Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Science News

How Scientific Consensus Has Gotten a Bad Reputation 770

nerdyalien writes From the article: "Fiction author Michael Crichton probably started the backlash against the idea of consensus in science. Crichton was rather notable for doubting the conclusions of climate scientists—he wrote an entire book in which they were the villains—so it's fair to say he wasn't thrilled when the field reached a consensus. Still, it's worth looking at what he said, if only because it's so painfully misguided: 'Let's be clear: the work of science has nothing whatever to do with consensus. Consensus is the business of politics. Science, on the contrary, requires only one investigator who happens to be right, which means that he or she has results that are verifiable by reference to the real world. In science consensus is irrelevant. What is relevant is reproducible results.'" As a STEM major, I am somewhat biased toward "strong" evidence side of the argument. However, the more I read literature from other, somewhat-related fields (i.e. psychology, economics and climate science), the more I felt they have little opportunity to repeat experiments, similar to counterparts in traditional hard science fields. Their accepted theories are based on limited historical occurrences and consensus among the scholars. Given the situation, it's important to understand what "consensus" really means.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

How Scientific Consensus Has Gotten a Bad Reputation

Comments Filter:
  • by BoRegardless ( 721219 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:07AM (#47852481)

    No functioning computers would exist without "Science." Science is verifiable and reproducible often in a variety of ways, or it is not "science."

    • by i kan reed ( 749298 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:20AM (#47852589) Homepage Journal

      True as that may be, people who are absolutely nuts tend to use the perpetual openness of science as an excuse to inject irrelevant, arbitrary insanity into discussions of fact. I'm not just referring to the (particularly common as Slashdot) climate change deniers who dismiss all sorts of careful analysis of data and theory for some unspecified null hypothesis "because we've been wrong before". But crazier people.

      Conservapedia's [conservapedia.com] owner cum dictator, Andy Schafly comes to mind as a frequent abuser. Who has made "be more open minded" arguments over things as scientifically established as relativity, which he asserts doesn't exist, or walking on water being scientifically possible.

      And creationists do the same.

      The point, of course is that while established science can always be wrong, arbitrarily embracing the opposite and asserting the evidentialist structure of the scientific method as a reason is crazy. The proof is in the pudding, if you will.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Most non-scientists are not in a position to evaluate the claims of any given scientist. So, they rely on scientific consensus in order to decide which scientific proposals they will accept as true. This is their only defense against the insanity that you are proposing. It is not an ideal defense, but it is what we've got.

        The proof of the pudding is in the eating.

        • by Matt.Battey ( 1741550 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:14PM (#47853253)

          Most non-scientists are not in a position to evaluate the claims of any given scientist.

          I'm pretty sure that was the argument the Church had against releasing full, translated copies of its data, a.k.a. the contents of the Christian Bible.

          This argument doesn't pass the sniff test. It is the job of a "scientist" to present claim and data that supports said claim in such a way that it may be consumed by anyone and still stand on its own, only then is there "consensus."

      • They have over 38000 entries there? That makes it the biggest satirical Wikipedia clone I know.

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:05PM (#47853139) Journal
        See, what you are saying is correct, some people refuse to acknowledge evidence when it is right in front of their faces, and that's a real problem. The evidence for relativity is fairly clear, and quite strong; if someone rejects it, either they are not looking at the evidence, or not understanding the evidence.

        However, when someone says, "you should believe what I say because there is consensus," that is a problem too. Science argues from reproducibility and evidence; from ancient times people believed things because they were claimed by an authority. If Aristotle said it, then it must be true, for example, or if the bible says it, then it must be true.

        The great advancement of science was to not believe in authorities, but rather to look at the evidence. Nullius in Verba is the motto. Saying, "believe me because we have consensus" is a step back to the dark ages. If the evidence is strong, then present it. If the evidence is not strong, then your consensus will do nothing.
        • by i kan reed ( 749298 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:16PM (#47853273) Homepage Journal

          Of course, that doesn't make any sense.

          We're not saying that to people who have meaningful evidence. We're saying to to people fixated on irrelevant points raising scientifically absurd objections consistently and repeatedly. There isn't a scientific debate happening here. If we were, we wouldn't see so much "just asking questions" about things with well established answers.

          These are people who are trying to assert "my ignorance is equal to your knowledge" out of an implied deference to fairness.

