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How Climate Scientists Parallel Early Atomic Scientists

Lasrick writes "Kennette Benedict writes in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists about the existential threat of climate change, and how the scientists who study and write about it are similar to the early atomic scientists who created, and then worried about, the threat that nuclear weapons posed to humanity: 'Just as the Manhattan Project participants could foresee the coming arms race, climate scientists today understand the consequences of deploying the technologies that defined the industrial age. They also know that action now to reduce greenhouse gas emissions will mitigate the worst consequences of climate change, just as the Manhattan Project scientists knew that early action to forestall a deadly arms race could prevent nuclear catastrophe.'"

20 of 440 comments (clear)

  1. Honesty? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If they were honest, why are they calling it "Climate Change" now, rather than Global Warming?

    Seems to me they're trying to have it both ways.

    (Note: This is just an observation, nothing more. If you try to argue with me about issues I haven't raised here today, I'm going to ignore you.)

    1. Re: Honesty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because the weather always changes and that way you'll never be proven wrong.

    2. Re:Honesty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I am amazed at how people love to attribute the worst possible motives to scientists (lying for what? to get a 20K-100K grant?) but refuse to see the motives of those who fund climate CHANGE deniers, which would be oil companies, investment fund managers with big stakes in petroleum, etc. with billions at stake.

      For the dim witted I can only assume it is because in the back of their minds they think they can never be a PhD scientist, which feeds resentment, but they think they could possibly be a hedge fund manager or oil boss.

    3. Re:Honesty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Climate scientists have more in common with priests than the sort of people who try to disprove their own hypothesis with experiments. If you had based your whole career on a particular hypothesis how anxious would you be to disprove it? Climate scientists are anything but unbiased observers. Any climate scientist who maintained the sort of dispassionate skepticism which is the hallmark of a real scientist would never be able to graduate in their chosen major. They would not be able to pass even a single class in climate science if they answered exam questions honestly.

    4. Re:Honesty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The big fame in science comes from disproof. The most referenced papers of mine are ones where I disproved theoretical claims. Every scientist wants to be the one who disproves something big.

      Watson and Crick disproved that DNA was a double helix. James Maxwell disproved that electricity and magnetism could be described by a single set of equations. Issac Newton disproved that physical phenomena could be reproducibly described by equations rather than by attributing them simply as acts of God. Einstein disproved that electromagnetism and gravity could described by a single set of equations. That's why all those guys are unknown.

      You are either an idiot or someone who knows nothing about science and the way science is funded. It is much, much more difficult to get grant money for generating negative results than for generating results leading to a new theory or the enhancement of an existing theory and money is what allows the research which leads to scientific reknown. Of course, if you work in SETI, then you work in the ultimate "playing in the sandbox" field and, as such, are immune to normal funding pressures.

    5. Re: Honesty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Reference please.

      Http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svante_Arrhenius#Greenhouse_effect

      The article says that his formula wes reasonable, but he could not predict industrial growth, so could not predict trends.

      I agree that CO2 levels are linked to temperature,
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Co2-temperature-plot.svg

      But ... Misrepresenting facts doesn't help.

      Note to all mods (for the second time) : do NOT moderate opinions without FACT. Most highly moderated comments in here have nothing to back their claims. It makes a mockery of Slashdot.

    6. Re:Honesty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And how many oil barons would be oil barons if drilling for oil were illegal.>/quote>

      herba-derpa-do to you too, genius

      Or if they had to pay for the damage their activities does to us?

      The damage their activities do? You mean like every benefit our modern lifestyle gives us? A surplus of high-quality food. A long life. Advanced medical care. Vacation homes. Clean water to drink and bath in. Birkenstocks out the wazoo. Condoms and birth-control pills. Computer games. Arrays of giant radio telescopes. Streaming videos. Nearly instant communication to almost anywhere on the planet. The ability to mold the landscape for esthetic or practical reasons. Enough surplus wealth to allow the luxury of representative government. Enough surplus wealth to support a parasitic class of self-hating fools who do nothing but sit around on their arses looking for transmissions from space aliens while complaining about the society in which they live?

      Spare me your attempt to create a class of bogey-men. The "oil barons" are people just like you and me. There is nothing sinister about them. Our modern society is made possible by access to energy and oil provides much of that energy. If you wage war against the use of petroleum, then you wage war against that which feeds and clothes you. No serious individual would want to deindustrialize the world and no serious thinker believes that our current advanced lifestyle can be maintained without the production and use of oil-based products.

    7. Re:Honesty? by budgenator · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seriously, every statement you made there was an outright lie. Including the "No warming for 17 years" lie. Current temperatures are will withing the 95% confidence limits of the AR4 model assemblage.

      Seems "No warming for 17 years" is pretty solid;

      Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, the railroad engineer who for some reason chairs the IPCC’s climate “science” panel, has been compelled to admit there has been no global warming for 17 years.

      The Hadley Centre/CRU records show no warming for 18 years (v.3) or 19 years (v.4), and the RSS satellite dataset shows no warming for 23 years (h/t to Werner Brozek for determining these values).

      IPCC Railroad engineer Pachauri acknowledges ‘No warming for 17 years’

      AR5 is due out soon, it's likely to be a game changer.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    8. Re:Honesty? by ultranova · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am amazed at how people love to attribute the worst possible motives to scientists (lying for what? to get a 20K-100K grant?) but refuse to see the motives of those who fund climate CHANGE deniers, which would be oil companies, investment fund managers with big stakes in petroleum, etc. with billions at stake.

      It's cheap energy that's at stake. Basically, if anthropogenic climate change is true, then the options are:

      • 1. Continue using fossil fuels and suffer the consequences.
      • 2. Switch to nuclear and live with the associated risks, both real and imagined.
      • 3. Reduce energy usage to whatever can be supported by renewables and accept the resulting lower quality of life.

