The Galileo gambit and other stories: the three main tactics of climate denial

Galileo was right, but that doesn’t mean his fans are. Justus Sustermans/Wikimedia Commons

The Conversation

Galileo was right, but that doesn’t mean his fans are. Justus Sustermans/Wikimedia Commons
Galileo was right, but that doesn’t mean his fans are. Justus Sustermans/Wikimedia Commons

The recently elected One Nation senator from Queensland, Malcolm Roberts, fervently rejects the established scientific fact that human greenhouse gas emissions cause climate change, invoking a fairly familiar trope of paranoid theories to propound this belief.

Roberts variously claims that the United Nations is trying to impose world government on us through climate policy, and that CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology are corrupt institutions that, one presumes, have fabricated the climate extremes that we increasingly observe all over the world.

In the world of Malcolm Roberts, these agencies are marionettes of a “cabal” of “the major banking families in the world”. Given the parallels with certain strands of anti-Jewish sentiment, it’s perhaps an unfortunate coincidence that Roberts has reportedly relied on a notorious Holocaust denier to support this theory.

It might be tempting to dismiss his utterances as conspiratorial ramblings. But they can teach us a great deal about the psychology of science denial. They also provide us with a broad spectrum of diagnostics to spot pseudoscience posing as science.

The necessity of conspiracism

First, the appeal to a conspiracy among scientists, bankers and governments is never just a slip of the tongue but a pervasive and necessary ingredient of the denial of well-established science. The tobacco industry referred to medical research on lung cancer as being conducted by an “oligopolistic cartel” that “manufactures alleged evidence”. Some people accuse the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) of creating and spreading AIDS, and much anti-vaccination content on the web is suffused with conspiratorial allegations of totalitarianism.

This conspiratorial mumbo jumbo inevitably arises when people deny facts that are supported by an overwhelming body of evidence and are no longer the subject of genuine debate in the scientific community, having already been tested thoroughly. As evidence mounts, there comes a point at which inconvenient scientific findings can only be explained away by recourse to huge, nebulous and nefarious agendas such as the World Government or Stalinism.

If you are addicted to nicotine but terrified of the effort required to give up smoking, it might be comforting instead to accuse medical researchers of being oligopolists (whatever that means).

Likewise, if you are a former coal miner, like Malcolm Roberts, it is perhaps easier to accuse climate scientists of colluding to create a world government (whatever that is) than to accept the need to take coal out of our economy.

There is now ample research showing the link between science denial and conspiracism. This link is supported by independent studies from around the world.

Indeed, the link is so established that conspiracist language is one of the best diagnostic tools you can use to spot pseudoscience and science denial.

The Galileo gambit

How else can science dissenters attempt to justify their contrarian position? Another tactic is to appeal to heroic historical dissenters, the usual hero of choice being Galileo Galilei, who overturned the orthodoxy that everything revolves around the Earth.

This appeal is so common in pseudoscientific quackery that it is known as the Galileo gambit. The essence of this argument is:

They laughed at Galileo, and he was right.

They laugh at me, therefore I am right.

A primary logical difficulty with this argument is that plenty of people are laughed at because their positions are absurd. Being dismissed by scientists doesn’t automatically entitle you to a Nobel Prize.

Another logical difficulty with this argument is that it implies that no scientific opinion can ever be valid unless it is rejected by the vast majority of scientists. Earth must be flat because no scientist other than a Googling Galileo in Gnowangerup says so. Tobacco must be good for you because only tobacco-industry operatives believe it. And climate change must be a hoax because only the heroic Malcolm Roberts and his Galileo Movement have seen through the conspiracy.

Yes, Senator-elect Roberts is the project leader of the Galileo Movement, which denies the scientific consensus on climate change, favouring instead the opinions of a pair of retired engineers and the radio personality Alan Jones.

Any invocation of Galileo’s name in the context of purported scientific dissent is a red flag that you’re being fed pseudoscience and denial.

The sounds of science

The rejection of well-established science is often couched in sciency-sounding terms. The word “evidence” has assumed a particular prominence in pseudoscientific circles, perhaps because it sounds respectable and evokes images of Hercule Poirot tenaciously investigating dastardly deeds.