          • If we were, we wouldn't see so much "just asking questions" about things with well established answers.

            Also worth mentioning, sometimes asking questions about established answers is one of the best ways to find new knowledge. I read a book about neuroscience recently [amazon.com], and the author said, "writing this book made me re-examine the basis of why we believe what we do, to figure out what the evidence is supporting these ideas." If you use their questioning as a motivation to understand more, then it will make you smarter. If you see it as merely an argument, then that's all it will be.

            Incidentally, I have no i

        • The thing with "consensus" is that consensus is what happens when scientists are out of (reasonable) questions to ask and answer. You put forth your measurements and say "we believe this is caused by X." And somebody else says "Ah, but it could be caused by Y!" So you devise an experiment (or set of observations) to test whether the results are from X or Y. Once that's established and no one has any other questions on the X-Y issue, then consensus has been achieved.

          That's what happened with climate science.

    • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:20AM (#47852593) Homepage Journal

      Science is verifiable and reproducible often in a variety of ways, or it is not "science."

      I craft a theory according to the current state of knowledge, and to verify it I do a study on X and come out with results Y, which I use to come to conclusion Z. My article is peer reviewed and published in the relevant accepted journal of science.

      Did I do science? By most measures, YES.

      However, only steps 1-3 were done on the actual scientific process - it's missing verification until a 3rd party comes along and repeats my study, gathering the same results within an acceptable margin of error.

      The problem is that doing my own study is 'sexy', repeating somebody else's, especially when their results are within mainstream theory, isn't.

      • And you have landed on an important problem in the scientific world. There's an understanding among academics that they need to make attempts at reproducing results. And for "big" things that make a splash, someone is usually going to step up to the plate.

        But sometimes things take a while. Like just a month ago, someone just published an analysis undermining the, frequently believed, and popularly widespread, notion that women measurably like more masculine faces at the height of the fertility. That's

      • Science is verifiable and reproducible often in a variety of ways, or it is not "science."

        I craft a theory according to the current state of knowledge, and to verify it I do a study on X and come out with results Y, which I use to come to conclusion Z. My article is peer reviewed and published in the relevant accepted journal of science.

        Did I do science? By most measures, YES.

        However, only steps 1-3 were done on the actual scientific process - it's missing verification until a 3rd party comes along and repeats my study, gathering the same results within an acceptable margin of error.

        The problem is that doing my own study is 'sexy', repeating somebody else's, especially when their results are within mainstream theory, isn't.

        It's not just that verifying somebody else's results in not sexy. There are other factors as well. There used to be a broad scientific consensus about phlogiston theory being the best explanation to explain processes like combustion and oxidation. Eventually it was discredited against fierce opposition from some of the big names in science at the time and there are many other examples of this from other scientific fields. Scientific consensus about some theory or other sometimes has a tendency to be imposed

        • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @01:07PM (#47853791) Journal

          And yet no one believes in phlogiston anymore. Science did what it was supposed to do.

          I can think of plenty of examples of the old guard trying to hang on to discredited ideas. The Out of Africa theory of human origins, when it first came out, flew in the face of a general view among European experts that modern humanity had evolved in Eurasia. The old guard, to some extent, were more informed by racial biases (the very 16th-19th century idea that sub-Saharan Africans were somehow lower on the evolutionary chain), and indeed there were a few angry bastards, notably on the Continent, that clung to the idea of a Eurasian origin of H. sapiens even into the 1980s, when finally enough molecular data had been gained both from extant human populations and from the remains of ancient humans (including Neanderthals) that it became irrefutable that modern H. sapiens had a very recent origin (sometime between 200,000 and 150,000 years ago) in Africa.

          And again, on the same general topic, for a long time the idea that modern humans and Neanderthals had interbred was viewed as completely invalid. mtDNA studies were flung in the faces of researchers who insisted that modern humans and Neanderthals had interbred in Eurasia. Those that insisted that the interbreeding had happened were tut-tutted, in some cases viewed almost as hippies. Indeed, even into the 1990s, the "consensus" view was that any interbreeding was so rare as to have had no impact on the genetic makeup of modern human populations.

          Well, lo and behold, by the 21st century, better techniques for DNA extraction and genome mapping revealed that virtually all human populations outside of sub-Saharan Africa did have nuclear genes that came from Neanderthals.

