Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Since you asked: A response to Professor Coyne

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

Over at WEIT, Professor Jerry Coyne has put up three interesting posts during the past few days, with questions for his readers relating to free will, the irrationality of belief in Divine revelation, and climate skepticism. I’d like to briefly respond to his questions.

Free will

In a post titled, Once again with free will: a question for readers (August 16, 2016), Professor Coyne laments the persistence of popular belief in libertarian free will – the view that whenever I make a choice, I could have chosen otherwise, otherwise my choice would not be free. Professor Coyne contrasts this view (which he calls view A) with the hard determinist view (called view B), which he espouses. On this view, the libertarian understanding of free choice is correct, but free choice is an illusion: no matter how free we feel when we act, our brains are bound by the laws of physics, and our behavior is determined by either our genes or our environment, and by nothing else. There is a third opinion, called soft determinism (view C), whose proponents agree with hard determinists that our actions are determined (“with all molecules configured identically, we can do only a single thing,” as Professor Coyne puts it), but disagree with hard determinists about the meaning of freedom: on this view, determinism is compatible with some conception of free will (insofar as I still act rationally and willingly), but not with the libertarian contra-causal view of free will.

Professor Coyne considers the difference between views B and C to be “largely semantic,” and observes (correctly) that if determinism is true, then “[y]ou simply CANNOT freely accept whether or not to hold Christ as your savior, or Muhammad as Allah’s prophet.” He concludes by posing a question to his readers (my emphases):

Philosophers squabble about the difference between classes [or views – VJT] B and C, whereas to Professor Ceiling Cat (Emeritus) [that’s Jerry Coyne’s nickname for himself on his Website – VJT], a far more important argument is to be had between members of combined class (B + C) — the determinists — versus members of class A, the libertarians. To me, the latter argument, B + C vs. A, is of vital importance for making society better, while the argument between B vs. C is basically a semantic squabble that has an import on academic philosophy but not on society.

Do you agree with me or not? State your reasons. (Try to be briefer than I’ve been!)

I agree with Professor Coyne on this point: the debate between libertarians and determinists about whether we have the power to do otherwise (contra-causal free will) is an all-important one. But my reason has nothing to do with making society better, although that certainly matters. Rather, my reason has to do with making individual people better. To build a good society, you need good people. And in order for people to be good, they have to believe not only that they can change the world around them; they have to believe that they can change themselves – indeed, conquer themselves – in order to free themselves from the chains of vice and overcome their character weaknesses. Determinism discourages such a belief: someone who believes that they lack the power to do otherwise when they make a choice is more likely to shrug their shoulders when confronted with a temptation and think, “I am what I am, and I might as well not try to fight it.” Belief in determinism is massively demoralizing, whereas belief in libertarian free will is ennobling. It’s as simple as that.

And of course, if we have libertarian free will, then we can freely choose our philosophy of life, and our religion, too.

Is that brief enough for you, Professor Coyne?

Coyne’s “proof” that the Scriptures are entirely man-made

In another post titled, Proof that the scriptures are man-made and don’t convey God’s word (August 16, 2016), Professor Coyne relates the story of a brilliant argument against revealed religion, which occurred to him at 2 o’clock in the morning. He begins by quoting from a Wikipedia article on ethics in the Bible:

Elizabeth Anderson criticizes commands God gave to men in the Old Testament, such as: kill adulterers, homosexuals, and “people who work on the Sabbath” (Leviticus 20:10; Leviticus 20:13; Exodus 35:2, respectively); to commit ethnic cleansing (Exodus 34:11-14, Leviticus 26:7-9); commit genocide (Numbers 21: 2-3, Numbers 21:33–35, Deuteronomy 2:26–35, and Joshua 1–12); and other mass killings.

Coyne observes: “These days nobody feels obliged to carry out such commands.” He then asks: why not? Coyne then puts forward his fatal trilemma: either God didn’t really mean what he said (i.e. it’s all metaphor); or God did mean it, but times have changed; or God didn’t say it, and the Scriptures are entirely a product of human morality.

Coyne rejects the first option because the Biblical injunctions are presented in the context of “historical accounts” of what God commanded. He rejects the second option because it is tantamount to relativism: if God’s commands regarding slavery and homosexuality can change when the circumstances change, then anything goes. That leaves us with the third option: “the morality ‘dictated by God’ was really a reflection of a morality held by humans.”

Let me begin by pointing out that Coyne’s trilemma is flawed, because it fails to consider a fourth possibility (defended by Christian thinkers such as William Lane Craig and C. S. Lewis): that while much of the Bible comes from God, parts of it have been corrupted by human beings. This option might seem a redundant one, but it has the merit of being able to account for passages in Scripture that preach a transcendent morality: laws that mandate acts of charity to people in need; laws designed to ensure that needy individuals of low social status would be taken care of, rather than being left to die; laws that tell people to love foreigners “as yourself”; and laws that forbid even secret feelings of hatred towards other people. And I’m not talking about the New Testament here. I’m talking about Leviticus 19. Leviticus is about as Old Testament as you can get.

As I wrote in a previous post, five years ago:

From an evolutionary standpoint, such laws are very, very odd. What is striking about these laws is that they are written from the transcendent perspective of a Being who reads our innermost thoughts, who knows if we are harboring hatred in our hearts, who witnesses deceitful words and deeds, and who sees and avenges acts of injustice. At the end of every command, this Being announces His presence: “I am the Lord.”

The idea of a transcendent judge is a notion that goes beyond our human categories: it appeals to a standard of morality which is personal and at the same time larger than any human mind can conceive. It is an idea which is bound to cause headaches for an evolutionary biologist who holds that all human concepts can be explained within a naturalistic framework. Where did a community of social primates get the idea of a transcendent lawgiver from? The idea cannot be naturalized: nothing within Nature furnishes us with an adequate source for the concept of a Reality that lies beyond Nature.

Coyne might complain about the harsh penalties meted out by God in Leviticus 20 (which I have previously discussed here, but unless he can account for the transcendent morality in Leviticus 19, his naturalistic hypothesis lies in tatters.

Coyne appeals to Plato’s famous “Euthyphro argument” in an attempt to prove that we don’t need God in order to know what’s right and what’s wrong. However, all his argument establishes is the necessity of human reason, when attempting to distinguish right from wrong. What Coyne is arguing for, though, is the sufficiency of human reason: he believes that reason (coupled with our ingrained sense of empathy) is all we need to tell right from wrong. His argument therefore fails to prove the point he wants to make.

Coyne is not done yet, however: he thinks he has another decisive argument against Biblical inspiration, for he adds:

The priors [i.e. antecedent probabilities – VJT] for humans making up the Bible are surely higher than the priors for some Palestinian scribes channeling the word of a God who never left any evidence for His existence. (This is, of course, irrelevant to the issue of whether Jesus or Moses really existed as non-divine beings.)

First, it is ridiculous to say that there is no evidence for God’s existence. Even if there were no good evidence, the fact remains that poor evidence is still evidence. Second, there is in fact good eyewitness evidence for miracles, as I have argued here and here. Evidence for miracles is strong prima facie evidence for God. Third, if there is evidence for God’s existence, then appealing to prior or antecedent probabilities in order to argue against the inspiration of Scripture is irrelevant. We have to deal with the posterior probability that Scripture is (in whole or in part) inspired by God, in the light of the evidence we now have. That is what makes my fourth option a more reasonable one than the third option proposed by Professor Coyne in his trilemma above.

Climate change

In a third post titled, Brian Cox has a genius response to a climate-change hater!, Professor Coyne wrote about the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s “Q&A” show, which recently featured physicist Brian Cox on a panel which included an Australian Senator, Malcolm Roberts, who denies the reality of man-made climate change. Here’s a short excerpt from the show, courtesy of Youtube:

And here’s the graph used by Brian Cox during the show, which Malcolm Roberts derided as a NASA fake:

And here’s another graph which presents the temperature change data more clearly:

And here’s how it looks if you use a normal scale, with degrees Fahrenheit on the vertical axis (courtesy of Suyts space):

Not quite so alarming, is it?

I’d like to offer my own quick comments on the ABC show, and on the threat of global warming.

First, let me say up-front that anyone who thinks NASA has faked the climate change data is just silly. As Steve Mosher pointed out in a recent comment on Anthony Watts’ climate change blog, “NASA doesn’t adjust data.. they ingest NOAA data.” I might add that Senator Malcolm Roberts’ views are extreme and not at all typical of global warming skeptics: most of them readily acknowledge the reality of man-made global warming, but maintain that it is nowhere near as alarming as the IPCC predicts it will be. In other words, they’re lukewarmers, not “deniers.”

Second, Senator Malcolm Roberts appealed to the authority of Steve Goddard (whose real name is Tony Heller), who has been shown to be factually wrong on a number of issues.

Third, the 97% consensus figure has been severely critiqued on the Internet, for reasons which are summarized in a 2014 article on Popular Technology.net, titled, 97 Articles Refuting The “97% Consensus”. However, the latest research (see also here and here) appears to establish beyond reasonable doubt that 90 to 100% of climate experts do, in fact, agree that the global warming in recent years is man-made – although I should point out that the exact definition of “recent” varies from survey to survey. Additionally, the greater the level of climate expertise among the various kinds of scientists surveyed, the higher their level of agreement that global warming is indeed caused by human beings. So I think we can conclude that Brian Cox is right, regarding the existence of a scientific consensus on climate change.

Fourth, the consensus that Cox appeals to is a relatively modest one: most of the warming we have experienced in recent years (especially since the mid-20th century) is man-made. And that’s all. Currently, there’s no scientific consensus that global warming is likely to be catastrophic. And if it’s not going to be catastrophic, then Cox’s worries about the dangers of global warming are misplaced. While it’s reasonably certain that the rise in global temperatures since the late 1970s has been largely man-made, what’s not certain is how much temperatures will eventually rise in the future, as a result of further greenhouse gas emissions – in other words, the equilibrium climate sensitivity (or ECS), which is defined as the equilibrium change in global mean air temperatures near the Earth’s surface that would result from a sustained doubling of the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide. The scientific disagreement on this subject relates not to the effects of carbon dioxide but to the feedback effects of water vapor, which the IPCC claims will magnify the effects of carbon dioxide increases by a factor of two, three or four, or perhaps even six. The IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) states that “there is high confidence that ECS is extremely unlikely [to be] less than 1°C and medium confidence that the ECS is likely between 1.5°C and 4.5°C and very unlikely [to be] greater than 6°C.” That’s quite a range of uncertainty.

Fifth, climate models have a bad track record of over-estimating the impact of man-made global warming, as this graph demonstrates. Thus Brian Cox’s alarmist claims that large areas of the Middle East will become uninhabitable as a result of global warming are decidedly premature: the claims relate to estimates for the year 2100, which are highly likely to be over-estimates.

Sixth, the cost of fighting global warming has been estimated by Professor Mark Jacobson at $100 trillion, which is higher than the entire world’s annual GDP, and 1,000 times more than the cost of the Apollo program, in today’s dollars. If you’re going to spend $100 trillion, common sense dictates that you should make sure you’re spending the money intelligently, and not investing it in any snake oil cures. Although the costs of solar and wind energy are falling, there’s a good reason for thinking that these renewable sources won’t be enough to solve the problem of global warming: as Professor John Morgan explains in an online article titled, The Catch-22 of Energy Storage, the ratio of energy returned on energy invested (EROEI) for solar and wind power plants is far too low for them to be viable as power sources in Western countries. In short: not only are current plans to fight global warming astronomically expensive, but they may not even work, anyway. Instead of rushing headlong into building more renewable energy power stations, we should be investing more money in research, which will probably save us money in the long run, and make the fight against global warming more affordable. In a recent interview, businessman Bill Gates has candidly acknowledged that it will take “clean-energy miracles” to solve the problem of global warming. “Today’s technologies,” he writes, “are a good start, but not good enough.” He argues that “we need a massive amount of innovation in research and development on clean energy.” Nevertheless, there are signs of hope: according to Gates, there are currently a dozen promising technology paths for clean sources of energy, and he believes that “in the next 15 years we have a high probability of achieving” energy which is “measurably less expensive than hydrocarbons, completely clean and providing the same reliability.” Gates also calls for more investment in next-generation nuclear power.

Finally, as I argued on a recent post, the fight against global warming, important as it is, must take second place to efforts to eradicate starvation, malnutrition and disease:

…[E]ven if the direst prognostications of the IPCC forecasters turn out to be correct, it would be morally wrong to withhold money from children who are dying now, in order to save generations of as-yet-unconceived children. Starvation, malnutrition and disease are clear and present dangers which kill millions. Future dangers can never take precedence over these crises. For this reason, I believe that citizens should actively resist proposals to spend tens of trillions of dollars fighting a long-term menace (global warming), at a time when children are dying of malnutrition.

Well, I think that three questions are quite enough for one day. What do readers think?

Comments
Climatology for Today: Here's the abstract from a very recent paper.
Based on the satellite altimeter data, sea level off the west coast of the United States has increased over the past 5 years, while sea level in the western tropical Pacific has declined. Understanding whether this is a short-term shift or the beginning of a longer-term change in sea level has important implications for coastal planning efforts in the coming decades. Here, we identify and quantify the recent shift in Pacific Ocean sea level, and also seek to describe the variability in a manner consistent with recent descriptions of El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and particularly the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). More specifically, we extract two dominant modes of sea level variability, one related to the biennial oscillation associated with ENSO and the other representative of lower-frequency variability with a strong signal in the northern Pacific. We rely on cyclostationary empirical orthogonal function (CSEOF) analysis along with sea level reconstructions to describe these modes and provide historical context for the recent sea level changes observed in the Pacific. As a result, we find that a shift in sea level has occurred in the Pacific Ocean over the past few years that will likely persist in the coming years, leading to substantially higher sea level off the west coast of the United States and lower sea level in the western tropical Pacific.
Now, in the press release I included in my previous post we have scientists who want to imply that the reason that sea levels have risen is that the 'heat' that would have normally elevated air temperatures has been, let us say, 'swallowed' by ocean resulting in expansion of the ocean's water. In this article, the authors are simply identifying possible ocean current causes (IOW, mechanical instead of caloric) of this sea level rise. But I noticed that the paper I've just quoted said the rise has taken place over the last "5 years." That reminded me of what a climatologist said over twenty years ago. He said that the precipitation along the West Coast is easy to figure out: [I'm pararphrasing here] "every time Mt. Pinatubo erupts in the Phillipines there is cooling, and heightened precipitation. Then, as time passes, it returns to a more normal level." He said that this pattern extends back throughout the entire 20th Century. The principle cause for the cooling and increased precipitation is 'volcanic ash'! That is, the ash is in the air, reflecting sunlight, with less sunlight falling on the waters in the western Pacific, causing the currents to cool, and decreasing ocean temperatures along the California, Oregon and Washington coasts. Well, what would be the side-effect of this 'volcanic ash'? Yes, of course, a cooling of ocean waters, which would make the water more dense, with the result that sea levels should fall. Meanwhile over eastern Pacific waters (except along the coast itself) the water would receive the normal amount of sunlight, resulting in the 'western' density ( and sea level drop) causing a 'lift' in the eastern Pacific. All of this is plausible; and none of it involves CO2. So, I did a 'google search' and put in 2011 and Mt. Pinatubo. Yes, that's right, the last really major eruption? 2011. Oh, my. IOW: scientists are 'using' sea level changes to 'justify' what they now call the "global warming hiatus." Ah, yes, pseudo-science. Quite entertaining.PaV
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
11:06 AM
11
11
06
AM
PDT
vjt: BTW, here's an interesting press release on phys.org. The authors say:
"Our research shows that the internal variability of the global climate system can conceal anthropogenic global warming, and at other times the internal variability of the system can enhance anthropogenic warming." The next step, he said, is figuring out the mechanisms that allow the Pacific to change the global surface temperature so quickly.
There are TWO sources of 'heat' on earth: the Sun, and nuclear radiation in the Earth's core. If you want to know what's going on with the Earth's temperature, those are the places to look. CO2 'warms' indirectly: via H2O in the air=water vapor. Well, guess what: what if the Earth's core heats up a little more than usual? Where does that extra 'heat' go? You guessed it: into the atmosphere as 'water vapor.' And what is a by-product of this extra heat? The release of CO2 which is present in large amounts in the ocean, in a condensed form, and which can easily be released when ocean waters 'heat up' slightly. (E.g., along the mid-Atlantic Ridge, they have recently discovered that there is a much greater amount of magma oozing out of the mantle than previously thought. Just imagine the effect that this has on the ocean's overall temperature.) IOW: increased CO2 is the 'result' of ocean warming; not the 'cause' of it, which means that CO2 is a lagging indicator of increased heat. Of course, this is precisely what the historical record shows. The rest is really no more than blather. Science has become pseudo-science, ready to be hired by anyone who is willing to pay scientists, whether it is the NSF, or NASA, or whomever, even, let's say, manufacturers of wind turbines.PaV
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
10:33 AM
10
10
33
AM
PDT
vjt:
I might add that while many of these laws still apply today, the punishments do not. In a fledgling society, still vulnerable to pagan corruption, where sexual immorality could wreak social havoc and destroy lives (think of VD epidemics and abandoned illegitimate children), extremely harsh penalties for infractions of the natural law were unfortunately necessary; today, they’re not.
This illustrates Divine Revelation as we have it in the Bible. Inspiration is two-sided: on the part of the author, and on the part of the hearer. God must be at work in both to have true revelation. In the case of what appears to be merciless punishment, what the author 'said,' and what was 'heard,' are different. IOW, what was 'said' had a deeper, spiritual meaning. So, while the punishment is inviolate and severe, the true 'meaning' of the punishment is that one must be 'inviolate and severe' with oneself. One can easily compare this to what is found in the Quran and how it is understood: IOW, what is missing in the religion of Islam is an authoritative interpretation of revelation. The radical extremists take the harsh language of the Quran, e.g., "jihad," literally, while many Moslems sensibly see it in a 'spiritual' way: i.e., we do 'war' against our sinful selves. But there is no overall authority here. Any imam can declare 'jihad' for almost any reason at all. This is where, IMO, Islam break down. (And, for over 1300 years.) As to 'inerrancey,' the Catholic position as stated in the Concilliar document, Verbum dei, is that in whatever concerns our eternal salvation, the Bible is 'inerrant.' I think this states things quite nicely.PaV
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
10:16 AM
10
10
16
AM
PDT
“[y]ou simply CANNOT freely accept whether or not to hold Christ as your savior”
LOL, this has been the Reformed position for centuries. Luther, Calvin, the Puritans, ...ehem... the Apostles Paul & John. But I guess it depends on what you mean by 'freely'. We freely choose based on our desires, but we can't freely choose our desires; they are what they are (that much seems obvious to me). The Devil is in the details here, and I would say Libertarians and Determinists don't dig deep enough. [edit: I would also say that we can’t freely choose what we believe, but I guess that might be out of scope on this one.]M. Holcumbrink
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
10:04 AM
10
10
04
AM
PDT
How can one trust oneself to argue rationally and responsibly if one hath not responsible, rational freedom? KFkairosfocus
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
09:38 AM
9
09
38
AM
PDT
Hi PaV, Thank you for your post. You asked:
If Scripture has been corrupted, then why didn’t Jesus (who said that ‘divorce’ was not what God intended) say that this was the case when they brought the woman caught in adultery before him?
Let me say first of all that the fourth option which I put forward in my post does not necessarily represent my own personal view. Rather, it represents the position I'd take if I were debating Jerry Coyne in public. My own view is a more nuanced one, which is difficult to articulate and not easy to defend. Some of the troubling commands from God in the Bible were intended for people living at a particular time (e.g. Sabbath laws, which played a vital role in giving the Jewish people a sense of religious identity, and setting them apart from pagan religions). However, natural law (as expressed in the Noachide Code) is universal. Hence God could not decree that adultery is OK. Some of the troubling commands from God were intended literally, but need to be understand in the context of the oral laws of the Jews, which soften their bluntness by describing the exact circumstances under which they apply, and how they should be enforced. (Thus if you look at the oral traditions regarding the laws on adultery and homosexuality, you'll find that the standard of evidence required in order to secure a conviction is very high, and that offenders would have previously received warnings about their conduct. Likewise, the laws about the stoning of rebellious sons sound pretty harsh, but the parents were the ones who had to throw the first stone. Obviously we aren't just talking about a cheeky kid here, as it would be psychologically impossible for parents to kill their own children for such a trivial offense.) I might add that while many of these laws still apply today, the punishments do not. In a fledgling society, still vulnerable to pagan corruption, where sexual immorality could wreak social havoc and destroy lives (think of VD epidemics and abandoned illegitimate children), extremely harsh penalties for infractions of the natural law were unfortunately necessary; today, they're not. Lastly, some of the troubling commands from God were not intended literally, but that doesn't make them metaphorical, either. I suspect they may have been intended as "horror stories," designed to warn the Israelites' pagan neighbors not to mess with Yahweh. What better way to deter Midianite attacks than to concoct and preserve a national legend describing in gruesome detail how their men, women and children were slaughtered after they attacked the Israelites? In reality the entire episode may never have happened. That would be the approach I'd adopt: tackle the commands on a case-by-case basis. But it's a very difficult approach to defend in debate, and it's much easier to defend the view that most but not all of Scripture is inspired. As for Jesus' own views: I wouldn't be too sure that He necessarily viewed all of Scripture as inspired. Consider what He said on the Mosaic law allowing divorce: "Moses gave you this, law on account of the hardness of your hearts." Note: Moses, not God. And regarding the woman caught in adultery, Jesus sidestepped the question of whether she deserved to be stoned. He simply told her not to sin again. I suppose I consider the view that Scripture contains some errors as a good fall-back position, which I myself would adopt if Biblical inerrancy became no longer tenable. I hope that helps answer your questions, PaV.vjtorley
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
09:04 AM
9
09
04
AM
PDT
Dionisio: Thank you for the comments (and the threats! :) ) Compatibilism is one of the great intellectual mistifications of our sad times. I definitely prefer an old good determinist to a compatibilist, exactly as I prefer an old good neo darwinist (a la Dawkins) to any post-post-neo darwinist with brilliant vague trendy philosophies. About compatibilism, and Dennett's fans, you can check the Stanford site: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/compatibilism/ My views about libertarian free will are well known: in a word, I believe that free choice is a faculty of our cognitive consciousness, which allows us to change really the course of things by changing how we react to what happens to us. A basic consciousness-matter interface at quantum level allows that to happen without violating any laws of causality. Free will is not an illusion, but an inherent property of conscious cognition and action. It's as simple as that.gpuccio
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
07:03 AM
7
07
03
AM
PDT
gpuccio @1 Though I prefer your posts on pure biology-related issues, your comment here is very interesting. Definitely I'm not well versed in philosophical categories (or anything else for that matter), hence I had to look for all the terms in the dictionary. Confirming your commentary, the term 'compatibilism' failed to appear in the lexical Merriam-Webster dictionary. :) The English language institution pointed to a more general dictionary which includes 'slang' terminology. :) Other online sources refer to that term as 'soft determinism' and things like that. Now, here's a simple question: why were you born in Palermo instead of Danzig? Did your ancestors decide that for you? BTW, if that was the case, good for you! At least from climate/weather perspective. :) Actually, why is Danzig now called Gdansk? Was it the result of a democratic referendum among the local population? Why did Mozart's music compositions become more famous than Salieri's? The movie 'Amadeus' might give a hint, though perhaps it's not historically accurate. :) Off topic (with VJT's permission) - please, don't forget to treat many of us here with an OP on what you call 'hidden procedures' in biological systems. We won't let you get away without doing that for us. Ok? :)Dionisio
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
06:37 AM
6
06
37
AM
PDT
"First, let me say up-front that anyone who thinks NASA has faked the climate change data is just silly." This is ignorant. NASA manipulates data just like all other climate data producers. So please tell me, what's the difference between manipulating data to fit your warming model of the earth and faking data? Andrewasauber
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
05:36 AM
5
05
36
AM
PDT
