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Eric (skeptic) at 03:23 AM on 9 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Chuck101, the main reason for my focus is so there can be a discussion, although it's very difficult for me to avoid tangents into attribution, costs, mitigation, etc. The 97% includes models, but model treatments vary along with the result (Greenland melting versus Amazon drought versus storminess). chriskoz (and JohnMashey), the average conditions and dynamics are linked to each other. It's ok to put the average conditions from empirical data into a model parameter, but the conditions will change the dynamics downstream (time or location). For example we all agree that measurements show that CAPE is increasing on average and high CAPE will help sustain an MCS like the derecho that hit my area at the end of June. Along with such severe weather I am interested in how much negative feedback is caused by that severe weather if in fact it increases on average. That is where I do not believe the models have the fidelity to make an accurate projection. By fidelity I mean that the model need not predict anything correctly but must result in an accurate climatology that is an essential input to the energy balance calculation. -
Bob Lacatena at 03:14 AM on 9 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Eli, But we can't understand stuff from models because we don't understand enough stuff to build models that are good enough to help us understand stuff. Or so Eric seems to think. -
michael sweet at 03:09 AM on 9 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric, Most of the data summarized in the table is observations, not models. There is a single line for models. Your claim "the apparent probability density functions are not actually PDFs but model run density functions" is simply incorrect and evidence of complete denial. Welcome to the 3%. The overwhelming majority of the data idicating a 3C sensitivity comes from direct observations, not models. If your claim to uncertainty is that observed data is modeled there is no room for discussion. -
Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
vrooomie - Indeed, it was featured prominently at WUWT. -
vrooomie at 02:52 AM on 9 September 2012Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
And though Dana and Daniel are correct, in their dismissing the findings of Soon and Briggs, I'll wager that, *as I type*, the denialiti are furiously posting their findings all over the Intertoobs. -
Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
Dirt Girl - I for one am quite curious about the Soon and Briggs TSI - it isn't supported by any of the information I am aware of. They state the temperature data is from BEST, but do not source their TSI data. If you look at either the sunspot numbers or direct TSI measurements (averaged over the 11-year solar cycle for clarity) versus temperatures (as in this plot), you see that insolation is dropping while temperatures are rising over the last 40 years or so. S&B's claims are contradicted by the evidence. [ And yes, the Washington Times is a hyperconservative low-circulation paper, owned by the late Sun Myung Moon, not known for any balance in their views. I would not consider it a reliable source. S&B are welcome to try to publish their column in a peer-reviewed journal - it might give the editors a good laugh while getting rejected. ] -
vrooomie at 02:50 AM on 9 September 2012Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
While reading the article, here's the point at which I fell off'a my chair, laughing... "...there has been relatively little work investigating the solar-climate connection." Riiiight. As for the rest of the article, and considering not only the source of the 'data,' but who published and printed it, I agree w/Dana@4 -
Daniel Bailey at 02:44 AM on 9 September 2012Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
From a superficial scan of the article & graphic: - No baseline indicated -Data appears visually to end at 2005 (hey, BEST goes through 2010, doesn't it?)- The US is only a minute fraction of the world - BEST is land-only The only reason to not extend the TSI & temperature data later in the decade (using all the land data), and to ignore more than a century of OHC data, is that plotting such data would be inconvenient to reaching their predetermined narrative. The graphic is a crap exercise in curve-fitting, IMHO. -
dana1981 at 02:39 AM on 9 September 2012Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
Dirt Girl @3 - we weren't planning on it. The Washington Times is a right-wing rag, and Soon and Briggs are not worth taking seriously. Note the graphic in question claims the temperature data are from BEST but does not provide a reference for the solar data. As you note, TSI data have been essentially flat since 1979, decreasing if anything. Basically the Soon op-ed is a joke and IMO not even worth debunking. -
EliRabett at 02:33 AM on 9 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
As important, if not more, is the ability of models to help us understand stuff. -
Dirt Girl at 02:22 AM on 9 September 2012Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