          So it strikes me that this, and numerous other examples, consensus that does not fit the evidence is always ultimately discarded. But that some consensus views are wrong does not mean all consensus views are wrong.

    • by dpilot ( 134227 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:42AM (#47852837) Homepage Journal

      This always struck me as a funny part of the "Harry Potter" series. They were all in a school for magic, verifying and repeating using experimentation. Though it sounds silly to say, it impressed me as "the science of magic."

      Science is the way of thinking and the framework, not the topic.

      • by jfengel ( 409917 )

        Unfortunately, it was a very poor kind of science, and that's one of the things that really irked me about the series. The potions (chemistry) class was especially bad. They were taught things by rote, and they learned only that if they didn't follow the procedure then they'd get bad results. Often, interestingly bad, but they thought of them as simply "the wrong thing" to be discarded rather than investigated.

        The wizards looked down on "muggles", but they had an awful lot to learn from them. Applying muggl

    • Science may be good and pure and free of politics.

      BUT SCIENTISTS ARE NOT. They depend on funding and getting tenure and in general are dependent on institutions and where institutions are, there is a boat load of politics.

      A hard science like physics has it relatively easy, but everything down the ladder can be and are muddied to one degree or another.

      For the record, I'm convinced of anthropogenic global warming.

  • Worse than that... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Etherwalk ( 681268 )

    It's actually much worse than that.

    Studies in economics and psychology tend to suffer from certain problems which limit their real-world application and the likelihood that they actually mean what people think they mean.

    First, they are often based on correlation rather than causation. This is especially true with psychology studies, and readily allows confirmation bias, incorrect interpretations of data, and interpretations of data which are heavily influenced by the perspective of the researcher.

    Second, t

    • by oh_my_080980980 ( 773867 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:25AM (#47852639)
      Please stop. You think you know what you are talking about but you really don't. If you understand anything about experimental design and statistical analysis you would not have written the second sentence. Correlation or causation depends on the design of the study. When it comes to surveys, those would be correlational studies. When it comes to studying animal behavior, those would be causation.

      Any study's results are only generalizable to the population from which the sample was derived. Thus if the sample was taken from a population of Ohio State university students, those results are only generalizable to that population. Your complaint is with the media and how they report the results no the study's principle investigator.
      • Correlation or causation depends on the design of the study. When it comes to surveys, those would be correlational studies. When it comes to studying animal behavior, those would be causation.

        Absolutely. Most of the studies I have seen discussed or come across in psychology have been correlation-based. While many people are good at saying they don't know for sure what the study means, most people looking at it interpret it to have meaning that fits with their preexisting biases.

        Any study's results are only generalizable to the population from which the sample was derived. Thus if the sample was taken from a population of Ohio State university students, those results are only generalizable to that population.

        Yes, hence the problem with conducting so many experiments on college students.

        Your complaint is with the media and how they report the results no the study's principle investigator.

        Not only them. You also see a lot of the same problems in psychology textbooks, for example, and among psychologists. Psychologist

    • Okay, let's just take a second and review this idea.

      What on earth makes you think non-preliminary studies in psychology/sociology study correlation? People in the field take those correlations you reference, and develop causative experiments all the time. Expose groups to two different stimuli, and measure the behavioral differences. Have you never even browsed the abstracts of a psychology journal [sagepub.com]?

      I know it's popular among engineers to dismiss the soft sciences for, being, well soft. But the fact that

    • by digsbo ( 1292334 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:46AM (#47852883)
      In economics, the Austrian School folks agree with you so strongly that they reject the notion that empirical data can trump a priori reasoning. Recognizing that there is no "controlled experiment", any data that refutes a well-reasoned logical argument is considered incomplete. It's a remarkable rejection of empiricism and a recognition that economic activity is based on human behavior (praxeology) and as such can't be precisely quantified.
      • by khallow ( 566160 )

        any data that refutes a well-reasoned logical argument is considered incomplete.

        Another possibility is that the "well-reasoned logical argument" wasn't actually well-reasoned. For example, I've seen a perversion of the Austrian School axiom of action in which it is claimed that humans and only humans can act.

        That bolded part can be refuted easily by observing non-human actors such as computer trading programs and animals. The latter can make economically relevant decisions without having a human involved anywhere in the process, for example, bees harvesting honey and incidentally po

        • by stdarg ( 456557 )

          That bolded part can be refuted easily by observing non-human actors such as computer trading programs and animals. The latter can make economically relevant decisions without having a human involved anywhere in the process, for example, bees harvesting honey and incidentally pollinating plants or a host of scavengers and predators taking turns on a large carcass.

