Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Science, Skeptics, and "Deniers"

This piece appeared in Pajamas Media, and pretty much sums up my thoughts on Climate Change.

Bad ideas get trashed in good science. If you doubt it, just read James Watson on the heated fight with Linus Pauling over the structure of DNA. Craig Venter outraged the competition by discovering the human genome three years before they expected to get there. Or see what Isaac Newton said about Leibniz. It gets nasty.

That's for healthy science, which is not a list of orthodox beliefs, but more like an endless, running debating club. You could tell that global warming was in trouble the moment that James Hansen, NASA's chief climate astrologer and enforcer of The Faith, said that "climate deniers" should be put in jail.

Good science is full of "deniers," who are also called "skeptics." I've never met a scientist who wasn't one. Albert Einstein was a lifelong skeptic about quantum mechanics. Nobody wanted to throw him in jail. Einstein was (and still is) admired for the brilliance of his skepticism. When somebody wants to jail a skeptic you know their favorite orthodoxy is tottering and about to slip down some rat hole. James Hansen was seeing the end of the global warming fraud, and he was afraid.

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