Global Warming: Consensus is not science...
How many times have you heard that there is a consensus on global warming?
Panelist and Colorado State University professor of atmospheric science William M. Gray, a hurricane authority, announced that he thinks that the biggest contributor to global warming is the fact that "we're coming out of a little ice age," and that the warming trend will end in six to eight years.
Said Gray, sagely: "Consensus science isn't science."
No lie. In fact, it's a bizarre argument. Why do global-warming believers keep pushing this everyone-agrees line when consensus uber alles is so, well, unacademic? The ideal should not be scientists who think in lockstep, but those in the proud mold of the skeptic, who takes a hard look at the data and proves conventional wisdom wrong.
Independent Institute President David Theroux hailed that trait in this year's co-winner of the Nobel Prize for medicine, Barry Marshall, who believed ulcers were caused by bacteria, when the establishment knew that Marshall's theory was "preposterous" -- except that Marshall turned out to be right.
Crichton focused on the many times that fad science has been wrong.
Remember Y2K? Ho-hum.
The population-bomb scare? Yawn. Then there's Yellowstone, the national park that declined due to rangers' misbegotten (and often fatal for the wildlife) conviction that they knew what was best for the animals -- in this case, they killed wolves and they overprotected elk until the whole ecosystem suffered.
1 Comments:
Even a quick search through NATURE or SCIENCE will quickly show how wrong you are. Perhaps reading peer-reviewed scientific publications instead of fiction would improve your understanding of the complex problems of understanding global warming. However the jury is not out
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