Skeptical Science
Getting skeptical about global warming skepticism
Posted on 17 March 2010 by John Cook
A fascinating paper well worth reading is
Denialism: what is it and how should scientists respond? (Diethelm & McKee 2009)
(H/T to Jeremy Kemp for the heads-up). While the focus is on public
health issues, it nevertheless establishes some useful general
principles on the phenomenon of scientific denialism. A vivid example is
the President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, who argued against the
scientific consensus that HIV caused AIDS. This led to policies
preventing thousands of HIV positive mothers in South Africa from
receiving anti-retrovirals. It's estimated these policies led to the
loss of more than 330,000 lives (
Chigwedere 2008). Clearly the consequences of denying science can be dire, even fatal.
The authors define denialism as
"the employment of rhetorical
arguments to give the appearance of legitimate debate where there is
none, an approach that has the ultimate goal of rejecting a proposition
on which a scientific consensus exists". They go on to identify 5 characteristics common to most forms of denialism,
first suggested by Mark and Chris Hoofnagle:
- Conspiracy theoriesWhen the overwhelming body
of scientific opinion believes something is true, the denialist won't
admit scientists have independently studied the evidence to reach the
same conclusion. Instead, they claim scientists are engaged in a complex
and secretive conspiracy. The South African government of Thabo Mbeki
was heavily influenced by conspiracy theorists claiming that HIV was not
the cause of AIDS. When such fringe groups gain the ear of policy
makers who cease to base their decisions on science-based evidence, the
human impact can be disastrous.
- Fake expertsThese are individuals purporting to
be experts but whose views are inconsistent with established knowledge.
Fake experts have been used extensively by the tobacco industry who
developed a strategy to recruit scientists who would counteract the
growing evidence on the harmful effects of second-hand smoke. This
tactic is often complemented by denigration of established experts,
seeking to discredit their work. Tobacco denialists have frequently
attacked Stanton Glantz, professor of medicine at the University of
California, for his exposure of tobacco industry tactics, labelling his
research 'junk science'.
- Cherry pickingThis involves selectively drawing
on isolated papers that challenge the consensus to the neglect of the
broader body of research. An example is a paper describing intestinal
abnormalities in 12 children with autism, which suggested a possible
link with immunization. This has been used extensively by campaigners
against immunization, even though 10 of the paper’s 13 authors
subsequently retracted the suggestion of an association.
- Impossible expectations of what research can deliverThe
tobacco company Philip Morris tried to promote a new standard for the
conduct of epidemiological studies. These stricter guidelines would have
invalidated in one sweep a large body of research on the health effects
of cigarettes.
- Misrepresentation and logical fallaciesLogical
fallacies include the use of straw men, where the opposing argument is
misrepresented, making it easier to refute. For example, the US
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) determined in 1992 that
environmental tobacco smoke was carcinogenic. This was attacked as
nothing less than a 'threat to the very core of democratic values and
democratic public policy'.
Why is it important to define the tactics of denialism? Good faith
discussion requires consideration of the full body of scientific
evidence. This is difficult when confronted with rhetorical techniques
which are designed to distort and distract. Identifying and publicly
exposing these tactics are the first step in redirecting discussion back
to a focus on the science.
This is not to say all global warming skeptic arguments employ
denialist tactics. And it's certainly not advocating attacking peoples'
motives. On the contrary, in most cases, focus on motives rather than
methods is counterproductive. Here are some of the methods using
denialist tactics in the climate debate:
- Conspiracy theoriesConspiracy theories have been growing in strength in recent months as personal attacks on climate scientists have intensified. In particular, there has been accusations of manipulation of temperature data with the result that "the surface temperature record is unreliable" has been the most popular argument over the last month. This is distracting people from the physical realities of global warming manifesting themselves all over the world. Arctic sea-ice loss is accelerating. Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets are losing ice mass at an accelerating rate.
Spring is coming earlier each year. Animal breeding and migration are
changing in response. Distribution of plants are shifting to higher
elevations. Global sea level is rising. When one steps back to take in the full body of evidence, it overwhelmingly points to global warming.
- Fake expertsA number of surveys and petitions
have been published online, presenting lengthy numbers of scientists
who reject man-made global warming. Close inspection of these lists show
very few qualifications in climate science. On the contrary, a survey
of climate scientists who actively publish climate research found that over 97% agree that human activity is significantly changing global temperature.
- Cherry pickingThis usually involves a focus on a
single paper to the neglect of the rest of peer-review research. A
recent example is the Lindzen-Choi paper that finds low climate
sensitivity (around 0.5°C for doubled CO2). This neglects all the research using independent techniques studying different time periods
that find our climate has high sensitivity (around 3°C for doubled
CO2). This includes research using a similar approach to Lindzen-Choi
but with more global coverage.
- Impossible expectationsThe uncertainties of climate models are often used as an excuse to reject any understanding that can come from climate models.
Or worse, the uncertainty of climate models are used to reject all
evidence of man-made global warming. This neglects the fact that there
are multiple lines of empirical evidence that humans are causing global warming .
- Logical fallaciesStrawmen arguments abound in the climate debate. Often have I heard skeptics argue "CO2 is not the only driver of climate"
which every climate scientist in the world would wholeheartedly agree
with. A consideration of all the evidence tells us there are a number of
factors that drive climate but currently, CO2 is the dominant forcing and also the fastest rising. Logical fallacies such as "climate has changed before therefore current climate change must be natural"
are the equivalent of arguing that lightning has started bushfires in
the past, therefore no modern bushfire is ever started by arsonists.
Update 16 April 2012: Many thanks to Mark Hoofnagle
for pointing out that the 5 characteristics of science denial didn't
originate in Diethelm and McKee's paper but in an
article written by Mark and Chris Hoofnagle.
This is an article very worth reading for anyone interested in climate
change and public discourse about science. Credit has been updated
accordingly.
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