          A computer trading program is a tool used by humans. Animals "act" in the vernacular sense but the Austrian school's idea of action derives from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P... [wikipedia.org] which is the study of *human* action.

          In thinking of economics, while it certainly makes sense to consider the actions of animals as you noted, the only relevance is in guiding the actions of humans. It's irrelevant to consider what honeybees are going to do outside of how that impacts humans and how we must react to them.

      • by Nimey ( 114278 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:48PM (#47853611) Homepage Journal

        "Rejects empirical data" is another way of saying "taking it on faith", i.e. the Austrian school is a religion by another name.

  • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:13AM (#47852527) Journal

    Science is about provability, consensus is about getting majority or even a plurality of opinions. These two things are mutually exclusive.

    Piltdown Man was once "consensus". We know how that turned out.

    • Not even close.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Science is not about provability. Provability is the domain of pure mathematics.

      Science is about falsification, which is quite different. All scientific knowledge is "until seen". The best theories survive, but they might not survive forever. Science proves nothing, it only provides us with empirical evidence for or against a certain hypothesis.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by tverbeek ( 457094 )

      No, mathematics and logic are about provability. Real-world phenomena can't be proven; they can only be shown to have worked a certain way every time we've observed them so far. (I've dropped this rock 100,000 times, and every time it has fallen ... but I can't prove that it will next time.) If you want absolute proof you need to stick to theoretical phenomena. Or chuck it all and just believe something with absolute faith because it's written in an old book, like the other people who are afraid of their

    • by pz ( 113803 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:47AM (#47852905) Journal

      As an experimental scientist, I can, with certainty, state that you are wrong when you claim "science is about provability."

      It is extraordinarily difficult to prove something experimentally. Most advances come about because we (both individually as experimentors, and collectively as members of a given scientific field), think we've accounted for most potential confounds and artifacts, not because we've conducted perfect experiments. Biological sciences, especially, suffer from a huge number of uncontrolled variables that often we are not aware of, but impinge mightily upon our results. Biology, to continue, is noisy. Very, very noisy. In my lab, we measure phenomena related to visual perception, and I can tell you unequivocally that individual variation usually swamps any underlying phenomenon we examine (meaning, we need to measure with lots and lots of individuals to make sure we aren't being fooled, and even then, we can easily get fooled).

      Rarely, if ever, do we prove something experimentally. It's only through the consensus of reproducibility that scientific facts get established.

      Piltdown Man, to discuss your example, was due to observational error (ie, a hoax), not experimental evidence demonstrating provability. Observational science, as opposed to experimental science, is rife with missteps and re-interpretations. Look up the history of shooting stars, as one example -- they were considered purely terrestrial phenomena well after the establishment of the United States as a country. It took repeated observational events, not experiments, to establish that meteors are astronomical in origin.

      Reproducibility is the cornerstone of modern science. Everything else is consensus. We think we know things, and mostly, we've been correct with a high degree of probability, since we've been able to take given conclusions and build, predictably, upon them. But, every now and then, even firmly-held beliefs with eons of structural experimental integrity are demonstrated to have been mistaken. There is very little scientific truth, merely scientific certainty. If you want absolute truth, look to mathematics instead.

  • why do you except scientific methods to be part of it?

    economics can have some science to it, but mostly it's psychology and mostly it's guesswork. some better, some not so good. there's psych medicines that you can test with science and need science to produce, but the results in an individual can vary.. free will and all that. the other side of economics is just pure math, but that's just a side. you can calculate interest rates all you want but you can't really know if someone can pay it to you..

    you can s

    • "there's psych medicines that you can test with science and need science to produce, but the results in an individual can vary.. free will and all that."

      Really? So addiction is a matter of free will? Might want to tell that to all the heroine addicts.

      Somebody is irretrievably stupid.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:20AM (#47852591)

    Consensus is something that helps us keep crackpots and bad actors (Say, those that pay for fake/biased studies that support their political or financial position) from pushing their agenda. Charisma and slick marketing are dangerously effective so the practice of gathering the collective opinion of all the experts in a given field is important.

    It's not perfect. Occasionally the community is slow to move on new evidence, but science should be a careful and methodical practice.

    We enjoy stories about underdogs and misunderstood geniuses or the rogue new guy that goes up against the "establishment" but in reality actual true stories of this nature are quite rare. Statistic noise rare. Real breakthroughs are nearly always the culmination of decades of work from hundreds of researchers.

    Michael Crichton, frankly, was a hack that enjoyed the above fantasy a bit too much. He did do a bit of research for his projects but it was always just dressing for the same plot over and over again.

    That man has done more damage to the world than he ever knew. When he fell in to the climate change denial camp he provided legitimacy to the anti-intellectual nonsense that we're struggling to deal with today.

  • Going along with your science department's political position so that you continue to have a job and funding.
    • by dave420 ( 699308 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:05PM (#47853145)
      You do realise the world of riches that awaits a scientist who could show AGW to be nonsense, right? They'd end up with a Nobel prize, their own science department, and a large research budget. This is such an easily-disproven nonsensical claim made by denialists it's not even funny. It only seems to work on other denialists who applaud it and say "See! See! That's what happens!". Others just laugh and assume the denialist in question is a grade-A muppet.
  • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:31AM (#47852707)

    A consensus is a bunch of people who share an opinion. You can have a consensus of scientists, but not a scientific consensus. Crichton was right (about that): science is about consistent, reproducible results, not opinions or consensuses. Politics often involves consensus.

    Climate science doesn't care how many people, scientists or not, vote for a particular hypothesis. Climate politics do, and that's what's involved when we try to decide what to do. Unfortunately, people confuse the two.

  • by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:33AM (#47852725) Homepage

    It's absolutely true that science is not about consensus. Science is not a body of knowledge, but a process of (roughly speaking) formulating an explanation of phenomena, devising a means to test the explanation, and then using that test to determine whether the explanation adheres to the "real world". One of the criteria of a good test is that it must be reproducible, but nothing in the process of science actually requires "consensus".

    However, you have a bunch of different scientists with different specialties studying different phenomena, so much so that no single person can actually be aware of it all. Certainly no single person can actually reproduce all of the tests and experiments. In the face of such complexity, we've developed another system which, speaking strictly, is not "science". It's more of a social/political system whereby the various experiments are reviewed by other scientists who attempt to determine whether the tests were good, and whether the tests actually tested the explanation/phenomena they were supposed to. In a formal setting, this process is called "peer review", but it also happens informally (i.e. scientists read each others' work, challenge it, devise other tests).

    The upshot of this social system is that, if you aren't enough of a climate scientist to review the existing knowledge of global warming and evaluate its validity, then you should probably just trust the consensus. You trust that there are a lot of smart people working on the problem, and if 95% of the climate scientists agree, then the safe guess is that they're probably at least on the right track. It doesn't mean that they're absolutely correct-- no scientific or social process can guarantee absolute correctness-- but you're going to find more success going with the overwhelming consensus than going against it.

    Of course, every once in a while, there is some genius who figures out that the overwhelming consensus is wrong. Most of the time, the scientific community catches on pretty quickly and the consensus changes.

  • by tverbeek ( 457094 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:33AM (#47852727) Homepage

    The notion that climate science or economics can't repeat experiments is not entirely fair. While it's true that we can't conduct isolated double-blind experiments under identical conditions, we can conduct tests under analogous conditions to determine whether a given model is accurate or not, which is the real goal of such science. Given enough instances in which the accumulation of carbon compounds in the atmosphere leads to an overall increase in temperatures, or in which an increase in government spending or low-end wages stimulates economic activity in a market economy, we can make the inference of a correlation, and start looking for a mechanism of a causal connection.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:41AM (#47852825) Journal

    'Let's be clear: the work of science has nothing whatever to do with consensus. Consensus is the business of politics. Science, on the contrary, requires only one investigator who happens to be right, which means that he or she has results that are verifiable by reference to the real world. In science consensus is irrelevant. What is relevant is reproducible results.'"

    The phrase "One investigator who happens to be right" assumes one would be able to tell who is right and who is wrong immediately as it happens. The consensus is agreeing who got reproducible provable results.

    People who do not understand science, who want to game the system are intentionally gaming the system. They bring in rules used in philosophical debates and legal arguments into science. Equal time for both sides works ok in philosophy and in courts. But not in science. Let us say one side has tons and tons of data and the other side is waving hands. Giving equal time to both is doing a great injustice to the side with data.