Since being elected, Roberts has again aired his claim that there is “no empirical evidence” for climate change.

But “show us the evidence” has become the war cry of all forms of science denial, from anti-vaccination activists to creationists, despite the existence of abundant evidence already.

This co-opting of the language of science is a useful rhetorical device. Appealing to evidence (or a lack thereof) seems reasonable enough at first glance. Who wouldn’t want evidence, after all?

It is only once you know the genuine state of the science that such appeals are revealed to be specious. Literally thousands of peer-reviewed scientific articles and the national scientific academies of 80 countries support the pervasive scientific consensus on climate change. Or, as the environmental writer George Monbiot has put it:

It is hard to convey just how selective you have to be to dismiss the evidence for climate change. You must climb over a mountain of evidence to pick up a crumb: a crumb which then disintegrates in the palm of your hand. You must ignore an entire canon of science, the statements of the world’s most eminent scientific institutions and thousands of papers published in the foremost scientific journals.

Accordingly, my colleagues and I recently showed that in a blind test – the gold standard of experimental research – contrarian talking points about climate indicators were uniformly judged to be misleading and fraudulent by expert statisticians and data analysts.

Conspiracism, the Galileo gambit and the use of sciency-sounding language to mislead are the three principal characteristics of science denial. Whenever one or more of them is present, you can be confident you’re listening to a debate about politics or ideology, not science.

 

Source: The Conversation. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

34 responses to “The Galileo gambit and other stories: the three main tactics of climate denial”

  1. solarguy Avatar
    solarguy

    In other words, how to baffle brains with bullshit!

  2. Chris Fraser Avatar
    Chris Fraser

    Expertly said ! Wait for the One Nation implosion.

    1. Peter Campbell Avatar
      Peter Campbell

      Is there any reason to think that Hanson does not share Roberts’ views? If there is an implosion it might be about who is to be boss rather that difference of opinion on policy.

      1. Chris Fraser Avatar
        Chris Fraser

        Or it could be a senate ticket cobbled together with occasionally different ideologies. They’ll need to spend some of their political energy staying out of each others’ way.

  3. onesecond Avatar
    onesecond

    The science deniers are in the position of the Catholic Church of old that wanted to burn Galileo. The cling to the old ways, to a time when humanity didn’t have this impact on earth and ignore any new evidence. It is the same breathtaking twisting around of essential facts that takes place when religious people claim that they get persecuted by the LGBT community.

  4. Don McMillan Avatar
    Don McMillan

    When is comes to science people are selective based on there own beliefs. This is the religious gene in humans. Activists groups jump on the science bandwagon when it suits them, for example climate science is right but the science of Fracture Stimulation is wrong.
    This shows a lack of understanding science as it has nothing to do with “Truth” just hypotheses/theories.

    1. lin Avatar
      lin

      Not sure I understand what you mean about activists saying “science of Fracture Stimulation is wrong”.
      I don’t think you will find an activist who argues that fracking doesn’t work. The debate is about to what extent it contaminates ground and surface water, causes earthquakes, and results in uncontained emissions of gas.

      1. Don McMillan Avatar
        Don McMillan

        Thanks Lin
        The technology of fracturing subsurface rocks is over 150 years [Col Roberts 1865 patent], so we know it works. In the last 20 years there has been countless inquires all about its environmental impact- e.g EPA-USA, Royal Acc, of Sc/eng, here in OZ NSW chief scientist, NT 2014, & WA – this list is endless. All have OK’d it.
        If an oil & gas producer damages the environment the litigation would be unrelenting [e.g BP Gulfof Mexico]. In 150 years there is not a single litigation against an E&P company of Fracking provider for damaging the environment.
        I put Fracking in the same basket as vaccination. People’s understanding of risk is very very poor.

        1. lin Avatar
          lin

          Tobacco companies insisted their product was healthy and safe for decades too. As did the company manufacturing agent orange. And pharmaceutical companies with many dangerous drugs.

