Difference between revisions of "File:Global Climate Alarmism and Historical Precedents.pdf"

From Wikispooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(metadata)
m (Text replacement - "{{FileProv" to "{{Document")
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{FileProv
+
{{Document
 
|source_name=Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons
 
|source_name=Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons
 
|source_details=Vol. 18 No. 3 - Autumn 2013
 
|source_details=Vol. 18 No. 3 - Autumn 2013
Line 5: Line 5:
 
|type=paper
 
|type=paper
 
|publication_date=September 2013
 
|publication_date=September 2013
|comment=Authoritative opinion from one of the world's leading climate scientists and IPCC member working on the 1995 and 2001 Assessment reports
+
|subjects=Climate change, Corruption of Science, History of Science
|ContentsTitle=Science in the Public Square: Global Climate Alarmism and Historical Precedents
+
|description=Authoritative opinion from one of the world's leading climate scientists and IPCC member working on the 1995 and 2001 Assessment reports
 +
|title=Science in the Public Square: Global Climate Alarmism and Historical Precedents
 
}}  
 
}}  
 
===Introduction===
 
===Introduction===
Though valuable as a process, science is always problematic as an institution. Charles Darwin often expressed gratitude for being able to be a gentleman scientist with no need for an institutional affiliation. Unfortunately, as a practical matter, the gentleman scientist no longer exists. Even in the 19th Century, most scientists needed institutional homes, and today science almost inevitably requires outside funding. In some fields, including climate, the government has essentially a monopoly on such funding.
+
Though valuable as a process, science is always problematic as an institution. [[Charles Darwin]] often expressed gratitude for being able to be a gentleman scientist with no need for an institutional affiliation. Unfortunately, as a practical matter, the gentleman scientist no longer exists. Even in the 19th century, most scientists needed institutional homes, and today science almost inevitably requires outside funding. In some fields, including climate, the government has essentially a monopoly on such funding.
  
 
Expanded funding is eagerly sought, but the expansion of funding inevitably invites rent-seeking by scientists, university administration, and government bureaucracies. The public square brings its own dynamic into the process of science: most notably, it involves the coupling of science to specific policy issues. This is a crucial element in the climate issue, but comparable examples have existed in other fields,
 
Expanded funding is eagerly sought, but the expansion of funding inevitably invites rent-seeking by scientists, university administration, and government bureaucracies. The public square brings its own dynamic into the process of science: most notably, it involves the coupling of science to specific policy issues. This is a crucial element in the climate issue, but comparable examples have existed in other fields,
Line 23: Line 24:
 
* Significant numbers of scientists eager to produce the science demanded by the “public.”
 
* Significant numbers of scientists eager to produce the science demanded by the “public.”
  
These features are hardly independent. Moreover, they interact in important ways (see Figure 1). This tale illustrated in the figure is not meant to explain any particular abuse of science but rather to demonstrate why the system is vulnerable to abuse.
+
These features are hardly independent. Moreover, they interact in important ways (see Figure 1). This tale illustrated in the figure is not meant to explain any particular abuse of science but rather to demonstrate why the system is vulnerable to abuse...
 
 
Continues.....
 
 
 
[[Category:Climate Science]]
 
[[Category:Corruption of Science]]
 
[[Category:Doc]]
 

Latest revision as of 23:16, 24 July 2016

Authoritative opinion from one of the world's leading climate scientists and IPCC member working on the 1995 and 2001 Assessment reports

Disclaimer (#3)Document.png paper  by Richard S. Lindzen dated September 2013
Subjects: Climate change, Corruption of Science, History of Science
Source: Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons

★ Start a Discussion about this document
Science in the Public Square: Global Climate Alarmism and Historical Precedents



Introduction

Though valuable as a process, science is always problematic as an institution. Charles Darwin often expressed gratitude for being able to be a gentleman scientist with no need for an institutional affiliation. Unfortunately, as a practical matter, the gentleman scientist no longer exists. Even in the 19th century, most scientists needed institutional homes, and today science almost inevitably requires outside funding. In some fields, including climate, the government has essentially a monopoly on such funding.

Expanded funding is eagerly sought, but the expansion of funding inevitably invites rent-seeking by scientists, university administration, and government bureaucracies. The public square brings its own dynamic into the process of science: most notably, it involves the coupling of science to specific policy issues. This is a crucial element in the climate issue, but comparable examples have existed in other fields, including eugenics and immigration, and Lysenkoism and agronomy.

Although there are many reasons why some scientists might want to bring their field into the public square, the cases described here appear, instead, to be cases in which those with political agendas found it useful to employ science. This immediately involves a distortion of science at a very basic level: namely, science becomes a source of authority rather than a mode of inquiry. The real utility of science stems from the latter; the political utility stems from the former

For science to be politically useful, several features are involved:

  • Powerful advocacy groups claiming to represent both science and the public in the name of morality and superior wisdom;
  • Simplistic depictions of the underlying science so as to facilitate widespread “understanding”;
  • “Events,” real or contrived, interpreted in such a manner as to promote a sense of urgency in the public at large;
  • Scientists flattered by public attention (including financial support) and deferent to “political will” and popular assessment of virtue; and
  • Significant numbers of scientists eager to produce the science demanded by the “public.”

These features are hardly independent. Moreover, they interact in important ways (see Figure 1). This tale illustrated in the figure is not meant to explain any particular abuse of science but rather to demonstrate why the system is vulnerable to abuse...

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeDimensionsUserComment
current16:03, 1 September 2013 (5.23 MB)Peter (talk | contribs)Category:Climate Science Category:Doc
  • You cannot overwrite this file.

The following page uses this file: