, or the work of deniers. But more than ever “skepticism is our highest of duties”. All contradictory evidence must be examined, and respectful debate conducted. Indeed, this wretch is still on a mission to bring insights to the complexities of wildlife, wildfires, sea level, and climate. So, I want to thank Sherm Fredericks for providing the newspaper space for my columns. I also want to thank WUWT for posting my columns and analysses. I simply hope to make people think and dig deeper. I will have a long rehab, so I encourage you to email me to discuss those issues. Together we can become “improvers of natural knowledge”.
Jim Steele is director emeritus of the Sierra Nevada Field Campus, SFSU and authored Landscapes and Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism.
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Wish you a complete recovery !
Don’t believe you ever acted as badly as John Newton ….
😉
Thanks Jim, glad you pulled through.
My wife had rheumatic fever and that can (does) damage heart valves. In 2009 we planned for a new valve for March 2010. At Thanksgiving she had a heart attack, that was cleared with some heart muscle damage. Clean-up after the procedure included the use of Heparin. A small percentage of people react to this. She did.
See: HIT .
8 days fully sedated. 55 days in ICU. Valve replacement. 7 weeks in a rehab facility. {A long and amazing story}
Now to the point:
She thanked the surgeon (& team) for saving her life. His reply was that it was the “man up there” who had further work for her to do. She did get strong enough to play fiddle. For 10 years, she and friends entertained in elder-care and rehab facilities. Panic2020 has ended that.
We wish your next 10 years are as great as hers has been.
So thankful you are still with us – we have so much more to learn – prayers…..
Is not modern medicine wonderful?
In the future, a scientist with a tendency to question politically correct stances will NOT qualify. Sorry.
Concerning the Vietnam War comment; LBJ, that “Loud Braying Jackass” as my father, a lifelong Democrat, named him, was responsible for most of that war’s tragedies, after JFK, a Democrat unrecognizable today, began our involvement. It was the much maligned Richard Nixon who extracted the USA from that quagmire.
Best wishes for a steady recovery. May you keep writing long & well!
All the best wishes, Jim. Often as Alice and I play ball with our dog Radar on our local beach I think of your articles and I look around me and try to understand what I’m seeing. The convoluted strata of the cliffs, the scars of ancient elevated beaches, the dimpled rocks in the meadow that mirror the rocks on the shore. As we’ve traveled I’ve looked for the same; the coral mounds high above today’s sea level; beaches and driftwood in the Arctic the same. On a Lindblad/National Geographic Antarctic expedition with James Balog of “Chasing Ice” fame and Dr. Robert Bindschadler, NASA, I countered their arguments of “It’s worse than you think” with studies indicating that the calving of the Greenland Jakobshavn glacier and shrinking of Antartica’s Pine Island glacier had previously been much greater. I credit the spirit of skepticism you released in me with my questing for context in these and other events. You’ve inspired many of us to proudly wear “Skeptic” labels.
Good luck and godspeed, Jim. You’ve always been one of my favorite contributors here at WUWT, because you write so clearly, communicate your ideas so well. Would that every scientist thinks and speaks as clearly and carefully as you do. Best wishes going forward.
Hi Jim. Congratulations with your miraculous survival.
Anything you write here on WUWT I read with interest and pleasure.
The first piece of you I read was your description of the yearly food cycle of the polar bear and how less summer ice meant more biomass, therefore more fish, therefore more seals and therefore more polar bears.
Well researched, well reasoned, a joy to read – it blew my mind: the alarmists backed up by the establishment media and many scientists were further lost in nonsense\deceitful activism than I already thought.
Since then I have read every article of you that I found – they are part of an oasis of intelligence and intellectual integrity where I rest and find new courage amid the intellectual laziness and dishonesty one meets so much.
Thank you.
As a dancer, may I recommend a kind of very subtle, relaxing physical training that many dancers nowadays use to make their movements easier and smoother?: Moshe Feldenkrais’ technique.
He too inhabits my oasis of intelligence and integrity.
Robin Kool
Hi Jim
Glad to here your story had a happy ending. I read your book when it was first published and loved it for the clear thinking and real scientific thought. I have also read your many posts – and look out for them – which is why I have come to this one despite being late. I live in Victoria Australia and sometimes feel I am beating my head against an alarmist brickwall and a government that cares nothing for its people – other than the politics of getting re-elected. I am a member of the Victorian Planning and Environmental Law Association and attend their annual two day conferences where I seem to be the only one questioning the environmental speakers they put up that have more concern about preaching to you than valid science to report.
I hope you continue on with your mission for many years yet and give us many more points of argument against the forces of darkness. Cheers – Melbourne (Kinglake) Resident