Posts Tagged ‘science’

Invasion of the Flying Cockroaches

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

My ongoing annoyance with the on-a-mission climate change deniers in this country (they are less common elsewhere for various reasons, but especially because it has become a partisan issue and one of our political parties speaks in an increasingly singular voice of insanity) has just been matched by Meg McArdle. She’s not a denier, she points out, rather she’s a moderate, an independent voice. This is the same territory she stakes out in her political opinions. She’s splitting the difference between whatever positions can be found on any given issue. If you don’t know, this is called the Middle Ground Fallacy.

This fallacy is committed when it is assumed that the middle position between two extremes must be correct simply because it is the middle position. this sort of “reasoning” has the following form:

  1. Position A and B are two extreme positions.
  2. C is a position that rests in the middle between A and B.
  3. Therefore C is the correct position.

This line of “reasoning” is fallacious because it does not follow that a position is correct just because it lies in the middle of two extremes. This is shown by the following example. Suppose that a person is selling his computer. He wants to sell it for the current market value, which is $800 and someone offers him $1 for it. It would hardly follow that $400.50 is the proper price.

What is the middle position between those who believe we are being visited by UFOs and those that don’t? That we are sometimes visited by UFOs but not as often as some claim? And yes, I do think climate change denial (aka climate change skepticism) is of a kind with those that believe in conspiracies of other sorts, like UFO visitation. That’s not ad hominem, I really do think it’s coming from a common instinct. It’s not that some of the the science supporting climate change could be wrong – some of it almost certainly is and we’ll discover what holds up and what doesn’t as evidence accrues.
But, here’s McArdle pontificating from, as far as I can tell, no evidence whatsoever other than her gut instinct:
What’s at stake is the degree of warming associated with our carbon dioxide emissions.  In particular, to what extent the earth’s many complex and not necessarily well understood feedback systems may mitigate (or exacerbate) temperature increases.  I’ve long been skeptical of the more catastrophic scenarios, because all this carbon used to be in the atmosphere, which probably defines a ceiling on how bad it will get–a ceiling well below “WE’RE ALL GOING TO DIEEEEEEEE!!!”  That said, I wouldn’t really want to live in the Jurassic, and not just because I’m afraid of hundred-foot lizards. (for example, I am also afraid of the huge flying roaches Palmetto bugs that live in our nation’s more southern climes). So that doesn’t mean I don’t worry quite a lot.

I have no idea where she gets the idea that “all this carbon used to be in the atmosphere”. I can’t even imagine what she even means by this. Is “all this” shorthand for “a lot“? Pretty sloppy writing if that’s the case. Or does she believe that fossil fuels is carbon that settled into the earth from the atmosphere? Egads. The best evidence (note the citations are from the journals Science and Nature and not simply yanked from the author’s behind) suggests that the levels of carbon in the atmosphere are higher than at any time in the past 15 to 20 million years!
“We then applied this technique to study the history of carbon dioxide from 800,000 years ago to 20 million years ago,” she said. “We report evidence for a very close coupling between carbon dioxide levels and climate. When there is evidence for the growth of a large ice sheet on Antarctica or on Greenland or the growth of sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, we see evidence for a dramatic change in carbon dioxide levels over the last 20 million years.
“A slightly shocking finding,” Tripati said, “is that the only time in the last 20 million years that we find evidence for carbon dioxide levels similar to the modern level of 387 parts per million was 15 to 20 million years ago, when the planet was dramatically different.”
My opinion matters just as much as Meg McArdle’s. Which is to say, not at all. Don’t listen to individuals. Argument from authority is just another fallacy (and George Will is not an authority in any case). If evidence arises that things aren’t as dire as current predictions, take it in. You’ll also want to discount much of what you find on Google. There is a fancy graph out there showing no correlation between CO2 and temperature but if you look at the home page of the sites publishing this stuff you’ll invariably find organizations or individuals who are dedicated to the denialists’ claims, and not to discovering truth.
I think it’s important to remember than scientists are contrarians. It’s a large part of my attraction to science – it debunks commonly held beliefs again and again. The scientific method is based on falsification of data, not on confirming what you already believe to be true. I’d like to say that there’s hope that the evidence for human-caused climate change will be overturned but that’s unlikely given the fact that the evidence is from many different lines of inquiry. If the worst that happens is a proliferation of Palmetto bugs as McArdle fears we’ll all be very, very lucky.
This fallacy is committed when it is assumed that the middle position between two extremes must be correct simply because it is the middle position. this sort of “reasoning” has the following form:
1.
2. Position A and B are two extreme positions.
3. C is a position that rests in the middle between A and B.
4. Therefore C is the correct position.
This line of “reasoning” is fallacious because it does not follow that a position is correct just because it lies in the middle of two extremes. This is shown by the following example. Suppose that a person is selling his computer. He wants to sell it for the current market value, which is $800 and someone offers him $1 for it. It would hardly follow that $400.50 is the proper price.

The Atlantic Takes a Dive

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Hey, The Atlantic has lost it. At least for me. The evidence is in two parts. First, the flu vaccine. I kind of hate this topic. But I’m going to write about it anyway because it is upsetting me.

Until not many years ago I had never had the flu vaccine and didn’t really understand much about it. Maybe I still don’t but I think I’ve gathered this much – the flu vaccine, as vaccines go, sucks. It’s pretty hit and miss year to year because of inaccuracies in predicting what strains will be prevalent and it doesn’t help old people, who really need it, as much as the young and healthy (because it depends on a strong antibody response). But saying the flu vaccine sucks compared to other vaccines isn’t saying much because vaccines have contributed more to human health and happiness more than any other feature of modern medicine except perhaps antibiotics. The flu vaccine, while imperfect, is probably a really good idea. Certainly it is safe compared to getting the flu. It’s safe compared to leaving your house, for that matter. This topic upsets me right now for  few reasons, one of which I’ll share. This week I overheard a conversation between a mother of two young kids and a pregnant woman. The mother said she was going to the store after work to get some “Airborne” because there was no way she was going to let her kids get the flu vaccine. The pregnant woman concurred saying that she wouldn’t get it either even though her doctor really wants her to. Well, fuck. Her doctor wants her to get vaccinated for a very good reason – it could be because he’s a tool of the medical industrial complex but it’s more likely because pregnant women are much more likely to die from influenza than the normal, unpregnant population. And, yes, so are young kids more likely to die from it too. I’m not going to provide any references for that assertion because they are easy enough to find.

So, on to the stupid Atlantic article.

Does the Vaccine Matter?

“Tom Jefferson has taken a lot of heat just for saying, ‘Here’s the evidence: it’s not very good,’” says Majumdar. “The reaction has been so dogmatic and even hysterical that you’d think he was advocating stealing babies.” Yet while other flu researchers may not like what Jefferson has to say, they cannot ignore the fact that he knows the flu-vaccine literature better than anyone else on the planet.

The article paints Jefferson as a brave maverick fighting against conformity and complacency. It’s more likely that he’s kind of a crank. Or at least flirts with them. Two Science Blogs, by separate authors, do the take down.

Journalists sink in The Atlantic article on vaccines

There is nothing judicious about Jefferson, whose problem was described by one of my colleagues as “methodolatry,” the profane worship of the randomized clinical trial as the only valid method of investigation. In this case his evidence base isn’t even relevant, because we aren’t dealing with seasonal flu but pandemic flu.

Vaccination for H1N1 “swine” flu: Do The Atlantic, Shannon Brownlee, and Jeanne Lenzer matter?
Vaccination for H1N1 “swine” flu: Do The Atlantic, Shannon Brownlee, and Jeanne Lenzer matter?
Framing an issue as arguing that conventional wisdom is wrong and highlighting a couple of “lone voices in the wilderness” warning, Cassandra-like, of impending disaster represent a time-honored journalistic trope, not to mention a story structure that goes back thousands of years to, well, Cassandra at least. Add a healthy dollop of “skepticism” about big pharma and the government, and you definitely have a winner. I can see why the editors of The Atlantic bit.

Also, there is the pure goodness that is Mark Crislip writing on the efficacy of the flu vaccine. You don’t even need to read to enjoy Dr. Crislip – he’s fighting the good fight on his podcast Quackcast too.

Apple quits U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Go Apple!

Adding momentum to the revolt against the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Apple on Monday resigned from the business group because of its opposition to federal efforts to limit greenhouse gases.

It should be pointed out that the USCOC is not only “opposed to federal efforts to limit greenhouse gases”, they are actually deep into denialist territory.

U.S. Chamber of Commerce Calls for Trial of Climate Science

William Kovacs, the Chamber’s senior vice president for environment, technology and regulatory affairs, in an interview with the “Los Angeles Times.”

It would be “the Scopes monkey trial of the 21st century,” he said, “evolution versus creationism.”

This man is seriously confused and wishes to share that confusion with us. I guess it’s working because I have no idea what he means. He’s representing the scientific point of view against the unscientific views of the world’s climate scientists? What?? Or maybe he thinks creationism won against the evil science of evolution. (It most certainly didn’t.)

It’s not encouraging that a group that, to some degree, represents U.S. business is so backward looking and fearful. At least some of their now former members are thinking of the opportunities that lie ahead. Good for them.

Science and evidence and capital crime

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Cameron Todd Willingham, Texas, and the death penalty : The New Yorker

Somebody linked to this a couple of weeks ago and I just got around to reading it. This is a fantastic piece of journalism. I feel guilty that I didn’t have to pay for it – it’s that good. I’m imagining the scheming going on to turn this into a movie and I’m not sure how I feel about that. Movies are generally terrible. And yet, everybody should know about this. Oh well, nevermind, read it now or save it for later like I did. And link to it.

Sleep Is Wrong

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Mind – Sleep May Be Nature’s Time Management Tool – NYTimes.com

Why do we sleep? From an evolutionary perspective there are two kinds of traits. The first is adaptive, traits that give a species abilities and behaviors that help individuals survive in order to pass along their genes. The second set of traits are side effects of the first. You get into a lot of interesting but fuzzy speculation here. For instance, did humans develop a belief in the supernatural because we dream? If so, it may be that those beliefs are a side effect of an adaptive behavior – sleeping, and dreaming – rather than adaptive in and of themselves.

The NYT gets in on the speculation in order to make use of the current buzz phrase “time management” and overachieving cult of getting-things-done (GTD). It’s kind of interesting anyway:

The answer may boil down to time management, according to a new paper in the August issue of the journal Nature Reviews Neuroscience. In the paper, Jerome Siegel, a professor of psychiatry at the University of California, Los Angeles, argues that sleep evolved to optimize animals’ use of time, keeping them safe and hidden when the hunting, fishing or scavenging was scarce and perhaps risky. In that view, differences in sleep quality, up to and including periods of insomnia, need not be seen as problems but as adaptations to the demands of the environment.

It seems obvious to me that conservation of energy during unproductive periods is the purpose of sleep. In my understanding, energy conservation is integral to evolution. Mutations have to engender really important new traits if they also result in increased energy usage. For instance, your brain requires an huge amount of energy. Because of this increased energy consumption, you need to find a lot more resources than you would otherwise. But it gives us humans a big enough advantage that the extra energy requirements make it worthwhile. It’s a trade-off. More energy requirements – think about the energy birds need to be able to fly – versus the ability to escape predators or devise solutions to feed yourself.

To be tongue-in-cheek about it – I went to bed after midnight and was awake at 5:30. That’s not a lot of sleep. But it can be explained by my need to code like a madman today to complete a task that will help me catch up on my bills. Doesn’t explain why I’ve spent the past 20 minutes writing this post. ;-)

A useful meme

Saturday, April 12th, 2008

Gore’s Law

As an online climate change debate grows longer, the probability that denier arguments will descend into attacks on Al Gore approaches one.

Global Warming Denialism

Saturday, April 12th, 2008
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Via.