I recently
attended a scientific conference in the Northeast U. S. (I will be purposely
vague about the exact venue for reasons that will shortly become clear), and on
the plane I read an article by the Harvard political scientist Harvey Mansfield
that pointed out an ironic fact about science: in order to do good science, scientists must act at least
some of the time like non-scientists.
Right after that, I got to see a good example of what he was talking
about.
One of the main
things that attract certain personalities to science and engineering is the
supposed objectivity and emotion-free quality of science. Mr. Spock, the famously non-emotional
Vulcan of the Star Trek TV series,
supposedly had a temperament ideally suited for science, because emotion was
never supposed to influence his judgment.
Many scientific journals insist that papers submitted to them be written
in the passive voice (not "We found that. . . " but "It was
found that. . . "), thus removing any trace of the author's personality
from the paper and making it sound more objective. But Mansfield pointed out that thumos (a Greek word meaning "spiritedness" or
"passion") often takes over when scientists perceive a threat to
something they hold dear, even if the threat comes with scientific
credentials. And many scientists
who discover something that goes against the current consensus of scientific
opinion have to defend their new ideas passionately against equally vigorous
and emotional opposition. In getting
emotional, scientists end up acting like ordinary non-scientists, but most good
scientists tend to have a certain amount of thumos
that motivates them to do the hard work and defending of their ideas that are needed
to get a hearing in the competitive world of research.
The night after I
arrived at the conference, the sponsoring organization held a banquet which
included a buffet dinner, awards, and a three-piece classical music group that
could barely be heard above the conversational din in the large hall. During dessert, the chairman got up at
the raised podium and announced the name of the after-dinner speaker: William Happer, a well-known
physicist. I had heard his name
before, and as he began his talk, I remembered where: as author of an article entitled "The Truth About
Greenhouse Gases."
By now, the most
famous (but by no means the only) greenhouse gas is carbon dioxide, CO2. The conventional wisdom among most
scientists, policymakers in many countries, and the general public is that (a)
humanity is playing Russian roulette with the world's climate by burning so
much fossil fuel, which (b) invariably makes CO2, which (c) traps
heat and raises average global temperatures, which will (d) lead to all kinds
of disasters, from dying polar bears to flooded South Sea islands and perhaps
even an epidemic of kidney stones.
Therefore, all right-thinking citizens should be aware of their carbon
footprints and do everything humanly possible to minimize them, or else go
around feeling guilty for not doing so.
Prof. Happer's
specialty is the way atoms and molecules absorb and emit radiation, and in the technically
sophisticated and convincing talk he gave, he showed that the correlation
between rising CO2 levels and global
average temperature is more alleged than real. He also showed that the role of CO2 in the
global heat balance has been greatly exaggerated, and that there are serious
flaws in the way current models treat the details of how the gas absorbs
radiation to affect climate. He
closed with a quotation from playwright Henrik Ibsen: "I am in revolt
against the age-old lie that the majority is always right."
The audience
reaction was interesting. They
were quiet at first, but when it became clear that Happer was arguing against
the main claims of global warming, most people except for a small circle near
the speaker resumed talking as though nothing special was going on. There was scattered applause at the
end, and then Happer asked for questions.
The first two or
three were queries about technical details. Then a tall, rather formidable-looking man rose and mounted
the podium. I can't recall all his
words, but I know he began by saying his father was one of the founders of the
field of cloud physics. He charged
Happer with at least two faults: cowardice, for not being willing to attend
mainstream climate-change meetings to present his arguments; and ill will, for
insulting the intelligence of the climate-change community. In response, Happer pointed at one of
the charts in his presentation and said, "The facts are there." His accuser said something else in a
tone of voice that I would characterize as non-scientific, and for a moment there
I wondered if the after-dinner entertainment was going to be an amateur
prizefight. Then the chairman
hastily grabbed the microphone and asked the musical trio to start
playing. The audience laughed that
nervous kind of laugh that means people are relieved that something really awful
isn't going to happen after all, and that was the end of that.
Only it wasn't,
really. What if Happer is right,
and the vast majority of climate scientists, government leaders, and the public
(which is not qualified to judge) has turned a molehill of a problem into a
mountain that threatens whole economies and spreads fear and misplaced
priorities worldwide? A lot of
people will end up looking pretty foolish, for one thing, which is why Son of
Cloud Physicist got up and said what he said. Of course, one should not make the opposite error of
thinking that every crank and holder of a fringe opinion who comes along must
be right and the mainstream is always wrong. But Happer's evidence is not the only reason to suspect that
the conventional climate-change picture at least has serious flaws. Others such as David Rutledge at
Caltech have questioned the conventional wisdom as well, but for different
reasons.
Climate change
happens so slowly compared to the potential progress of science that I suspect
the story will be gradually rewritten as time goes on to prove the dominant
powers right whatever actually happens, and it will take a clever historian to tell the real story a century or two hence. In the meantime, those of us who have more important things
to worry about than how many centimeters per year the ocean is rising can take
some comfort in the chance that William Happer's voice may be heard, and
scientists will act a little more like scientists in the matter of examining
the technical evidence for global warming.
Harvey Mansfield's
article "Science and Non-Science in Liberal Education" appeared in
the Summer 2013 edition of The New
Atlantis, pp. 22-37.
A model is only as good as the modeller's understanding of the system being modelled. Bad assumptions, lack of clarity about how factors interact and gaps in knowledge will yield a model that doesn't provide good predictions.
ReplyDeleteAnd yet, the climate people were 100% certain about their predictions.