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800+ Pages, and only 5 are devoted to Global Climate Change ..
I have a new section on "KW 101" down below, a short paragraph under "KW 101: A Primer."
Sean Esbjorn-Hargens and Michael Zimmerman exclude the most relevant fields concerned with global climate change in their Integral Ecology: namely, climate science, oceanography, and other important fields devoted to right-hand exterior-external quadrants from their 200+ methodologies. Among these 200+ methodologies are Acoustic Ecology, Psychoanalytic Ecology, Neoshamanism and Zoosemiotics (AKA Animal Communication)--none of which can address climate change without a foundation of climate science so are useless in and of themselves in addressing climate change. Without the foundation of natural science, we cannot answer any of the questions below meaningfully. This to me is a horrendous oversight.
Out of 800+ pages, only 5 pages are devoted to climate change. Of course, I didn't expect the entire book or even most of it to be on climate change but at the very least, I expected more than 5 pages devoted to the topic (or 7, if we include the footnotes). This is why I bought the book. Not to learn about the flatness of deep ecology or systems theory (Ken Wilber has already taught me that) or some newfangled eco-maps or concepts of Integral, but to simply get an Integral perspective on an issue that is collectively perceived to be the single greatest threat that faces humankind.
Out of the five or 7 pages devoted to an "Integral approach to global climate change," well over half of the material is concerned with honoring the controversial perspectives of global warming skeptics and deniers in the public arena. These skeptical and denier viewpoints are presented alongside legitimate science as being of equal if not greater value to Integral than the scientific consensus on anthropogenic climate change itself. The remainder of the discussion is devoted to Integral critiques on scientific reductionism (how postmodern) and the limitations of right-hand quadrants to "forecast the weather," such as climatology.
Aside from the fact that climate change differs from weather, the claim that Integral is superior to right-hand methodologies because it draws from 8 ecological zones is not at all impressive if climate cannot be distinguished from weather. Or if those very methodologies which an Integral ecologist critiques are poorly understood or cannot be included into its overall Integral ecological framework.
"If you want to know this, do this": if you want to know the "weather," go turn on the TV and watch the weatherman. If you want to know climate, go consult a climatologist. Simply critiquing climatology as limited in its capacity to predict climate or referring to global climate change as "weather," i.e., "The Weatherperson Says. . . ." (p. 344), "Forecasting the Weather" (p. 345), and "What Is the Weather Today?" (p. 346) displays a certain bias against the science and cynical attitude toward climatology, given that these "weather topics" were in reference to global climate change. Climatology is a branch of atmospheric science concerned with long-term global climatic changes: not with short-term local weather forecasts.
The disussion on climate change was so brief that I can sum it up in the following excerpts:
In between and within the general positions represented by Crichton and Gore lies a lot of variation. On the one hand, skeptics of climate change are not a unified front. They cast doubt on the occurrence of climate change for many different reasons, including the limits of consensus science, the unhelpful sensationalism of environmentalists, the weakness of current climate models and computer programs, the lack of long-term data on natural cycles, the unclear role of human activity, and the difficulty of predicting climate change. On the other hand, even supporters of the global warming theory, such as mainstream scientific institutions--e.g., the United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Union of Concerned Scientists, and the United States National Academy of Sciences--have individual scientists who don't agree on the details or focus on divergent areas of interest. In addition, even those who do agree on the details often disagree over what steps need or ought to be taken to respond to the perceived crisis.
So on the one hand, you have all kinds of people raising all kinds of doubts about the scientific consensus. On the other hand, you have the scientific consensus who can't even agree with each other on the details to tell us what to do.
Aside from the most obvious fact that the body of scientific evidence was side-stepped in favor of "controversy," the message itself smacks wholly of insincerity: a one-sided contrarian position disguised as "two different sides" of a controversy. Provided for contrast or diversity and with the apparent goal of displaying author neutrality, fairness, and balance in reporting in the name of integrality and wholeness.