      None of these are good options, so people prefer fantasy to reality. Specifically, they pretend either that climate change is a lie or that windmills can keep the lights on. It isn't, and they can't, but it's not fun admitting that your children will be worse off than you are.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    9. Re:Honesty? by agenaud · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No warming for 17 years

      See 17 years in a 40 year context and in the 130 year temperature record.

      Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, the railroad engineer who for some reason chairs the IPCC

      The same Dr. Pachauri who was the director of the energy and resource institute of India, chancellor and fellow at several the universities in several countries, chairman of the agriculture foundation, chairman of climate board at Colombia University, senior advisor at Yale, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, advisor to several oil companies, manufacturers and banks?

      --
      3E51A207
  2. Science? by sylvandb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is not science if your hypothesis is not falsifiable.

  3. Re:Rothchild bullshit by mwvdlee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why stop at four billion years? Compared to the temperature some ~13.8 billion years ago, it's positively chilly right now!

    I find it fascinating how science is often refered here on slashdot, but when it comes to climate scientists, all of a sudden the vast majority of scientists are stupid, lying, elitists scaremongers.

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  4. The Doomsday Device has worked so far. by Snufu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Manhattan Project scientists may have foretold the arms race, but could they have foreseen that the advent of nuclear weapons would produce the longest period of peace between industrialized nations in the past several centuries? Considering the countless lives lost in the wars of the 19th and 20th centuries, how many lives have been saved under the haunting specter of nuclear annihilation?

    In this context the analogy to climate science is less clear.

  5. Nonsense by Maimun · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The Earth's climate has always been changing and will be changing while the planet is alive. It is uncertain whether humans have measurable influence on those changes at all; the fact that people with clear financial interests claim so does not make it certainty. Even if we suppose there is a measurable influence it is still uncertain whether the human influence is setting the current trends -- there have been warm ages in the past, too. For instance, the Medieval Warm Period.

    When I was growing up, i.e. the 70ies and the 80ies, the climate scare was The Big Bad Global Cooling. At the end of the 90ies and until recently, the climate scare was The Big Bad Global Warming. Then the scare mongers got smarter and now the scare is The Big Bad Climate Change Whatever It Is. Since the climate is always changing it is a perfectly safe bet it is going to change, somehow. To prevent the climate from changing is about as possible as to prevent the Earth from rotating :)

    BTW, we have an unusually cold summer here in the Balkans.

  6. let me unpack this for you by stenvar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    early atomic scientists:

    - developed sound physical theories that any theoretical theorist could verify from first principles and a few key experiments

    - proved that their theories worked in a series of repeatable experiments

    - implemented their technologies as practical devices

    - worried that the technology they themselves developed might be used for bad

    climate scientists:

    - make extrapolations involving tons of assumptions and unknowns

    - their experiments and data collections cannot be reproduced

    - haven't created any new technologies

    - try to stop people from using other people's technologies

    1. Re:let me unpack this for you by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's the difference between a relatively simple and straightforward problem and a very difficult one.

      Once the basic experiments were done for nuclear fission, all you needed to do was give it to the engineer. The problem with climate change is that the experiments would be global and require a long time to give meaningful results.

      However, the mechanisms are perfectly clear. Greenhouse gases make it warmer. People are increasing greenhouse gases at an alarming rate. Both of those statements are supported by experiment and data. Now, it just becomes a math problem.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    2. Re:let me unpack this for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Another difference is that physicists are not required to have certain political beliefs. To be a climate scientist, to even consider becoming one, you pretty much have to be a true believer already. No one who didn't believe in AGW would seek a degree in order to study it. An atheist or agnostic does not become a priest for similar reasons. At least religious people do not try to claim that the fact that 99.9% of priests believe in a god is somehow evidence for its existence.

  7. Maybe both? They warned if a coming ice age by raymorris · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In the sixties and seventies, the climate hucksters were selling us on a man-made ice age. In the eighties, they told us California would be underwater by 2000. It's still there.

    Maybe alot of people twist and exaggerate the evidence for their own reasons when $ billions are on the line. A $100k grant ? Just in the Obama years alone, he's handed hundreds of millions of your money to fake greenies. By fake , I mean ones that took the money and ran, never living up to any of their promises.

  8. Re:Tense About Nuclear Weapons by SETIGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The AGW hypothesis may or may not reflect actual reality. That's the problem with an unfalsifiable hypothesis.

    The AGW hypothesis is not unfalsifiable. People with no understanding of science often make that claim. A couple decades of significant cooling (0.05C per decade or so compared to the warming trend of 0.18C/decade warming since 1970. ) while CO2 levels continued to climb would probably be enough to do that.

    The problem for people who like to lie about science is that the science of AGW is very basic and well understood. To pretend it's not going to happen you have to imagine something that could stop it. And so far nobody has been able to invent something that can stop it short of a catastrophic breakdown in global atmospheric and oceanic circulation. Be my guest. Find something that can prevent CO2 from increasing temperatures and prove it. In 1906, Arhennius calculated the climate sensitivity to a doubling of CO2 when including water vapor feedback was 2.1C. Current estimates are between 2C and 4.5C. Go ahead, find a way to make the climate sensitivity negative and show that it works.

  9. Re:Selective Memory by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That is exactly what I came to post. It turned out that those atomic scientists were as guilty of exaggerating the dire consequences that would result from the arms race as the climate scientists of today are of exaggerating the dire consequences of climate change.

    As you said, good comparison (even though the submitter and the article don't even realize that the comparison they are making should cause one to draw the opposite conclusion to the one they want you to draw).

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison