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« Traces of Hockey Stick Illusion | Main | Lindzen in London update »
Thursday
Feb092012

Nullius in verba

This has just been released:

The Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF) is calling on the Royal Society to restore a culture of open-mindedness and balanced assessment of climate science and climate policy.

In a new GWPF report, written by science author Andrew Montford, the Royal Society is urged to ensure that genuine controversies are reflected in its public debates and reports and that the full range of reputable scientific views are being considered.

“As the Society’s independence has disappeared, so has its former adherence to hard-nosed empirical science and a sober detachment from the political process. Gone are the doubts and uncertainties that afflict any real scientist, to be replaced with the dull certainties of the politician and the public relations man,” said Andrew Montford, author of the new report.

In his report, Andrew Montford describes the development of the Royal Society’s role in the climate debates since the 1980s. He shows the Society’s gradual closing of critical scrutiny and scientific impartiality and the emergence of an almost dogmatic confidence that climate science is all but settled.

In recent years, the Society has issued a series of highly political statements demanding drastic action on energy and climate policies from policy makers and governments. On the issue of climate change, it has adopted an increasingly political rather than scientific tone. Instead of being an open forum for informed scientific debate, the Society is at risk of turning into a quasi-political campaign group.

The GWPF report criticises the Society for being too narrow minded in its assessment of climate change and for failing to take into account views of eminent scientists and policy experts that do not accord with its own position.

In his foreword to the report, Professor Richard Lindzen (MIT), one of the world's most eminent atmospheric scientists, warns that "the legitimate role of science as a powerful mode of inquiry has been replaced by the pretence of science to a position of political authority."

 The report itself is here.

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Reader Comments (103)

http://opinion.financialpost.com/2012/02/10/peter-foster-political-science-at-the-academies/

More on the report from Canada

Feb 11, 2012 at 4:31 AM | Unregistered CommenterMessenger

Ex Montfodia rarenter aliquid nova

http://adamant.typepad.com/seitz/2008/05/nullius-in-verb.html

Feb 12, 2012 at 2:37 AM | Unregistered CommenterRussell

May I suggest a reading of the book "Merchants of Doubt" by Oreskes and Conway? Two historians of science explain the remarkable confluence of thought among "serial disinformers" (my phrase) who have opposed the science involved in 1. acid rain, 2. the existence of the ozone hole, 3. the connection between cigarette smoke and cancer, 4. the star wars missile defence, 5. the denial of Rachel Carson's revelations about environmental pollution, and now 6. global warming caused by human activity. Even more dramatic is the political philosophy that drives their supposedly impartial evaluation of science. Six failures out of six does suggest a pattern, does it not?

Aug 26, 2014 at 12:00 AM | Unregistered CommenterRobert Evans, Ph.D.

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