No doubt that a less critical and scientifically-uninformed yet integrally-minded reader would come away from this analysis thoroughly enlightened and convinced that "two sides" of a controversy were fairly offered and evaluated integrally. Most likely, they would applaud this effort while remaining clueless that both sides are, in truth, only one side and are therefore only one perspective: not two, let alone Integral or whole. And one which is decidedly critical of the consensus and opposed to it one-sidedly, whether "for" or "against." And, owing to the brilliantly partial treatment of the authors, the reader would furthermore maintain a blissful state of unawareness from knowledge that the so-called controversy is overwhelmingly confined to the public arena but is virtually nonexistent in science, which is near unanimous in its agreement with the consensus (97% agreement among climate scientists; 90% agreement overall from every field of science combined, and with dissenting climate scientists who disagree with the consensus totalling to 3%). Of course, there is no way of knowing of such agreement among the sciences on the merits of these arguments alone or elsewhere in the book, considering the strangely disproportionate attention that is given to uninformed views or to the opinions of the 3% of dissenting scientists. Nor in knowing that controversy in the public arena extends beyond mere amateur skepticism, scientific skepticism, or the sensationalism of those "unhelpful environmentalists" and has a more sinister side, as well, which was oddly left out of the discussion above.
In light of the "controversial nature" of this subject matter over that of meaningful discussion on climate change solutions, I should also point to those controversies surrounding highly-funded and highly vocal right-wing think tanks and anti-regulation industrialists (they are mentioned in passing down below as an item under "TERRAIN OF EXPERIENCE"; but, of course, are diminished in significance as one of many different items of discussion left for others to discuss and sort out. Thus, not brought to our immediate attention above as were the so-called controversies surrounding the consensus). These disinformation campaigns--which amount to the manipulation of scientific uncertainty and flagrant twisting of research to delay regulation and treating the conclusions of science as political fodder--would be included above if the authors were truly committed to integrality and wholeness in awareness of controversy. These disinformation campaigns are far more controversial, far more powerful, far more influential, far more sensational, and far more damaging than any possible sensationalism that could possibly arise from those "unhelpful environmentalists."
Just who are the "unhelpful environmentalists," anyway? I ask because I see the term, "environmentalists," thrown around indiscriminately throughout the book as if it were a bad word. James Hansen? Al Gore? Eco-terrorists? PETA? IPCC? Christian Ecologists? Arnold Schwartzenegger? Republicans for Environmental Protection? Or maybe "all of those people combined, including climatologists, deep ecologists, eco-radicals, hippies, leftists, and anyone who wants to support any climate policy, whether meaningful or harmful, without differentiating one from the other." So let's just go ahead and cast all denier and skeptical claims as legitimate and reasonable and make the scientific consensus out to be as confused and as inept as we possibly can.
As for the ". . .individual scientists [within the consensus] who don't agree on the details or focus on divergent areas of interest," and the claim that "...even those who do agree on the details often disagree over what steps need or ought to be taken to respond to the perceived crisis," the perceived disagreements over details between individual scientists is considerably overstated by the authors. Such a claim could lead a reader to erroneously conclude that the science is not yet mature enough as a science to be trusted reliably or to influence policy. This is untrue, as the science itself has taken a full century to mature and there are more than enough agreements between individual scientists than disagreements over finer details such that the scientists themselves are nonetheless unanimous in their support of mitigation efforts. These actions, such as mitigation of human greenhouse gases, are unanimously supported by the consensus and is itself justifiable and necessary irrespective of perceived disagreements over finer aspects of details that the authors wish to call to our attention. As for the authors' perceived not knowing what steps need to be taken or how to respond to the perceived crisis, the scientific recommendation remains, as before, pretty straightforward: mitigation of human greenhouse gases, in particular, industrial CO2 and other emissions. This can be acheived by international agreements and other policies to regulate these emissions. So not exactly "rocket science" as the authors suggest. Of course, how to build international support for reduction and how to muster the political willpower to do so is another matter entirely; but not a matter of science.
KW 101: A Primer
An important concept in integral theory is "differentiation prior to integration." Any attempt at integration without differentiation merely results in a fusion, polarization, or a combination of various parts assembled into a "synthesis" or to some other type of systematic arrangement or configuration, which is not an integrum or whole but is merely synthesis or formulaic systematization. The authors' discussion of climate change controversies, for example, fails to differentiate political from scientific controversies, scientific from layperson controversies, and dissenting from perceived controversies within the consensus and thus making it impossible to integrate anything whatsoever in this discussion without prior differentiation. Instead, the "parts" (i.e. controversies) exist in various states of differentiation ranging anywhere from fused to synthesized to fractured to outright omitted and then compartmentalized or pigeonholed into a formulaic system of four different terrains and presented as an Integral analysis.