Sorry, this is O/T but I was wondering if Skeptical Science will be posting a rebuttal to the Soon and Briggs Op Ed in the Washington Times yesterday. I am curious as to how the graph in the article shows and increase in TSI after 1970. Looking at the TSI from satellites or sun spot proxy data this does not seem possible. The graphs I've seen both show a decrease during this time period. - Thanks -
Wadard at 02:09 AM on 9 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Shorter Eric: Humanity's saviour is low CS-inducing Arctic dust. Until that's all modelled I don't credit a thing. -
A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric (skeptic) - " I don't think "1°C is reasonable" but it is plausible." "plausible - Seeming reasonable or probable." You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means. Given under the evidence the 90% probability of a sensitivity between 1°C and 5°C (and yes, that range does indeed represent the error bars on our knowledge), 1°C sensitivity to doubling of CO2 represents only a 5% chance - equally probable as a 5°C sensitivity. A 1°C sensitivity given our current knowledge is not plausible, it is possible but unlikely. You are claiming that a 1/20 chance is "probable", and that's just not supportable. Given the evidence, 1°C is not a good bet. -
Bob Lacatena at 01:24 AM on 9 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric, Sorry, I don't see any further point to discussing this with you, as you seemed to be totally and completely trapped in the mind set that 1) The models are inadequate 2) Everything is based on the models 3) Therefore any conclusions are inadequate As long as you are trapped in this mindset discussion hopeless, and your perception of and opinion on anything will remain too narrowly constrained to allow for any reasonable progress in the conversation. Sorry, but I just don't see the point in discussing this with someone who turns every single discussion, no matter what the details, back to "the models are inadequate." -
Dikran Marsupial at 00:45 AM on 9 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric: "The category of "very likely" (90%) encompasses the range from 1C to well over 5C in most cases, so it doesn't help much." This comment strongly suggests that you don't understand the probabilistic arguments. A 90% credible interval is the error bars. The fact that they range from 1C to 5C tells us that there is a large uncertainty in our knowledge of the correct value. This is exactly the reason that it is unreasonable to assume it lies as the low end, as that is pretending we are more certain than we actually have evidence to support. -
Dikran Marsupial at 00:40 AM on 9 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric (skeptic) You are merely changing the subject. In a Bayesian analysis you start of with a prior state of knowledge (the ranges of the parameters) which you then combine with observations (in this case the model runs) which gives you the posterior state of knowledge. Thus the range of parameters is merely the prior state of knowledge, so it is hardly surprising that it is included in the analysis. The reason for specifying a plausible range is exactly because we don't know the correct value with high certainty. P.S. You might also want to investigate the purpose of "perturbed physics experiments". -
Eric (skeptic) at 00:36 AM on 9 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Sphaerica, here are no error bars in the depiction above. All the depictions with a model run density functions are from models, the others are volcanoes and paleo-derived. Both have forcings other than CO2 and may not be applicable. The category of "very likely" (90%) encompasses the range from 1C to well over 5C in most cases, so it doesn't help much. The weaker "likely" category is mostly 2C and above. As for dangerous, I noted here that stronger storms are cooling (although I made a mistake, subsidence is cooling on average, not warming, so if there are fewer but stronger hurricanes on average, that means negative feedback). I don't think current sea level rise is dangerous other than model projections. Dikran, how can we say that a critical parameter (say convection) is reasonable or not? A sensitivity of 2C might be realistic, given a number of simplifying assumptions, see here But the required calculations from physics or empirical data to model parameter values are difficult to determine in any case. -
Dikran Marsupial at 00:04 AM on 9 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric (skeptic) The "model run density functions" are probability density functions, and have a perfectly reasonable interpretation within a Bayesian framework. "The choice of ranges of parameters to mimic natural variation determines the shape of the distribution." Well of course they do, the "model run density function" is an indication of the relative plausibilities of different outcomes, given what we know, so naturally this would involve using realistic parameters rather than unrealistic ones! -