    If one side is just asking questions, raising doubts, etc and the other side is actually answering the questions and clearing the doubts, it is a great injustice to give equal time to both. It takes much longer to answer questions than to raise them.

    One should gain standing to raise doubts. Getting funding from industry groups with vested interests is not getting the standing. Must publish in the relevant field, get peer reviewed papers. Must risk reputation gained by hard long work to raise questions.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:55AM (#47853039)
    Scientific consensus is not political consensus.

    .
    Scientific consensus is an group of scientists agreeing on a proven theory or the proof of a theory.

    Political consensus is a group of people ganging together to push their opinions on others.

    The latter has a negative connotation which Mr. Crichton is using to taint the former.

    • Scientific consensus is like "you cannot exceed the speed of light." If you happen to demonstrate that you exceeded the speed of light, you want to be careful about how you present it--e.g. "we have this interesting result and can someone help show what we did wrong?"--but the community will take notice if you actually show that the consensus is wrong. The more consensus there is, the better the evidence you need to posit the question, but the community still listens.

  • by Jason Levine ( 196982 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:56AM (#47853065) Homepage

    No, consensus isn't needed for science to progress, but it is an inevitable result of science. A theory comes out, it is tested, peer-reviewed, and people see that it best describes the data. So more and more scientists in that field will accept that theory until something better comes along.

    Now, you can be that one guy who says "here is my theory which contradicts prevailing views." This has happened a lot in the past. However, the key point is that those contradicting theories need an extraordinary amount of evidence to prove them. If your radical new theory was that relativity wasn't actually true and you could explain everything with X, then you'd need a TON of reproducible proof to convince your peers that X is true. This is because we have so much evidence that relativity is true that it would take a lot to unseat it.

    What you can't do is insist that a theory with broad consensus is wrong because you have a different theory, offer up little to no proof, and demand that those "in the consensus" provide extraordinary proof that they are right.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @11:57AM (#47853067)

    That's what my math prof at the university said after he asked people who thought this or that answer was right (and the majority was wrong): Science is not a democratic process.

    Sadly, it has turned into one.

    Peer review sadly doesn't mean what it used to mean: That a lot of others who are experts in your field took a look and nodded their heads. What it means to day: A lot of other people in your field of study think likewise.

    Scientists are humans, as much as they try to sit on high horses and claim they ain't. They don't like being wrong. They don't like to give someone else the satisfaction of coming up with some paradigm shifting discovery. And most of all they certainly do not want to admit that they wasted their life hunting the rabbit down the wrong hole.

    Imagine we'd only discover today that the sun, not earth, is the center of our solar system. You think any of the scientists who invested their whole life perfecting deferent and epicycle calculation would budge to the overwhelming proof that they're wrong?

  • by ponos ( 122721 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:18PM (#47853279)

    I think there is a subtle difference between being right (in the usual sense of providing a model that happens to accurately represent measurable stuff) and the process of scientific discussion. Consensus is just an outcome of a process, ie collaboration. That process is extremely important but does not guarantee being right.

    In the end, without resorting to unnecessary complicated terms, if a bunch of people who are supposed to know what they are saying all agree on something that is not immediately testable (say, long-term human impact on the climate), odds are they are more likely to be right than some random wacko or idiot reporter because they spent some time discussing together and have highlighted potential errors.

    In the absence of definitive hard data, which will only be available in retrospect, we have to pick sides. Consensus seems a safer bet than the probability that some random guy is the new Galileo or Einstein.

  • by overshoot ( 39700 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:25PM (#47853361)

    This whole discussion is distorted by the framing around "belief." As long as the result of a scientific inquiry is "belief" it's reasonable (in the "sound reason" sense) to hold the issue open and speculate that Einstein's General Theory (or the current version of Darwin's) might in fact be totally wrong.

    But that's where the denialists play word games. They talk about open minds, and how consensus isn't dispositive, etc. and then use that as an argument against teaching evolution in schools or taking steps agains AGW. Or, for that matter, against teaching heliocentrism or plate tectonics.

    The "scientific consensus" may not be dispositive in any epistemological sense, but when it comes time to collapse the waveform and make a decision it's certainly the way to bet.

  • by sugar and acid ( 88555 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:26PM (#47853365)

    For climate change skeptics are always attacking the science and the scientists. But they never deal with the known facts.

    1. CO2 concentration is measurably increasing year on year and accelerating. If you want a running tally have a look here: http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/trends/
    This is one of a number of different high quality analytical chemistry studies that all tell the same story. CO2 concentration is increasing significantly.

    2. We know this is because of release of fossil fuel sequestered CO2. By careful investigation of the change in carbon isotopic ratios, and by simply accounting for the CO2 released. Human release of CO2 more than enough accounts for the CO2 increase in the atmosphere, and actually shows that a significant proportion is actually getting absorbed into the ocean and other carbon sinks. But clearly no where near all of it.

    3. CO2 in the atmosphere traps heat due to the wavelengths of light it does and does not absorb.

    This is all hard chemistry measurement, and are known with a high degree of confidence. These are not up for debate!

    The only debatable point is what do these facts mean for the climate and the environment going forward. And here we get into prediction and modelling. The best models and predictions shows that the climate will increase in temperature, and that will have significant and mostly detriment effect on most of the worlds environments and sustainability of human populations going forward.

    If you are a climate change skeptic scientist, what you have to come up with is a model that sensibly and scientifically shows why this increase in CO2 won't have any significant detrimental effects. Then put it up for publication in peer reviewed journals. And if your scientific argument has any legs it will change the scientific consensus. All the other stuff being thrown around is political motivated bull shit, with no scientific basis and should be simply ignored.

    • Playing the ball... (Score:3, Interesting)

      by dtjohnson ( 102237 )
      "CO2 concentration is measurably increasing year on year and accelerating...this is because of release of fossil fuel sequestered CO...CO2 in the atmosphere traps heat...These are not up for debate...The only debatable point is what do these facts mean for the climate."

      Here are some more facts. The atmospheric co2 concentration is increasing by about 2 ppm per year. The world currently produces about 4.9 x 10^13 kg of co2 per year from the combustion of fossil fuels. Therefore, the small total amount of
  • by Kazoo the Clown ( 644526 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @12:57PM (#47853717)
    Science is not consensus, and therefore my favorite random blog rant is equally credible? Somehow, I just don't see the former point supporting the latter...
  • by RaccoonBandit ( 2597025 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @01:09PM (#47853825)

    I think there is a difference between what scientists mean by a consensus in the scientific community and how it is understood by the wider public.

    If a climatologist says "there is a consensus" (s)he hardly means that a bunch of people came together to have a popular vote on the issue. Rather, it suggests that the majority of fellow climatologists have examined some evidence each and found the collection of all that evidence (and their respective analysis) to be conclusive (as far as statistically possible). However, no individual alone can "convince themselves by looking at the evidence" because the evidence consists of more data than anybody could study in a life time. So we have to put a certain degree of trust into our colleagues. An individual only has partial evidence, which by itself is insufficient to come to far-reaching conclusions about global climate developments. These conclusions can only be reached collaboratively -- in this sense it requires a consensus. Fortunately though I don't even have to trust any individual climate scientist or their data, just that there is no conspiracy by the majority. Furthermore, I know that I could examine any evidence if I wanted to, I just can't examine it all because there is simply too much of it. This applies similarly to other large-scale observational endeavours.

    However, to a non-scientificially minded person "consensus" might indeed suggest something weaker (people sharing an opinion) and therefore mistrust the conclusions. And then they can't look at the evidence themselves because there is too much data and that data comes from exactly the people whom they mistrust in the first place. So instead they look at the evidence they can see and understand, which explains why acceptance of climate change drops on snowy days.

  • by mdsolar ( 1045926 ) on Monday September 08, 2014 @01:19PM (#47853933) Homepage Journal
    In a lot of ways, consensus in science is what is lacking in both controversy and ignorance. It is what goes into text books. If a subject is controversial then some people know somethings about it but the details have not been worked out and agreed upon. If a subject has had no study, for example is there DNA under the ice on Europa? Then that is a subject of ignorance and perhaps speculation but not subject to consensus.

    So consensus forms on topics that feel like they have pretty much been studied to death. It should be noted though that contrarians may remain active even when a consensus exists. That may look like controversy, but really the contrarian's arguments have all been addressed to everyone's satisfaction except the contrarian's. So, basically, the contrarian is the guy who does not get it. The faster a field moves, the more likely a contrarian will still be professionally active.

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

Working...