Due to the global scope of the alleged problem and its perceived impending impacts on many aspects of human society, controversy surrounds almost every aspect of the climate change conversation. One way to illustrate the complexity of global climate change is to consider many important questions. The following list of two dozen representative questions, arising from the 4 terrains, illustrates the bare minimum of an Integral analysis.
Hmm. I wonder why "controversy surrounds almost every aspect of the climate change conversation." Could it be because my source is a Wikipedia article on Global Warming Controversy ?
NOTE: The majority of the questions below--intended to provide the "bare minimum of an Integral analysis" and classified into four different "terrains" (4 quadrants)--cannot be properly addressed unless we have a solid foundation of objective science from the UR quadrant on which to base our decisions and guide our action on climate change on the UL, LL, and LR quadrants. It is of little surprise that most of these questions of a scientific kind were already settled by legitimate science decades ago. As such they are no longer "questions" to be asked by Integral unless one likes to be redundant, is involved in independent scientific research, prefers to reinvent the wheel, has an Integral solution without the science or has uncovered new evidence to overturn the consensus. So why are they being raised yet again? And again and again by contrarians?
According to the footnotes, the "Integral analysis" below is based on a Wikipedia entry entitled "Climate Change Controversies," an entry devoted exclusively to disputes raised against the consensus view on climate change by climate change deniers and skeptics.
So this is what you get when you permit 3% of dissenting scientists and disputes from uninformed deniers and skeptics from a Wikipedia entry to direct the discourse of an Integral analysis: questions already settled by legitimate science years ago (thus, redundant) and a failure to consider the most critical and urgent questions that call for an Integral analysis. Such as: In light of many recent scientists who are reporting faster changes occurring that exceed most climate model predictions, what should we do? In light of many scientists who are calling for the immediate reduction of CO2 emissions to 350 ppm to prevent a tipping point and sudden and catastrophic climate change, how should we respond? In light of many scientists of late who have declared the IPCC's assessment from 2007 as obsolete, whom do we consult? Given that the IPCC chairman has recently admitted to the panel's underestimates of these changes to maintain a consensus but is currently warning that countries have less than four years to take action, why should we even listen? Given the growing concern among scientists and growing disconnect between scientists and an apathetic and scientifically-uninformed public, how do I react or tune out? What are the pros and cons between carbon tax and cap and trade? What do we make of Stern's recent analysis that no policy action will cost the world not 20%--but up to 50% of global GDP? What do we make of many scientists and economists who claim that a 40% reduction of CO2 can be acheived by energy efficiency alone (i.e., reduction of demands)? Is democracy even possible in an age of global climate change?
What are the consequences of CO2 rise to 1000 ppm? Why is climate change so politicized in the United States, but not elsewhere in the world? Why do the authors below think that climate change is partisan outside the United States? What do we make of Al Gore's assertion that we have all the technology already to solve climate change by 2020, just need the political will? What do we make of those naysayers who say that even though the technology exists, we won't do anything about it because we lack the collective will to do anything about it until it's too late? What do we say of those naysayers who don't believe in climate change, or of those who think that climate change is a leftist ideology? How does the Integral community's ultra-modernism and critique of deep or radical ecology interfere with its objectivity on climate change issues? Why is the Republican party in the U.S. Congress so anti-science and so unanimously opposed to climate change? How do we even address climate change in the United States, what with economic problems, conservative concern for taxing future generation with our debt, and when one state is threatening to secede from the union because of too much government? How reasonable is it to oppose the scientific consensus simply because you think you are Integral?
I'll respond to the questions below separately on comments to permit any brave individual to express their unique selves by responding to any of the following:
BTW...I'm not being disrespectful of Ken Wilber: I think he would encourage independent thinking and free expression of thought. This is not an attack on KW at any rate; but a critique of these so-called Integral Ecologists. Some of these questions below do not even appear to belong in the correct category or terrain.
TERRAIN OF BEHAVIOR
[UR: Objective (e.g., measurements of the natural world)]
In what ways have humans impacted climate, and how are they continuing to do so?
What are the roles of volcanism and solar activity on temperature cycles?
To what extent are current temperature changes the result of natural cycles and/or human activity?
In what ways are correlations (e.g., between rising temperatures since the industrial revolution) being confused with causation?
What are the most reliable sources of temperature measurement: weather balloons, land stations, ocean sensors, or satellites?
What is the long-term scientific relationship between climate change and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere?
TERRAIN OF EXPERIENCE
[UL: Subjective (e.g., experiencing the natural world)]
To what extent do scientists or qualified individuals feel fear about speaking out on either side of the issue?
In what ways are proponents overstating the evidence and opponents understating it?
To what extent are opponents of climate change suspiciously connected to the fossil fuel industry? And likewise, to what extent are proponents of climate change unfairly influenced by political, professional, economic, and social pressures?
How do people in different geographical locations directly experiencing climate change?
What psychological and emotional dynamics are preventing nuanced discussions of and collaborations on climate change?
How are the self-identities of community and global leaders playing a negative and positive role in making progress in addressing climate change?
TERRAIN OF SYSTEMS
[LR: Interobjective (e.g., functional fit of the natural world)]
What are the short-term and long-term policies needed to deal with climate change?
Which policies can be justified in the face of so much uncertainty of predictions about climate change? What are the economic consequences of various policies?
How are politics and business preventing justifiable action from being taken?
What is the range of small-scale and large-scale systems effects, both positive and negative?
What kinds of economic and political impacts could the Kyoto Protocol have on the global community?
How much insight do paleoclimatic studies shed on our current situation?
Will a cutback on emissions create a setback in gross domestic product?
In what ways might climate change impact some people negatively but have beneficial consequences for other people?
Could climate change be beneficial for Gaia as a planet in both the short and long term?
TERRAIN OF CULTURE
[LL: Intersubjective (e.g., shared horizons with the natural world)]
Why is climate change a partisan issue in the U.S.A. and abroad, with conservatives often hestitating to take action while liberals generally want to take action immediately?
How is climate change perceived, responded to, and argued about differently by various countries and cultures?
How much scientific consensus is there about today's apparent climate change?
How are we to interpret the petitions that suggest more scientists are refuting global warming?
How are various concepts and perspectives on climate change the result of specialists using different time frames and amplitude scales?
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Ranking Integral Ecology's Approach Toward an Integral Analysis by Quality
Posted April 20th, 2009 by barbi hammondAmong the many questions raised above was "how does the Integral community's ultra-modernism and critique of deep or radical ecology interfere with its objectivity and integrality on climate change issues?" This to me is a legitimate question given the apparent lack of many Integral notables to embrace a healthy green meme such as environmentalism to speak authentically on an issue that is currently screaming out for an Integral voice. This is not to suggest, of course, that deep or radical ecology is "healthy" although I highly suggest that support of the scientific consensus on anthropogenic climate change would be a very sensible and a wise healthy green meme to embrace. Quite possibly, those at Integral who still do not support the consensus have some green stage-level pathology and are confusing a HGM with a MGM, i.e., thinking that supporting the scientific consensus on climate change is the equivalent of embracing eco-radicalism or eco-terrorism, for example; thus, throwing the "baby out with the bath water" and resorting ultimately to a pre-trans fallacy that embraces Boomeritis or MOM instead when it comes to matters on climate change and thinking it is Integral.
In light of the vast and growing body of scientific evidence in support of the consensus, anything other than climate change realism is a sign of pathology at this point of time if you are at Green or above (i.e. climate change skepticism or denialism). If you are not yet at Green, then it is not a pathology but a natural state of being. But when your center of gravity is Green or Integral and beyond and you still embrace such views, this pathology could arise from any stage in first-tier development (since "Integral pathologies," after all, are in reference to those unresolved pathologies from the lower stages of development carried on as pathologies into the higher stages). Needless to say, it would be far too premature for me to offer a diagnosis at this stage of development beyond an examination of the book's pathological treatment toward climate change issues. So until I've read the rest of the book in its entirety, I will refrain from speculation beyond what I've read lest I say something inaccurate and put my foot in my mouth.
But to finish what I said, in any event the disease may be some variant condition such as the moral relativity of Boomeritis or even a MOM. Both of which are pathologies that exist in the mental-rational structure of consciousness (which is externally-related so is prone to quantification over quality and value and is confined to either/or dual oppositional thinking). Meaning, if left untreated, Boomeritis and MOM remain stage-level pathologies at 2nd tier and beyond.
Whereas Boomeritis is perhaps more guilty of relativity for the sake of equality for all opinions--whether good or bad--and is therefore egalitarian and anti-hierarchical, a MOM is more concerned with competition, acquisition, and development for the sake of individual progress and freedom so is perhaps more guilty of the either/or dual oppositional, although it too is inherently anti-hierarchical because the mental-rational structure is concerned with values of quantity: not with values of quality, so is inherently anti-hierarchical in nature and lacking of quality. Both MGM and MOM are guilty of fanning the flames of controversy instead of educating the public because of being inherently anti-hierarchical and dual oppositional. A classic example of both can be found in the passage below and the passage up above (original post) from Integral Ecology's coverage of climate change controversy:
Climate Change: A Guide For the Perplexed
The overwhelming consensus of the scientific community (i.e., those who are actively engaged in climate research, publish their results in peer-reviewed journals, and allow their conclusions to be tested by others) is that the global warming that is happening is mostly human-caused by the burning of fossil fuels. Despite this consensus there is considerable debate among the general public. There is big disconnect between the scientists and the general public. The popular media is usually interested in fanning the flames of controversy instead of educating the public. Therefore, they will look for opponents of the scientific consensus to provide a "balanced view" and give equal credence to the global warming skeptics. The voices of the few (unqualified) are magnified to be equal to the voices of the many. Sigh!
Ranking Integral Ecology's Approach Toward an Integral Analysis of Climate Change by QualityIntegral Ecology's approach toward an Integral analysis of climate change, in short--is a mirror-reflection of the popular media's approach: controversial, egalitarian, quantitative, and ultimately shallow. These are the bare minimum that are required to magnify the few (qualified and dissenting) scientific voices to be equal to the voices of the many (qualified and consensus scientific voices).
When "consensus" is used in this manner, we are typically referring to a viewpoint that is held by a majority of qualified scientists. Therefore, by "consensus," we conventionally think it is in reference to a numeric quantity that is greater than a minority scientific opinion. In truth, however, what we are actually referring to is not numeric quantity (i.e., majority), but rather to degree of quality of expert opinion and the one that is regarded as most expert and highest. We are therefore referring ultimately to best or highest qualified scientific opinion: not to the most "popular" or majority scientific view.
Mind you, since both "kinds" of scientists--dissenting and consensus scientists--are "qualified" to make an expert opinion on matters of a scientific kind, both kinds therefore possess a degree of quality. But this is not to say that since both scientific opinions are "qualified," that both kinds are of equal value or quality. Rarely has scientific dissent ever overturned a consensus opinion such that the dissenting opinion was adopted by the consensus majority because it was superior in science. What we find overwhelmingly, instead, is a consensus being reached among scientists after many years of research and debate via refutation, confirmation, testing, and the like. This results in dissenting voices eventually being overturned by due scientific process to thereby result in a situation of the dissenting scientists willingly adopting the consensus opinion upon being convinced otherwise by sufficient evidence. Not by force, but by personal choice by individual scientists. This is because the consensus view was found to be superior. In fact, I will have to confirm this but I had read somewhere that James Hansen, the climatologist who is credited for bringing to public awareness global warming 20 years ago, had once been among a minority of dissenting scientists who supported global cooling. This dissenting position was ultimately found to be flawed based on empirical data and temperatures reversing to warming in the 1980s. Hansen therefore willingly (not by force) abandoned the theory of global cooling and adopted the consensus view of global warming, which he was convinced was then superior.
There was not always a consensus among climate scientists. In fact, it took a whole century of debate among scientists to arrive at a consensus. This is because a consensus requires an overwhelming body of evidence to support it before it is adopted as the consensus position by a body or community of scientists. Overwhelmingly what happens is that once a consensus is adopted, further research continues to support the consensus, not refute it, as dissenting voices diminish and adopt the consensus. Making the consensus opinion superior in quality. Not by popular majority, but because of higher quality. Thus, "consensus," when used in this sense, does indeed refer to a greater quantity of qualified scientists (the majority) because scientists, like most smart people, like to side with higher quality: not inferior quality. This is why superior scientific viewpoints eventually become the majority opinion but, more importantly, consensus refers to higher quality and value.
When referring to a "scientific majority" as a consensus, moreover, this numeric quantity of majority refers to strictly to scientific majority: not to popular majority. When pitted against the popular majority, the scientific consensus, which is a majority view held among a body or community of scientists, is dwarfed compared to a popular majority, since "popular majority" refers to any population of people on the earth who are excluded from the group of qualified scientists composing this community for the fact that they are unqualified to offer an expert opinion of a scientific kind. Thus, when "consensus" is used in this sense, we are not merely referring to the majority view held by a community of scientists, but also a minority of people belonging to the scientific elite called "the scientific consensus," which is a certain scientific elite opinion which may or may not be shared by the popular majority. In any case, the scientific elite is far outnumbered by nonscientists throughout the world, so in this sense "scientific consensus" refers not to a unanimity or majority of "people" but instead to an elite minority of people belonging to a community of scientists--which, again, refers to quality and not quantity (although the quantity in this case, compared to all people on the earth, is relatively small compared to popular opinion).
However, in the case of Integral Ecology 's approach to climate change, we find not only find qualified, scientific opinions of inferior value (dissenting scientists) pitted against the 97% of scientists supporting the consensus (qualified, scientific opinions of superior value)--we also have a case of popular majority (unqualified) pitted against the scientific majority (qualified). Since these "dissenting" viewpoints based on Integral Ecology refer actually to a combination of qualified but inferior opinions and unqualified layperson opinions, the end result is "mob or majority rule" whereby quantity is valued higher than quality and hierarchy is negated. In other words, qualified, inferior scientific opinions (dissenting scientists) combined with unqualified, inferior popular opinions (popular majority) are pitted against the scientific elite (the scientific consensus). Resulting not only in a case of the voices of the few (dissenting scientists) being magnified to be equal to the voices of the many (scientific majority supporting the consensus position), but also a case of the voices of the many (unqualified popular majority--i.e., nonscientists) being magnified to be equal to the voices of the few (the scientific elite). But ultimately what we have is not differentiation or ranking of qualities or value but majority or mob rule and thus quantity instead, since the dissenting scientists are combined with the unqualified popular majority and magnified to be equal to the voices the scientific elite (the scientific consensus). This is essentially Boomeritis but also MOM, since one side is pitted against the other in a controversial kind of confrontation.
It is thus a mirror-reflection of the popular media's approach toward climate change issues: controversial, egalitarian, quantitative, and ultimately quantitative and shallow--not at all concerned with quality or value. These are the bare minimum that are required for an Integral analysis of climate change, according to Integral Ecology. Sigh!
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You funny Americans...
Posted April 20th, 2009 by barbi hammondRich,
For some reason, only the top half of your post appeared yesterday. The bottom half of your post was blank until I clicked on "add comment" this morning. Sorry that I didn't respond to it sooner; thought you were only making a general comment until I saw your question. Here is a copy of your question, as it is still blank on the main thread. Actually, the whole post has now disappeared because I can't find it any more:
"It was not until around 2005 that American media reported clearly that scientists had resolved the controversy."
How and why exactly did this happen? Who met when and what was discussed for this to be the case? It's not you that I'm skeptical of. You seem genuine and very knowledgeable about this subject. I'm just trying to stir up the pot. The media lives on the "worse is better" philosophy, and so I wonder if some scientists are willing to give them what they want in order to advance their personal careers.
I'm going to play the devil's advocate since this is an 'interrogation process" of sorts so please don't take any of this as an offense ("stirring the pot" guess you could say..):
Your demands for a simple explanation of "who met what, when, where, why, and how?" assumes that a single event, person, place, thing, or secret meeting took place could be linked to this shift in the American media that could possibly reveal or expose those parties that were responsible for their decision to pronouce this controversy in science as "resolved" in 2005 (as briefly as possible, I presume, since you don't have the time to read the article that discusses this matter at length).
This of course would be an impossible task for me as there is no single causal explanation for the change in attitude in 2005 in the American media. At any rate, the controversy in science--that there is "global warming" at that it is presently occurring--was over among scientists by at least 1988 (if not prior). So 2005 is rather late in the game for the American news media to suddenly break this "news" to the unbelieving American public as if it were new. The essay that I referred you to listed numerous other reasons for the American media's decision to finally come around in 2005 including Hurricane Katrina, the 2003 heat waves across Europe, record-breaking temperatures (according to many data sources, 2005 broke 1998's record-high temp) and the breaking off of large chunks of ice shelves from Western Antarctica but is beyond the scope of this response to list every single reason as to "who, what, when, where, etc." since you might get bored with it anyway and only read only part of it.