Bob Lacatena at 23:24 PM on 8 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric, Your position is utter nonsense. First... you don't see error bars? Second... all you see is models? Third... so if the range is 1C to 5C, and anything from 2C up is dangerous (the higher the more dangerous), and it is possible, based on current events, that 1.5C is dangerous... ...then tell me again how you wind up at "let's be patient, because climate sensitivity is probably 1C"? Tell me again, too, how you can look at the K&H chart, with a marginal probability of a climate sensitivity below 2C, and see 1C as a shining beacon? Oh, that's right, they are "not actually PDFs" and you can't seem to see the bars and lines and words like "likely" and "very likely." And they're all models... including the "Instrumental Period" and the "Current Mean Climate State" and the "Last Millenium" and the "Volcanic Eruptions" and the "Last Glacial Maximum" and "Millions of Years Ago" and... -
Eric (skeptic) at 22:51 PM on 8 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Michael, thanks for the challenge. I don't think "1C is reasonable" but it is plausible. As I explained here and previously, the apparent probability density functions are not actually PDFs but model run density functions. The choice of ranges of parameters to mimic natural variation determines the shape of the distribution. So I don't think it is reasonable to point to the center of "model density distribution functions" and claim that 3C is reasonable. The fundamental problem is sub-grid scale physical parameterizations which determine the density function, not reality or even simulated reality. More apropos to my previous post is that the paleo bars do not have any density function because there is really no way to know the distribution due to a lot of measurement error, localized measurements (ice cores) rather than global, changes in geography with large unknown effects, etc. One way to deal with some of the unknowns is by using models (e.g. feeding changed geography into the models). The full chart from Knutti and Hegerl is reproduced in post 72 above. It shows that the paleo estimates do not have a similar base state (far left red square in 3b) and do not have similar feedbacks and timescales (next red square). Those two red squares make the model estimates inapplicable to today's climate. To make them applicable, one must remove the uncertainties due to difficult-to-measure feedbacks. The result, at least in K&H08, is that the estimates of sensitivity from paleo data do not have a distribution, they could be uniform or more likely skewed left since other feedbacks also amplified the warming from glacial to current interglacial along with CO2. Today those other feedbacks are missing (e.g. dust, large weather changes, etc) As I said in the other thread there may be new positive feedbacks that were not in play in the glacial transition so that adds uncertainty on the high side. -
chuck101 at 22:43 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Thanks for the in depth explanation chriskoz, though I think there is a simpler underlying psychological process going on here. Eric views himself as a rational skeptic, and would be embarrassed to get lumped in with the standard denialist crowd. Hence, he claims that he accepts the 97% scientific consensus. EXCEPT. Except that he won't until some arbitrary milepost of his own specification is met, which it wont be, at least for a decade or two. This allows him to present himself as rational, sane and objective, while still denying the consensus for the next 10 to 20 years. A denier in denial. Nice Work! Self contradiction appears also to be necessary for an accomplished denialist: http://www.skepticalscience.com/plimervsplimer.php -
Bob Lacatena at 22:24 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
52, chuck101. You didn't miss anything. It's "focused denial" dressed up as rational skepticism. -
chriskoz at 22:11 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
chuck101@52 You got it essentially right. Furthermore, if you follow the link in JohnMashey@43, you better understand the differences between the problems answered by weather vs. climate simulations. The problems of climate (the changes in the average state of chaotic processes) prediction is not limitted by model accuracy in representing the chaotic processes. What is important is getting the roundings correct (e.g. to have constant mass and energy balance) and the model stability within given boundaries in accordance with observations. Accurate representation of the dynamics of the chaos is less important. As an example, Eric wants the models to calculate dynamic convections to have faith that cloud feedback is well represented. I argue that such calculations, apart from increasing the complexity and be source of potential bugs, may not increase models' reliability more than simple parametrisation tuned with observations would do. Eric displays a typical skeptisism of a weatherman: lack of confidence in simple science about average conditions, because he's an acclaimed expert in underlying dynmical models. A simplified analogy would be: to figure out the average properties of some gas in a container, an expert weatherman might ponder about (or even calculate) the resulting fluid motions, but I don't want to go into such details: simple laws of thermodynamics are enough. -
