Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Hubris, Scientism, and Climate Change


Hubris, Scientism, and Climate Change

As is my habit, I listen to many podcasts as I travel to and fro, mainly to keep up on current affairs and to remain educated in topics such as history, engineering, and so forth.  This past weekend, as I was returning back from military duties at Fort Drum, I was listening to Fareed Zakaria GPS[i], which had been recorded earlier in the day.  The following dialogue intrigued me:

“ZAKARIA: All right. We have to go but, Bret, I've got to ask you.  Your column on climate change caused a -- you know, a Twitter storm, maybe a real storm.  So, you know, basically saying we shouldn't be so overconfident and act as though there is absolutely no debate to be had on climate change.  Liberals should be willing to imagine that they could be wrong.  And what a scientist said to me in response was, look, that would be like saying, you know, when you turn a light switch on maybe the light will go on, maybe it won't, it's still up in the air.  That there is so much overwhelming science in this direction.  So that's the pushback I heard from one very intelligent, liberal scientist.

STEPHENS: Well, I don't deny global warming or climate change.  And I don't deny that we need to address it seriously.  The point of the article was to say that there is a risk in any predictive science of hubris.  There was an IPPC at global U.N. report at one point that said that the Himalayan glaciers were going to melt within our lifetime. This turned out not to be true.  The skeptics, or the genuine deniers, obviously, pounced on this detail.

So the column was an attempt to be was a warning against intellectual hubris.  Not an effort to deny facts about climate that have been agreed by the scientific community.  And I think that's a distinction that I'm afraid was lost in some of the more intemperate criticism.  But people who read the column carefully can see that I said nothing outrageous or beyond the pale of normal discussion.

ZAKARIA: And it's always struck me that the best answer to these kind[s] of things is not to try to silence people or drum them out but to answer them. To have a vigorous response and a vigorous debate which is what you provoked I think in that.  So I was very grateful for it.”[ii]

Based on this dialogue, I was called to actually read Mr. Stephens’ op-ed piece “Climate of Complete Certainty”[iii], which I actually thought was really superior:  https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/28/opinion/climate-of-complete-certainty.html.  I give this link as I think it is certainly worth your consideration and a fair reading on your own.  What I very much appreciate here is his call to be careful of over-reach, hubris, and certitude.  This is something anyone that is in a true academic pursuit should be always conscious of, because it often skews results, or worse, gets things completely wrong.  And this is no less true in real-life, history and politics.  One could certainly quibble with Mr. Stephens’ comparison of the climate change debate with the Hillary Clinton campaign, even if it did bring up some good points in his piece.  A more apt example might actually be the march to war in Iraq in 2002-2003 on the hubris induced, and ultimately wrong, theory that Saddam Hussein held massive cashes of weapons of mass destruction.

Of any character flaw that I take seriously, it is that of hubris.  Whether at an individual level or in a group, when people become pompous and arrogant, it is a sure sign that trouble is on the way.  In the climate change discussion space, I cannot be pegged as one who is in any sense a climate change denier.  I serve on the US Green Building Council’s Upstate NY Board[iv], I am active in Lutheran’s Restoring Creation[v], I teach courses in sustainable building and construction at Clarkson University (which always leads off with the reason for a need to be more sustainable), am active in efforts to support positive action to curb the damage of non-homeostatic impacts on the environment[vi] and I even have a fairly well viewed "TIM Talk"[vii] on this topic.  The point being, like Mr. Stephens, I am in no way attempting to "hurt" the cause of trying to fight against the causes of what is likely to be catastrophic effects of climate change.  In reality, I am trying to do the opposite; I want to ensure the cause is strengthened by ensuring that it doesn't succumb to the sin of hubris.

To that point, I am fully on board with Stephens in regards to the need for us to acknowledge and be forthright in how we speak about the science and the facts regarding climate change.  One of the main reasons for my concurrence is because I continue to see evidence of the great harm that over-prediction, hubris, and certitude have wrought in this effort.  Take for example this meme that was put out over Facebook by someone I know that lies in the climate change denial camp[viii]:



It isn’t hard to figure out the point of this meme, and how over-prediction and extreme alarmism are used as a punchline, especially when baseline facts do not support the conclusions:  NYC, while flooded during Hurricane Sandy (with extensive damage and cost), has not been converted into Venice, the average price of a gallon of milk is well below $12.99, and gasoline is presently at a third of the above predicted cost (although it has fluctuated as high as $4 per gallon, it’s never reached $9 per gallon).  There are certainly tons of holes in the meme that those of us that live in a fact based world can certainly point to[ix], but such apologia is of little avail, given the bald face and gross over-predictions laid out and that were never even close to being realized.  This is the precise type of intellectual hubris that Mr. Stephens is speaking to in his warning to those that are absolute fire-brands for the climate:  resist absolutism, be clairvoyant and true, and gain some humility.