But the idea that it was some publicity stunt conspired by ambitious, self-serving scientists and the American media through some shady negotiation or deal borders on the conspiratorial and the patently ridiculous, since mainstream media across Europe and Japan had been reporting that the debate on global warming was over as far back as 1988.
One thing I should clarify is that the quote above is in reference to a shift among science reporters employed by American media who, prior to 2005, were in the habit of caving into pressures imposed by the skeptical and denialist American public and media owners to present news of climate change in a manner that was "fair and balanced" between dissenting scientists paid for by the U.S. fossil fuel industries and right-wing think tanks (who argued contrarian claims that global warming "didn't exist") and between the mainstream scientific claim that there was global warming. This controversy was not a controversy in science but a political controversy instead, and was confined almost exclusively to the United States. Were there truly a "controversy in science," this scientific controversy would have existed elsewhere around the world as well. As such it was a domestic political controversy.
Which is fine; I realize that you are where you are because you are apparently American (right?) and you are not to blame. So I'm not blaming you at all for your suspicions, since your viewpoint illustrates the typical American's perception of climate change and response to it as some kind of media (or liberal media) or scientific elite conspiracy.
On a related note, Frank Visser made the observation that Ken Wilber's form of Integral is "American." What are you thoughts on that, anyone?
Your quote above came from Spencer Weart's essay on The Discovery of Global Warming: The Public and Climate Change (Cont. -- since 1980) from the American Istitute of Physics. Here's the full quote to put it in context (but not the full article, which can be found above):
(Continued from previous page). By the end of the 1970s, scientific opinion had settled on warming as most likely, probably becoming evident around the year 2000 — that is, in a remote and uncertain future. Some scientists nevertheless went directly to the public to demand action to avert the warming, and a few politicians took up the issue. During the hot summer of 1988, a few outspoken scientists, convinced by new evidence that rapid climate change might be imminent, made the public fully aware of the problem. Scientific discussions now became entangled with fierce political debates over scientific uncertainty and the costs of regulating greenhouse gases. It was not until around 2005 that American media reported clearly that scientists had resolved the controversy, while films and ominous weather events gave citizens a better idea of what global warming might mean. The majority of Americans (except on the political right) had moved gradually to a vague feeling that some kind of action should be taken. Stronger worries had grown among people in most other countries, and among many thoughtful policy-makers in the United States itself.
This essay deals mainly with the United States, but until the late 1990s opinions were generally similar in other industrialized nations. The response of American policy-makers is covered in an essay on Government: the View from Washington.
[skipping past to Crichton...]
Despite the efforts of the contrarians, science reporters and their editors slowly came to realize that the scientific debate over climate change was essentially over. They began to feel they should explain the situation straightforwardly, even at risk of angering part of their audience. Coverage of climate change in major U.S. newspapers, after declining in the mid 1990s, began to climb back. In 2004 the American public could read extensive cover-story articles in respected journals like Business Week and National Geographic, stoutly declaring that global climate change was truly a serious and immediate problem. Meanwhile several books and dozens of well-maintained Websites attempted to explain the situation. Far more widely noticed, however, was a best-selling thriller, State of Fear. The author, Michael Crichton, built his plot on the fantasy that fear of global warming was a deception propagated by evil conspirators and their dupes. As in his earlier novels, Crichton played upon a theme beloved of right-wing populists — the scientific establishment was arrogant, wrong-headed and untrustworthy, if not actively corrupt.