michael sweet at 21:25 PM on 8 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Eric, Knutti and Hegerl summarize the climate sensitivity by a variety of methods. The overwhelming consensus is 3C with a long tail upwards. Anything less than 2C is unrealistic. Please produce a link supporting your claim that 1C is a number that is capable of being considered. Here is the key graphic. Please describe using the graphic how you conclude 1C is reasonable. The lowest high confidence intervals stop at 1.5C and most stop at 2C. There are long high tails. This graph has been posted many times to SKS since you started posting. Can this graph be added to the climate graphics page? -
chriskoz at 20:20 PM on 8 September 2012Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
In that BBC video news pointed by shoyemore, from ~1:00 to 1:15, they used the PIOMAS ice volume animation by our own andylee just less than a week before! Congratulation to the team, for our science communication having such fast impact on mainstream media, and especially to Andy for this piece of animation well done! -
chuck101 at 19:05 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
I have read with interest the continuing discussion with Eric (skeptic) and his obsession with models. Forgive me, but I always thought that models are used to predict stuff. If the prediction eventuates, then we can have faith in the science and assumptions used in that model. By necessity, due to uncertainties in current knowledge and limitations in computing power, the models cannot predict reality entirely, but they are useful in projecting trends, and we need this to try to predict any consequences of continuing CO2 build up. Eric seems to have things precisely ass-backwards. What he is essentially saying is, forget all the overwhelming evidence we have now for AGW. Unless the models can accurately predict all this evidence (to his own arbitrary standards), we can't be sure that it is happening. Or did I miss something? -
timothyh at 19:01 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
@49 Lambda 3.0 However thankless and tiring it may be, it is important to rebut the denialists. Any wrong or misleading arguments used by denialists should be rationally corralled, lest they infect the unwary "Cautious" ... and outright conversion of denialists to Warmism is not unheard of. -
shoyemore at 18:33 PM on 8 September 2012Do we know when the Arctic will be sea ice-free?
Professor Peter Wadhams of Cambridge seems to be the one responsible for the "2015" prediction. Here he talks to the BBC, and I gather he is making a documentary with them on the Petermann ice island. Should be interesting. "Arctic melt is like doubling CO2" -
JohnMashey at 16:03 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
re: 44 chriskoz Thanks. This reminds me of a long discussion I had during a working lunch with folks at NCAR, after I'd done a lecture in mid-1990s: I'd asked them to assess the various impediments to progress. Someone categorized them as follows: 1) Data 2) Science 3) Compute power 1) DATA. the necessary data might not exist. Scientists might like satellite records going back 2000 years, including solar insolation and volcanoes. Such would be really useful in better calibrating climate sensitivity, which after all, is one of the reasons for doing paleoclimate reconstructions. Of course, and I forget who said this, but the idea was that people would love to have data from the future, but unfortunately it was not available. Even ignoring emissions choices, no one can possibly predict an exact path given ENSO transitions. Even if someone could, there are still volcanoes. 2) SCIENCE. In some cases, there weren't practical science models. Clouds were difficult. Inflection points / nonlinearities are tricky to model, etc. 3) COMPUTE POWER. And finally, some effects simply could not be seen without getting grid elements small enough or intervals short enough. Since I was helping sell supercomputers, I was always pleased to hear this. But as usual, for some kinds of problems, resolution might already be adequate, or could be known to become adequate, but the barrier might be in data or science. They were of course always making tradeoffs of resolution versus run-time, with bounds on CPU performance, memory footprint, disk storage, I/O bandwidth. -
Lambda 3.0 at 15:16 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
@47 mikeh1 said, "Any communication strategy needs to be directed at the bulk of the population who are still open to the science." Relevant to action in the States, the Leiserowitz et al paper, Global Warming's The Six Americas shows that the hard-core denial community stands at 10% of the US population. At least if you can put the deniers and fake skeptics in the "dismissive" category. Another 15% are in the "doubtful" category and are mostly influenced by the dismissive. In the segment that accepts the scientific consensus, we have 39% (13% alarmed + 26% concerned). In the middle are the cautious (29%) and the disengaged (6%). Since we observe denialism is resistant to reasoning and observations, shouldn't we be focusing efforts on educating the Cautious? While it is interesting to understand the psychology of denial, it seems that a lot of the effort that goes into direct rebuttal may be better focused on educating those Cautious Americans who haven't tipped into outright support of opposition of a national response to climate change. I'd like to see thoughts and research on how best to reach, teach, and motivate the Cautious segment to support reasonable action to mitigate and adapt. Also, don't these numbers show that the elected policy makers shouldn't have that much to fear from the denial community (25%) when there is so much support for the scientific consensus among the 39%? But then, there are the trillions of dollars in proven reserves of fossil fuels that must be written off at some point. I'd rather write off the profits than our descendants. -
adelady at 14:49 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Andy@40 "because of the deeper failure of all of us to respond rationally to a novel, slow-motion, global, invisible threat. We have not evolved the instincts nor developed the social frameworks to address a problem of this nature adequately." I'm not entirely convinced. The threats posed by acid rain and the ozone hole were equally 'novel, slow-motion, global, invisible' threats to the populace at large, but governments listened to scientists and enacted sensible provisions to deal with those threats. I'm guilty of never having doubted climate science right from the beginning but mainly of presuming that the response would take the same course as it did for CFCs and acid rain. When we installed our solar hot water service in the 80s, I really thought that they would be the only kind of basic residential hot water services newly installed in Australia by say, 2000. When the first Rio conference came out with its vaguely worded objectives I was still certain that it was merely the first step in a diplomatic process to pin down the specifics - just like CFCs. I turned out to be wrong. But I'm pretty sure that that is because the diplomatic, political and business environment changed. I'm very glad that we identified the ozone hole problem when we did. If we were trying to deal with it now, I very much fear we wouldn't succeed. -
mikeh1 at 13:44 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Back to the topic. I am a regular at The Conversation. John's article attracted all the usual deniers who troll the climate science articles there plus a few new names including a fake "anthropologist" and a fake "climate scientist". Reading the comments, it is pretty clear that they are hardcore deniers and would not be persuaded if the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melted tomorrow. Any communication strategy needs to be directed at the bulk of the population who are still open to the science. To that end, I am bemused by sites like The Conversation which has a large readership and this charter http://theconversation.edu.au/our_charter but also allows the climate science denier trolls free rein. They have some great articles from actual climate scientists which are impossible to have a sensible discussion about because of the organised and intensive trolling. In my opinion that is insane. It is like going to a public meeting where a few loud and aggressive voices are allowed to shout from the back of the room to prevent any discussion - there is nothing democratic about it. I like the "put up or shut up" moderation policy which is generally implemented here because to quite frank, I am no longer interested in reading the same recycled denier arguments for the umpteenth time. And as a communication strategy, allowing deniers to post their anti-science rubbish on a university/science site sucks. -
Eric (skeptic) at 12:12 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Sorry about the first paragraph, a little garbled. There is absolutely more uncertainty about potential positive feedbacks such as melting methane deposits. I am only claiming that the uncertainty about climate sensitivity calculated from paleo evidence is towards the low side of sensitivity. -
Eric (skeptic) at 12:09 PM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
I have hit one of the hazards of being off topic for which I apologize. My comment on uncertainty is narrow, only applying to the last paragraph in #31 by KR. There absolutely uncertainty in the realm of positive feedbacks, for example methane from permafrost, etc. Those are not what I was considering paleo evidence, namely the changes in conditions from glacial to present. I realize my narrower claim of uncertainty still needs support. Here's a post on that topic chriskoz, since we are trying to project for 100 years, we need to run for 100 simulated years and accuracy of the results does depend on the temporal granularity of the model. If the model cannot depict the evolution of convection then it can't determine the climate effects of convection. It must instead rely on parameterizations that can only be derived from the current (mostly inapplicable) climate. The faster sea ice melt should be expected following a positive AO winter (similar to 2007) and mostly represents a natural fluctuation. The models do poorly precisely for that reason. -
