Guest Author: John A., Posted by Rich Kozlovich
Editor's Note: This originally appeared as an e-mail to the publisher of Greenie Watch some years ago, and John gave me permission to publish it, which I did on July 26, 2009. With all this insanity about global warming the pandemic hysterics and energy, supported by many with degrees in science, I think it worthwhile to publish this once again.
When I published this originally I asked John A. for his last name in order to properly credit this commentary, but he commented that he keeps his “surname off the Internet." John apparently is a history buff and categorizes himself as a “classical liberal”.
Those
among us who are history buffs will find that statement insightful. For
those who aren’t, I have linked the history of “Classical Liberalism”
in the article. It isn’t what you think. I have also linked a number of
names and events that may not be commonly known to most people in order
to give everyone the true flavor of what John is saying. Enjoy! RK
The history of science is rife with examples of political, social and
moral fashions which not simply influence, but pervert the scientific
method and corrupt the conduct of scientists. Einstein faced off the
political and moral fashions of Nazism and
eugenics
but
plenty of his colleagues happily incorporated those twin systems into
their own research. Eugenics also laid the foundations for the moral
crusade against alcohol in early 20th Century America which was again a
supposedly scientific assessment delivered as a moral panic which must
be addressed immediately lest America fall into a deep pit of moral
degeneration.
The example of
Trofim Lysenko
and the political outlawing of
Mendelian genetics
in
Stalinist Russia is a particularly scary example of a political fashion
given to be a moral and political imperative by a dangerously unstable
man who became President of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The
parallels with the modern global warming scare are obvious.
Another example would be
neo-Malthusianism
as popularized in the 20th Century repeatedly by Paul Erlich first in the 1960s and more recently by the scarily named
"Optimum Population Trust"
(and here)which
includes such luminaries as Sir David Attenborough calling for
mandatory limits on family size to prevent near future overpopulation
and mass starvation. Once again, a supposed scientific analysis is
communicated as a moral imperative.
John Holdren
,
now President Obama's Climate Czar, co-wrote several books with Paul
Erlich in the 1970s at least one of which argued for forced abortions,
forced adoptions of illegitimate children or from mothers "who
contribute to general social deterioration by overproducing children"
and the introduction of chemicals into water and food that rendered
people sterile. All of this to forestall a crisis of overpopulation by
the year 2000!
Carl Sagan, Erlich and others began and propagated the Nuclear Winter
story
of the 1980s, together with scary scenarios about likely darkening of
the skies due to dust from burning cities rising into the stratosphere
and blocking out the Sun. All with the aid of computer models with
extremely rubbery parameters and dubious simplifications. A moral
imperative against nuclear weapons? You betcha. Even
Richard Feynman
iconoclast as he was, while averring that the underlying theory was
nonsense, could not raise his voice too loud lest people think he was in
favour of nuclear proliferation. Moral panics do that to the best of
scientists.
There are lots more examples, but you get the idea.
These scientific fashions all in their own time held great sway in
academia and mainstream media. They divided scientists into those who
were credible and those who were so morally and intellectually corrupt
as to actually oppose these ideas.
Modern environmentalism has most, if not all of the above ideas incorporated into the unholy fusion of science and
Marxist political theory now called "ecology",
but is really a manifestation of what David Henderson memorably called
"Global Salvationism".
The most interesting thing about all of this is that I, as a
classical liberal
can
find common cause with people from a wide spectrum of political and
philosophical beliefs that the lessons of history are that moral
fashions in science are endemic, cyclical and a constant menace to the
real business of scientists to understand how the Universe works.
Scientists don't live in a fashion-free vacuum. They dress themselves
in the fashions of the day, read the latest scare stories of the day,
follow the latest celebrity soap operas of the day and most of all abide
by rules to not upset the funding apple-cart from which their work is
done, whatever their personal and moral qualms, at least until
retirement.
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