          The oil and gas companies are some of the most powerful and wealthy in the world, and have both the resources and ability to control public debate and research into these areas. Your claim that fracking is benign is not universally accepted, with many credible agencies, landholders and scientists citing high quality evidence and data to support their opposition.

          http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/health/case_studies/hydrofracking_w.html

          1. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            What stopped Tobacco companies, Agent Orange, Silicon Breast implants, Asbestos, Some harmful drugs – Litigation. That is the test.
            Fracking is not benign, neither is windfarms. solar panels, cars, airplanes – anything designed by engineers. The question is “Risk”. Look at the airplane – the risk of death is real but I am happy to take the risk. Health risks associated with windfarms. The manufacturing [toxic chemicals] of Solar panels. Nothing worthwhile is benign.
            Lets look at aquifers – around the world including OZ they are in poor shape. In the USA chemicals found include, Herbicides, fertiliser, and chemicals from animal remains. Nearly every case due to “Spills from Surface” EG QLD Oaky – chemicals from air-force base. [Note litigation has commenced] The number one cause of damage of shallow aquifers is overproduction from, and wellbore construction of water bores. The latter is interesting as their is no requirement for water-bores to identify which water aquifer they access and if they encounter a gas zone. There is no requirement to isolate the gas and water zones. This is why gas producers from water-bores [Gasland Movie]. Oil & Gas wells have to isolate the water zones. After drilling and cementing wells they run tools to confirm isolation – if isolation is inadequate they must repair the well. Otherwise they could not drill offshore.
            Hope this helps
            PS E&P companies have the ability to “control public debate” Natural Gas exploration has been effectively banned in Tasmania, Victoria, NSW, Fracking banned in Vic, and soon NT – Their record of “Controlling public debate” is not evident.

          2. lin Avatar
            lin

            The companies you mention have a habit of making the litigation process go on for a very long time, as happened at Prince William sound with Exxon, the gulf with BP, and continues to this day with Hardie and the asbestos. The modus operandi is litigate till they are broke or dead.
            If you are a farmer whose wells are dry or poisoned, your options are very limited.
            As for windfarms, I have not heard any farmers who have wind farms on their land complaining, nor have I seen any evidence that their animals suffer any ill health.

          3. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            Thanks for responding.
            Litigation can take along time but that is in regards to payments to the Government. But compensation to businesses [fisherman, farmers etc] are usually paid quickly [the media makes sure of that!, E&P companies are no different to Banks, Windfarm, solar drug companies etc]. BP Gulf is a prime example.
            When “Gaslands” first came out the US law firms went into overdrive [huge teams were set up] chasing every film clip of a farmer lighting his kitchen tap. The Gaslands farmer is a classical example which was easy to prove as it was biogenic gas produced from his water-bore compared with thermogenic gas from the gas well. All these cases we see the accusation but not the final conclusion.
            Windfarms – people complain the low frequency noise affects their health. Google – I no knowledge on this topic

          4. lin Avatar
            lin

            are you serious?
            21 years after Exxxon Valdez, 8000 people have died waiting for compensation.
            https://thinkprogress.org/the-exxon-valdez-spill-was-in-1989-they-still-21-years-later-have-not-paid-the-full-amount-awarded-2bdb3d0a3ced#.u0dssl739

            Just 20 out of over 3,000 claims for failed business in the gulf of mexico have been paid so far, according to the settlement website.(http://www.deepwaterhorizoneconomicsettlement.com/docs/statistics.pdf)

            A US appeals court on Monday (08.08.2016) blocked enforcement of an $8.6 billion (7.8 billion euro) judgment against Chevron over oil pollution in Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest

            http://www.dw.com/en/a-slippery-decision-chevron-oil-pollution-in-ecuador/a-18697563

            and the list goes on and on.
            Individuals cannot fight companies with deep pockets. They get bankrupted when costs get awarded against them, and corporations just keep appealing against adverse findings until the litigants die or go broke.

          5. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            We are getting off the topic. Large litigation cases especially no win no pay attract incredible numbers of people looking for compensation. The sorting does take time & I am sure sometimes the courts get it wrong. Look at you local council outstanding compensation issues.
            The argument is that after 150 years of using this technology there has been no litigation by individuals, business and most important governments. If we start banning technologies based on “religion” then we’ll start putting people like Galileo in jail.

          6. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            YES I am an engineer and have designed and implemented Fracture stimulation projects. You can never say never but I think it is near impossible to design a fracture stimulation to damage a shallow aquifer.

            Engineers have been de-carbonisation energy for the last 100 years. Look at cars mpg or litres per 100 km improvements over the last 20 years. Unfortunately population growth is outstripping engineering improvements.

            The problem is the growth in population as David Attenborough stated we have a plague of humans.
            Good talking to you Lin

          7. lin Avatar
            lin

            And I have studied toxicology, and anything that comes out of an oil or gas well has a lot of crap in it that is seriously bad for your health.

          8. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            Anything that come out of an oil and gas well is part of nature. It is organic. Toxic – Yes but nature can manage it. Snake venom, most plants are toxic, water in creeks can make you sick, I think the list is endless. But oil and gas is not synthetic, micro-organisms can feed of hydrocarbons so if you like it or not HC’s are a part of nature.
            Your concern is that we [humans] seem to be overstretching nature’s resources. Well we are.
            My hypothesis is that this is due to over population. I have worked in developing nations and China all seeking our standard of living. This pressure is unrelenting. Now I am lost for a solution.

          9. Alastair Leith Avatar
            Alastair Leith

            Oh it’s natural, case dismissed.

          10. Alastair Leith Avatar
            Alastair Leith

            off-topic when you are proven to be a delusional shill for industry?

        2. Alastair Leith Avatar
          Alastair Leith

          Are you kidding?! The term sacrifice zone almost solely exists because fossil fuel extraction corporations do irreversible damage on every continent in this world except for Antarctica everywhere they tread. And it’s almost always the poorest and indigenous people along with their waterways and environment that bare the brunt. The litigation for the gulf disaster (and Exxon Valdez oil spill for that matter) was hardly unrelenting, Obama let them off the hook. The Gulf is an underwater death zone, even today and will remain so for decades to come. How does compensation paid to fishers bring that back? (It doesn’t it just gets BP/Haliburton et al off the hook).

          And recourse to the courts is often unsuccessful. Do you recall the Halliburton Loophole, which allows for unregulated injection of whatever carcinogenic chemicals into ground and aquifers in the USA? Also modern hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling is nothing like the 150 years old technology, which is why the shale gas boom the USA has just witnessed in the last couple of decades was, you know, the shale gas boom not a continuation of a 150 year old process.

          When individuals seek compensation for aquifer damage they get trucked in drinking water for the house, the farm goes to waste and to even get that they must sign Non-disclosures agreements forbidding them and their children to ever discuss the matter with anybody… so you don’t get precedents in the court and you don’t get public attention drawn to the issue. The farmers are always in a desperate situation as their land has become worthless and they need to extract any capital compensation they can.

          Finally a technology is not a science. It’s a deployment of engineering which may rely on science, and on the other hand may be conducted with general ignorance

          1. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            Where to begin. Anything that is bad – medical drugs that harm, asbestos, breast implants etc litigation ends the practice. Look at Nitro-glycerine once used in the oil industry now banned – killed a number of people. To say that the E&P industry is exempt from litigation and more powerful than governments the record especially in OZ does not show this.
            Firstly Natural Gas exploration is banned in Tas, onshore Vic, NSW and soon NT. This is an example that the E&P industry and their lobby groups have no power of influence. When you hear a politicians state “our decision” is based on “community concerns” is code we are ignoring engineers and scientists. Also the idea we can pump unregulated chemicals in fracs shows the fact that you have never dealt with the regulator. We have lost any influence many moons ago plus the chemicals we use are harmless and found in everyday products.
            In relation to examples of farmers having water shipped to them. This is the aeroplane syndrome, They are safe but very occasional crash. Do we ban planes NO. Same with E&P wells. They do occasional fail and must be fixed. The worst case of isolation failure was the BP GOM. You seem concerned with aquifers – throughout the world they are in poor condition. The number one cause is water bores [agricultural]. Overuse is one. Second is borehole construction. As per OZ, there is no requirement when drilling a waterbore to identify gas zones nor isolate gas zones. Which is why QLD farmers discovered CSG not the E&P companies. In NSW there are waterbores producing natural gas for over 50 years. Another example is the “Gaslands” movie where the farmer alights his kitchen tap. Where’s the litigation you say? Cannot have it as it is legal. Interestingly all the surveys in OZ & USA have found chemicals in aquifers are mainly herbicides, fertiliser, and animal remains. “Spill from the surface” So where are the protestors? When I pointed this out to the greens their care-factor evaporated
            In QLD near Oaky aquifer contamination is alleged to be from the Air-force Base – Litigation has commenced.
            Technology is not a science. “Conducted in general ignorance” I learnt fracture Stim at university. It is founded on decades of engineering and geo-mechanics, and geoscientists work. It is extremely high-tech – perfect NO – but neither is an aeroplane.
            The activities have got it wrong. They should be protesting against Vertical wells targeting conventional reservoirs as the fracs are larger and reservoirs are connected to the aquifers. Shale gas on the other hand is not connected to the aquifers – they are source rock.
            In the end stop buying the product. Dealing with NSW is an example. One group telling the natural gas business they are not welcome – so guess what – they leave. Next minute NSW is yelling at E&P companies to supply gas. Go figure?

          2. Alastair Leith Avatar
            Alastair Leith

            “Meanwhile, accidents keep on happening, both above-ground and under, by the hundreds or thousands. One in a dozen spills by drillers wasn’t contained before it hit drinking water sources – and the spills that hit water supplies tended to be much larger spills than those that didn’t (p. 38). Although gas wells are generally depicted as having numerous layers of concrete and steel casings to prevent the gas, wastewater and chemicals inside the well from interacting with the environment outside it, two thirds of wells had no cement along some portions of their bores (p. 275), an EPA review found. And conditions underground, which can leave wells under high pressure, high temperatures or in “corrosive environments” sometimes caused well casings to have “life expectancies” that run out in under a decade (p. 281) – but the oil and gas industry has told investors that shale wells are expected to keep pumping for 30 years or more.”

            From the scientists review of the USA EPA draft executive summary of investigation into fracking.
            In Scathing Review, EPA’s Science Advisors Tell Agency Not to Downplay Fracking-Related Water Contamination

          3. Alastair Leith Avatar
            Alastair Leith

            Here’s some background on the population health effects and environmental impacts too.

            The Human Cost of Power

    2. JeffJL Avatar
      JeffJL

      There is no problem with the science of Fracture Stimulation. Nobody denies it works. The issue is with the chemicals that are being used and the contamination of the environment (both down the holes and in the waste repositories). Chemicals which companies in the US are not telling the local authorities they are using so it is impossible to prove they are contaminating the surrounding areas. It has been proved that they cause micro-quakes. The process is also highly suspect in increasing methane leakage into the atmosphere.
      Of course if you do not agree with the warming of the earth due to human actions then you would consider Fracture Stimulation OK.

      1. Don McMillan Avatar
        Don McMillan

        I have dealt with regulators. These guys are tough and they are not willing break the Law. It is quiet simple. Companies must declare all the chemicals and portions to the regulator if they want to operate in their jurisdiction.
        The issue has been to make it public. The Frack companies argument is that there are countries that do not honour patents and make research investment meaningless. Their common argument is that Coke Cola is not required to disclose their recipe.
        This stand has gone by the way – Chemicals are declared.

        1. lin Avatar
          lin

          You might know what is in the frack fluid on the way down. No way of telling what it is going to extract from what is down there. There are all sorts of toxic chemicals in coal and oil. Paint it on your skin or breathe the fumes for a bit if you don’t believe me.
          As for regulators, many have worked for the industry, and will work for the industry again. It’s not called the revolving door for nothing. Regulations are made to be broken by the rich and powerful.

          1. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            I divide two chemicals into two categories: natural and synthetic. Natural can be toxic e.g snake venom but nature can absorb or dissipate or manage . Synthetic is man-made which nature has difficulty dealing with. A simple example is dispersants – Gulf of Mexico BP oil disaster – Crude oil is a natural [organic] chemical therefore nature knows how to deal with – 80% of the oil spill is unaccounted for which is due to micro-organisms. Unfortunately due to the impatient “Humans” dispersants was used to speed up the “clean-up”. End result the coastline regrowth is inhibited for a very long time not due to the crude oil but the dispersants. Frac chemicals have evolved since the 1940’s and are designed such that nature can accommodate – or are biodegradable. [not well expressed] The main viscosity agent is guar gum which is used in ice-cream.
            You are right to be concern – that is GOOD.
            The issue in your case is who to believe. The internet bombards you with multiple answers and the media or journalists sell stories not disseminate information.
            I have no answer to this as I feel I have to be an expert in everything

          2. lin Avatar
            lin

            More important than natural vs synthetic with regard to toxins is environmental and biological persistence, toxicity and dose. Some of the things that mining digs up are not usually found naturally in significant concentrations in our environment. Heavy metals such as mercury, cadmium and arsenic are toxic, and build up in our environment and our bodies. Some of the volatiles from gas and wells may be “natural” and biodegradable, but this is not much comfort if you are living near a well and suffering serious respiratory, immune and nervous system damage. As far as synthetic chemicals go, humans have introduced over 100,000 new chemicals into our environment over the past century, some of them in very significant amounts. Only a very small percentage of these have had rigorous investigation of their biological and environmental risks. And even some of the most widely used chemicals on the planet, found extensively in our food, have recently been classified as toxic, carcinogenic, teratogenic and endocrine disrupting. My experience is that in all areas of human endeavour, where there is money to be made, you will always find people are willing to sacrifice others and the environment for their own enrichment.

          3. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            In the oil and gas business we get the blame for everything. What the public hears is the accusation but not the resulting outcome. This is why I refer to litigation. The latest is a classic. A community living near a gas plant discovered that many residences had above average levels of chemicals including benzene in their blood. Headlines everywhere. What happens next is numerous investigations are progressed, the government, local universities etc. The result many months later – 100% correlation with smoking. The people which had these chemicals in their blood where horrified initially but when the medical profession recommended giving up smoking declined. Every accusation in Australia & US is investigated. E&P industry perfect no way but we are no different to banking, agriculture, and very industry. Do we impact the environment YES we do. The issue is as follows:
            The root cause of humans over stretching the earth’s resources, mining, farming, land clearing, burning forests, fisheries etc etc is as David Attenborough stated “Humans are a plague on Earth”

        2. JeffJL Avatar
          JeffJL

          Good to hear that they now have to declare all the chemicals used and they are made public (can you provide a link as evidence of that please [US preferred]?)
          No they did not always declare them to the authorities, and there is plenty of evidence on the web for all to see.
          The fact that fracking companies tried to use a Coke Cola argument is evidence of the willingness to hide something. Less secrecy would allow ventilation of facts rather than the cloak and dagger tactics taken by these companies in the past.

          1. Don McMillan Avatar
            Don McMillan

            Well the US you can google that if you like. QLD download the petroleum act 2004 and EPA act 1999 – 312W There are very difficult to read or understand – To do this work we have to get permission from the Gov. We are more regulated than the medical industry.

            Every industry Apple, Drug companies, IT, Banks, Tesla etc all hide their IP – there is no conspiracy just protecting from copycats.

            You should keep your eye out for the Federal Gov. study into Frac Stim Chemicals due this year. Also read the FAQ section

            https://www.nicnas.gov.au/communications/issues/fracking-hydraulic-fracturing-coal-seam-gas-extraction/information-sheet

          2. Alastair Leith Avatar
            Alastair Leith

            no they don’t they patent it! reverse engineering in IT hardware goes on routinely. And much of Apple’s IP is, for example, in it’s human user interface standards of its OSes and frameworks, which are openly apparent to anybody (like Android OS developers) to copy as best they can get away with and fight for in the courts.

  5. Don McMillan Avatar
    Don McMillan

    Science is not about right or wrong and certainly not about truth, these concepts are religious terms. Science is solely hypotheses and theories. You cannot prove a hypothesis. If you cannot disprove a hypothesis it becomes a theory. A theory will remain in-place until it is dis-proven e.g Galileo.
    In todays science “climate change” is the current theory.
    When people use the terms “Right”, “Wrong” or “Truth” they are not referring to science.

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