Eric (skeptic) at 11:59 AM on 8 September 2012A detailed look at climate sensitivity
Here's a paper Sea-salt aerosol response ... from the Cornell website. The paper uses a model to compare climate (precip, wind and salt aerosol loading between those four climate regimes. The precipitation shows a steady increase from glacial to preindustrial to present to future with doubled CO2. That represents a negative feedback as the increased latent heat transfer offsets some of the increased GHE. The wind shows a fairly drastic difference from glacial to the other three regimes indicating that measurements such as sensitivity of climate to a forcing change from the glacial to interglacial can't be applied to interglacial to future. Tom in #72 replies that even if we are in a "Goldilocks" climate state, BAU will lift temperatures by 2-3C. My answer is there are not sufficient changes in the climate regime (compared to LGM) to do that. There are large decreases in wind (and consequent dust and other aerosols) that will not be duplicated to any significant extent in the forthcoming change from current to doubled CO2. The precip increases will work against temperature increases. In fig 3b (post 72) the left two squares are red because the starting conditions (LGM) are too different from today's starting conditions and the sensitivity estimate cannot be applied. I am trying to show further that the sensitivity estimate is also an overestimate due to the greater magnitude of climate changes from LGM to present than present to doubled CO2. People may argue that the increased difference is accounted for simply by the increased GAT change, but that change was only 4-5C. -
scaddenp at 11:45 AM on 8 September 2012Realistically What Might the Future Climate Look Like?
I havent tried to do this calculation for rest of world, but for NZ (which is heavily agriculture based), it was pretty easy to supply farm fuel needs with biofuel, particularly if woody biofuels or algal fuel that use non-arable land. Could even do transport diesel. So, I dont think we would starve without fossil fuels. Doing biofuel for all the other things that we use fuel for (especially private vehicles) is another story altogether. -
chriskoz at 11:38 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
JohnMashey@43, Well said. I especially like the distinction beetween weather and climate as "Initial Value Problem" vs. "Boundary Value Problem". Eric (skeptic) clearly ignores this distinction. The evidence supporting my claim here, is that Eric expressed so much concern about the resolution and accuracy of local processes in climate models, i.e. he's concerned that climate models are "unable to model 100 years at 10 minute and 1 square mile resolution to capture convective precipitation processes". Apart from obvious fact that the accuracy of results does not depend on how long the models runs; we all know, that boundary value problem is not resolved by increasing model's accuracy. That's nonsense, a common fallacy of those "researchers" who "look at the tree & don't see the forest". Eric is also concerned about the cloud formation dynamics: very localised processes. They have nothing to do with the actual science of water vapour feedback which is large scale (global) process. To fine tune the boundary value problem models, such as AOGCM, a well mixed system, you must seek to better understand global processes. A good way to do fine-tune a complex, turbulent system such as climate, is by careful observation and correction of parameters. E.g. latest observations in the arctic strongly suggests that our models underestimate the current AGW. The much faster than expected sea ice melt means the arctic ice albedo positive feedback (eqiv. to 20y of emisions at current levels see here) be indicative of higher than expected CO2 sensitivity, or faster than expected eqilibrium earth system response. Eric simply ignores that observation and blatently states that "climate sensitivity is low" against it. That's a classic cherry-picking. There might be other aspects of the denialist attitude represented by Eric, people like Steve Lewandowski might be able to point. I just pointed those aspects that I'm sure about. -
Tom Curtis at 11:11 AM on 8 September 2012AGU Fall Meeting sessions on social media, misinformation and uncertainty