On the subject of "global warming," ("climate change" is a farcical term: are they afraid that the climate will change? Of course not; they're afraid of the world heating up. Why should they be allowed to change the terms of the debate when it suits them, and simply to avoid being embarrassed by record low temperatures here and there?): last summer I looked into temperature records since the 1960's. All of the hullabaloo over a warming planet started just as the climatologists switched from human-recorded temperatures, to electronically recorded temperatures. There was a graph of recorded temperatures which included both pre- and post-introduction of the electronic sensors. Pre-introduction (i.e., humans manually recording temperatures) showed a very stable scatter of temperatures. Once the electronics were introduced, the scatter of data was all over the place. It was an incredible chart to look at. The impression was that what went before had nothing at all to do with what followed. I wrote on the blog that it looked like this whole issue of warming had nothing more to do than with this switch. It was a blog where experts were posting. No one contested my view. Further, all of these 'electronic' measuring devices have been "corrected" for low temperature readings. Well, isn't that interesting? So global warming appears just when they're adding a 'correction' to actual electronically recorded temperatures. Why were they adding temperature? Because it was too cold?! But once the additions were made, they tell us it's becoming too hot. Their computer models are completely wrong. Anyone who has ever done any modeling knows that these models are most accurate at first, and become increasingly less accurate. This is no more, now, then pseudo-science. So, let's ask the question: should we trust NASA? Here's this from their website:
July 19, 2016 2016 Climate Trends Continue to Break Records Two key climate change indicators -- global surface temperatures and Arctic sea ice extent -- have broken numerous records through the first half of 2016, according to NASA analyses of ground-based observations and satellite data.
But then a ship sent to the Arctic to study this loss of Arctic sea ice gets stuck. And the year before, too. In my estimation, they have lost all credibility. They ask us to believe in something we should have seen years ago. This is the essence of pseudo-science: an appeal, not to evidence, but evidence that is to come (like all those 'intermediates' in the fossil record). Something is terribly wrong here. That is the bottom line. Let's look at it this way. Temperatures started rising in the 1800's. Ask any so-called expert why this temperature rise began and they are at a complete loss to explain it in terms of man-made sources. They say silly things like it was the rise of the railroads. Well, this is silly. So, there is some natural reason for the warming that they either cannot discover, or not willing to discover. But, with this said, I think your bottom line, vj, is the right one. It would be a monumental disgrace to spend money to 'fix' this problem when more pressing problems exist in our world. And, of course, these same scientists are now saying the world is going to cool down for the next 12 to 13 years, but this is only a mask on underlying global warming. Really? How do they know? More importantly, just what do they know?PaV
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
04:26 AM
4
04
26
AM
PDT
vjt: Let me begin by pointing out that Coyne’s trilemma is flawed, because it fails to consider a fourth possibility (defended by Christian thinkers such as William Lane Craig and C. S. Lewis): that while much of the Bible comes from God, parts of it have been corrupted by human beings. If Scripture has been corrupted, then why didn't Jesus (who said that 'divorce' was not what God intended) say that this was the case when they brought the woman caught in adultery before him?PaV
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
03:41 AM
3
03
41
AM
PDT
VJ: I absolutely agree with Coyne on the following point: "Philosophers squabble about the difference between classes [or views – VJT] B and C, whereas to Professor Ceiling Cat (Emeritus) [that’s Jerry Coyne’s nickname for himself on his Website – VJT], a far more important argument is to be had between members of combined class (B + C) — the determinists — versus members of class A, the libertarians. To me, the latter argument, B + C vs. A, is of vital importance for making society better, while the argument between B vs. C is basically a semantic squabble that has an import on academic philosophy but not on society. Do you agree with me or not? State your reasons. (Try to be briefer than I’ve been!)" I could not have said it better. IOWs, differences between determinism and compatibilism are simply "a semantic squabble". IOWs, as I have always said here, compatibilism is a word fraud, and nothing else. IOWs, determinism and libertarian free will are the only two games in town. I absolutely agree. Of course, one is wrong and the other one is right. Everybody knows what I think about that.gpuccio
August 19, 2016
August
08
Aug
19
19
2016
02:21 AM
2
02
21
AM
PDT
1 2

Leave a Reply