And it is to the primary antidote of humility that I see Mr. Stephens trying to turn us to acknowledge as critical in the climate change discussion.  Pope Francis, in a very recent TED Talk[x] spoke to this very point, especially to those that lead and are involved in politics.  He said, “[p]lease, allow me to say it loud and clear: the more powerful you are, the more your actions will have an impact on people, the more responsible you are to act humbly.”[xi]  Francis, in the encyclical Laudato Si[xii], spells out the way forward in this work, one that certainly takes humility seriously and eschews hubris.  We have to avoid scientism[xiii], and instead accept that we can’t have all or nothing approaches to the challenge before us.  Rather we need to remove the blinders that such hubris and arrogance build and instead be all about an open dialogue, bringing honest, factual discussion to the fore.  To that end, the following should help to paint the true picture for us all.


Global Climate Report 2014 – Annual Global Temperature[xiv]


Climate Change: Global Temperature Projections[xv]

I can say with strong certainty that we are indeed in the fight of our lives and a fight for the only known inhabitable, life sustaining world in the universe.  Does this mean we have to take drastic measures?  Most likely it does, despite the fact that we can’t have 100% certainty.  But taking such drastic measures should be based on the facts that are skeptically arrived at, not hyperbole and over statements that belie an unwillingness to stand up to scrutiny.  We have to fight back against those that deny the reality of climate change, but we cannot deny the truth and its lack of perfect coherence as we do so.  We can’t afford, in this effort, that perfect becomes the enemy of good.  And it is for that reason I agree with Zakaria, I am grateful for Mr. Stephens piece, but even more so that there are many of my colleagues and many in the world working on this cause that think likewise, honesty really is the best principle.






[i] If you have an appetite, as I do, of multiple perspectives on the world and the US, this is a podcast worth listening to:  https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/fareed-zakaria-gps/id377785090?mt=2
[ii] Fareed Zakaria GPS, 7 May 2017, from transcript, retrieved from http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1705/07/fzgps.01.html, retrieved on 10 May 2017
[iii] "Climate of Complete Certainty", Op-Ed, Bret Stephens, 28 April 2017, New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/28/opinion/climate-of-complete-certainty.html, retrieved on 10 May 2017
[iv] Currently serving as the Vice Chair.
[v] A grassroots organization working within the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America to create an eco-reformation
[vi] Including participation in the Climate March here in Potsdam, NY on 29 April 2017
[viii] Sergeant First Class (Retired) Thomas Paxitzis.  SFC Paxitzis and I served together in the 955th Engineer Company (Pipeline Construction) which I commanded from July 2001 to February 2003 and July 2004 to December 2004.  Tom was a Platoon Sergeant and one that was probably the most empathetic in the unit.  His views today, on a number of subjects including this one, are well out of the comportment that he once held.  Given our serving together I am unwilling to sever a connection, but only hope and pray that his bitterness will turn to empathy and his anger to acceptance; especially as he is a faith leader in his local congregation.
[ix] Among them that Good Morning America didn’t make those predictions, it reported on those that were; that the dossier of John Coleman is checkered at best and demonstrates his misleading and un-factual stances (https://www.desmogblog.com/john-coleman); and that these were all “worst case scenarios” that had variable likelihoods of occurrence.
[x] “Why the only future worth building includes everyone”, April 2017, https://www.ted.com/talks/pope_francis_why_the_only_future_worth_building_includes_everyone?language=en, retrieved on 10 May 2017
[xiii] “Scientism:  Unlike the use of the scientific method as only one mode of reaching knowledge, scientism claims that science alone can render truth about the world and reality.  Scientism's single-minded adherence to only the empirical, or testable, makes it a strictly scientific worldview, in much the same way that a Protestant fundamentalism that rejects science can be seen as a strictly religious worldview.  Scientism sees it necessary to do away with most, if not all, metaphysical, philosophical, and religious claims, as the truths they proclaim cannot be apprehended by the scientific method.  In essence, scientism sees science as the absolute and only justifiable access to the truth.”  Source:  PBS Glossary, http://www.pbs.org/faithandreason/gengloss/sciism-body.html, retrieved on 10 May 2017.  I’d also offer the lecture of Henry F. Schaefer III, given at the C.S. Lewis Society of California, http://www.lewissociety.org/scientism.php.
[xiv] Global Climate Report - Annual 2014, Various Global Temperature Time Series, updated through 2014, https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/global/2014/13/supplemental/page-4, retrieved on 10 May 2017
[xv] Climate Change: Global Temperature Projections, David Herring, 6 March 2012, available at https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/climate-change-global-temperature-projections, accessed on 10 May 2017

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