GeoffChambers @130, I assessed the distribution of conspiracy theory responses for acceptors, undecided, and rejectors of AGW. Only for recectors is their any hint of a bimodal distribution; and that hint consists solely of the two dubious proxies. Therefore the suggestion that the distribution is bi-modal is ad hoc. Likewise, based on the limited literature I have read on the topic, there is no record of anyone strongly believing more than a few conspiracy theories simultaneously. Based on that, the supposition that such people do in fact exist and came out of the wood work solely for the benefit of this survey is also ad hoc. We are faced with two theories about the two suspect responses. The first is that they are attempts to game the survey. The theory that people attempted to game the survey is already confirmed , with at least 5% of responses known to have been attempts to game the survey. That makes the first theory both simple, and a theory with support behind it. The alternative theory is complex because it requires the existence of (so far, unsighted elsewhere) universal conspiracy theorists; and also requires a bimodal distribution, but only among rejectors of AGW. Given the choice between a simple theory with supporting evidence, and a complex theory requiring ad hoc hypotheses, I will always choose the former. Never-the-less, I am not saying Lewandowsky should exclude those two responses from the survey. Rather, I am saying he should make people aware of the reasonable doubt, and ideally show that their inclusion makes no difference to the result. (I believe that is indeed what he is claiming, although I have my doubts.) -
JohnMashey at 08:39 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Even if using the same code, weather and climate models are *different*, in some sense analogous to the difference between old-style protein-folding and climate models. Steve Easterbrook gives a good explanation of the difference between models for weather (Initial Value Problem) and climate (Boundary Value Problem). They are different, and knowing something about weather models does not automagically generalize to climate models. See RC's FAQ #1 and FAQ #2. -
Bob Loblaw at 08:08 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Eric (skeptic) @ 32, Sphaerica @ 36, KR @ 39 Yes. Isn't it odd that Eric is so certain about which portion of the uncertainty range contains the correct answer. Add me to the list of people that would love to hear Eric's explanation, justification, and support for his claim that the range of uncertainty is actually much, much smaller than that seen in the scientific literature. ...because that is basically what Eric has claimed: that the scientifically-indicated range of uncertainty is wrong - that he knows better and that he knows the correct answer is down at one end. -
Doug Bostrom at 07:55 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Andy S Guilty as charged and +1. -
Andy Skuce at 07:48 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Great comment, Kevin@37. I think that we need to be careful with all of these psychological explanations of why climate change "skeptics" think and reason the way they do. Firstly, as you said, it's all too easy to misuse these studies to categorize "skeptics" as somehow deficient in reasoning, which can be, at best, patronizing and at worst, dehumanizing. Secondly, it's all too easy to forget that our thinking processes, which are often driven by emotion first and reason second, are common characteristics of all of us, not just of people we disagree with. It's great fun to see "skeptic" commentators say things in responses to Stephan Lewandowsky's and John Cook's articles that seem to make the original authors' case for them. We must remember, though, that the problem with our, so far, inadequate response to climate change is not because a handful of internet pundits behave irrationally, but rather because of the deeper failure of all of us to respond rationally to a novel, slow-motion, global, invisible threat. We have not evolved the instincts nor developed the social frameworks to address a problem of this nature adequately. -
A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Eric (skeptic) - "...all the uncertainty points to lower sensitivity." And now you have explicitly stated a fallacious argument - that all the uncertainty favors your point of view. This is completely contrary to the evidence, wherein the bounds on low sensitivity are quite strong, and the bounds on a much higher sensitivity are in fact less constrictive. The uncertainty actually favors a higher sensitivity, not a lower one. As with Sphaerica - I'm going to have take your position as nonsense (a mix of cherry-picking and confirmation bias) unless you can provide some citations, some evidence, supporting your point of view. -
Doug Bostrom at 06:52 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Interesting comment from Kevin, thought-provoking. Funny thing is (and it perhaps illustrates Kevin's thoughts in terms of mirroring) last night I paid a visit to Lewandowsky's blog and the comment stream immediately led me to think of "mobbing." Later on I realized that by sheer numbers there was not much of a mob there, really, just a few shouters. -
Kevin C at 06:20 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
OK, I'll have a go at the sociology. Huge D-K caveats over all of this. My principle source is Girard, although there probably bits of Derrida and others mixed in here too. When communities face problems they tend to find outlets for that pressure, in the form of a response which is some modified form of violence. Often this involves the creation of a victim or class of victims (the scapegoat) on which the problems can be blamed. To avoid compromising our own humanity, dehumanisation of the victims is usually a part of the process. The victimisation process release the tension and builds common cause within the community. We all do this, it's our anthropology. Lots of illustrations: Emmanuel Goldstein in 1984, the skeptic community's demonisation of Micheal Mann, immigrants. Is US politics more polarised this year? Related to recession? The conspiracy paper is not about climate. So of little interest to many of us here. However the response is interesting to me, because of the social anthropology. The skeptic community reacted very strongly against it. Elsewhere in the consensus community the paper also got quite a lot of play (e.g. it made the Guardian). Once it attracted criticism, many leapt to its defence (again fewer here), despite it's irrelevance to climate science. What is going on? The paper is very easy to play as a tool for dehumanising skeptics: 'They can't help being skeptics, it is because they are psychologically predisposed to conspiracy theories'. Put like that you can see why it would go down badly. Worse, the more insecure members of our community can use it to reason 'we are rational thinking individuals, they are controlled by their psychology'. That the 'controlled by their psychology' argument cuts both ways is no doubt obvious to a psychologist like Lewandowsky, but it is a common mistake. As a result, I think the paper unintentionally played to and was exploited by the less science-focussed elements of the consensus community and it's followers, and was used to dehumanise the image of the skeptic. The title of the paper certainly didn't help in preventing it from being abused in this way. That's my impression as to what is going on. Biggest caveats: None of my observations are objective and they are all suspect. The patchiness of my social anthropology no doubt biases me to interpret things in the light of the bits I know. On a personal note, the creation and dehumanisation of victims is part of our anthropology, and certainly it comes very naturally to me, yet at the same time I find it abhorrent. I can't stop others doing it to me, but neither can I participate in a community in which doing it to others is normative. Fortunately, SkS has on the whole managed to avoid this. -
Doug Bostrom at 06:03 AM on 8 September 2012AGU Fall Meeting sessions on social media, misinformation and uncertainty
Because Lewandowsky said it was... And Lewandowsky was indeed correct. ...and when McIntyre did find it... Weeks after it was sent. Minimum lesson learned: Read your own email. -
Bob Lacatena at 05:50 AM on 8 September 2012AGU Fall Meeting sessions on social media, misinformation and uncertainty
133, Geoff,Because Lewandowsky said it was...
So what? He said he did, they claim he didn't... oh, wait, McIntyre found it but ignored it. Again, so what? How did this in any way invalidate the study? Or do you just feel for McIntyre's poor, trod on sense of importance?Of course it is.
Oh, Jeeze. So you think there was a warmist conspiracy to pretend to be skeptics, just to get them to look bad? Holy moly... -
Bob Lacatena at 05:45 AM on 8 September 2012A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
32, Eric,...all the uncertainty points to lower sensitivity.
This statement is direct contradiction of the science and utterly without support. Please supply a single, published citation that supports this presumption of yours. Looking at the range 1C to 5C and picking 1C because you personally think, in your own thought-experiments, that the "more positive feedback there was from lower dust levels, the lower the sensitivity to rising CO2" is true... ... is just plain insanity. How can you possibly separate yourself from the deniers? You began this thread by claiming "a large majority of skeptics agree with the 97% of climate scientists on AGW." I call "B.S.". You yourself are in complete denial. How can you speak for this large majority (that I have never seen)? -
A vivid demonstration of knee-jerk science rejection
Eric (skeptic) - Regarding ice-age dusts, it's not clear whether they provided negative or positive forcings, so again you are assuming ("positive feedback") a one-sided uncertainty. And you're back on the models, which (IMO) represents a cherry-picking of the evidence. -
geoffchambers at 05:38 AM on 8 September 2012AGU Fall Meeting sessions on social media, misinformation and uncertainty
Sphaerica #132Why do the conspiracy theorists among us actually care that this survey was or was not offered on self-proclaimed-skeptic blogs?
Because Lewandowsky said it was, and all the major sceptic blogs denied having found it, and when McIntyre did find it, it came from a different person, with a different introduction, attached to a different questionnaire, one week after it had already been publicised and widely discussed on anti-sceptic blogs. All points which need explaining, and which Lewandowsky refuses to address.Is the fear that skeptics who visit other blogs aren't representative of "real" skeptics, and so the study was improperly skewed towards a not-acceptable-as-a-real-skeptic population?
Of course it is. (-Snip-)Moderator Response: [DB] Ideology snipped.
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