This was in line with a proliferation of Websites and blogs that confidently denounced the scientific consensus on global warming. Some were posted not by paid lobbyists but by independent contrarians, passing around plausible-sounding arguments supported by scraps of anomalous data. There are always anomalies at the research front, of course. But when scientists resolved a problem the contrarians fastened on a newer one, while the old arguments stubbornly lived on among the Web's countless niches. The contrarians had constructed what one neutral observer called an "alternative universe" where "basic findings of mainstream science are rejected or ignored."(147a)
Some of the statements on the Web, radio talk shows, newsletters and other media began to resemble the typical American diatribe against wicked elites. Such arguments also began to show up in West Europe, Japan, and especially Russia, but Americans were the most prone to openly distrust scientists. Populist American politicians were often more scornful of intellectuals than were policy-makers in other advanced nations, and more responsive to pressure from oil and related corporations. Remarkably, the science-fiction novelist Crichton got an appreciative hearing as a "climate expert" on visits to Congress and the White House. Such antics widened the divide between the United States and most other nations, and helped maintain polarization over the issue at home.
When I posted "Michael Crichton needs to retire, I'm not joking," I had no idea that he was about to "expire" for real. I just thought that he was too old and boomeritis to be of relevance any more in the 21st century considering his outmoded position on climate change and peak oil (he doesn't believe in peak oil, either).
Sometimes bad arguments just have to "die off," but I didn't mean it literally. May he rest in peace.
But to respond to your comment, I'm sure he is or was a likeable guy; my point was simply that his so-called scientific contributions and "climate expertise" were not worthy of Integral and contributed greatly toward the "dumbing down" of America and throughout the world. He should have just stuck to entertainment.
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Only 5 pages on Climate Change but wow 750 pages on how to think about Climate...
Posted April 24th, 2009 by Sean Esbjorn-HargensIt is great to read Barbi's post. I feel she raises a number of important points around integral approaches to climate change in general and does a good job of pointing out some of the limits of our treatment of climate change in Integral Ecology. Also see her long series of posts on “Global Warming Skeptics with Green Centers of Gravity." Obviously she uses our book's thin discussion of climate change to make these points. On the one hand I'm happy to see critical posts of the book like hers as I feel these kinds of engagements are both inevitable and necessary. On the other hand, I feel she misreads and distorts our position quite consistently in her post. Hence, I’ve chosen a title for this post that is both playing on her title and inverting it – a little “glass half empty/half full” reversal.
Opposed to responding point by point to her post I will just make some overarching points in hopes of providing some context for readers. Also, I’m curious to see/read what others think about her characterization after they have read the whole book. It will be instructive to see how others find her presentation. Our book Integral Ecology is in many ways primarily a philosophy of ecology book as such it presents a new way of thinking about and approaching key ecological issues like climate change. As such it isn’t a book that provides a or the integral view on hot ecological topics (e.g., air pollution, waste management, green energy, water wars, deforestation/desertification, over fishing). Thus, Michael and I don’t spend a lot of time articulating our view of what an integral view on eco-problem X would be. We feel – in apparent contrast to Barbi—that there can be multiple even contradictory integral views on issues – especially ones as complex at climate change. Though interestingly, we do spend more time on climate change than any other specific crisis issue in the whole book. And at a mere seven pages that is saying a lot in both directions (e.g., 1. wow they don't really get into any major issues but the book is 800 pages – what are they then spending so much time talking about? [actually we spend most of the book outlining the IE framework and illustrating it so others can apply it to issues like climate change- though we do give lots of short examples and 3 case studies etc.] and 2. wow they spend more time on climate change than any other issue [because it is such an important issue]).
While our mere 5/7 pages leave a lot to be desired and to be clarified and unpacked I would like to suggest that these few pages do say quite a bit – when read with a generous spirit and in the context of the whole book. My sense is that the implications of what we are saying is quite profound. Especially in the context of the 16 principles of applying the integral ecology framework which appear right before we discuss global cliimate change (p. 340). Even if she doesn’t like some of our questions, or our placement of them in the 4 quadrants (note any question technically could be placed in any of the 4 terrains because they all have the four dimensions – it largely depends on what aspect of the question you are emphasizing), I’m struck by her on going cynicism and what reads to me as a complete dismissal of most of what we have to say (and keep in mind that a good portion of what she is dismissing is not actually our view). Also, I’m struck by her apparent disregard for our contextual explanations. For example, we explain why we are only spending a few pages on climate change, why we drew from the wikipedia entry to build out 4 Terrain questions [note she wrongly claims in spite of our clarity on the issue that only our questions are drawn – not our analysis – from the Wikipedia article and we did that to provide a sense of the views on climate change within the general US public] and in the appendix we explain why we are not including sciences such as climatology or oceanography (p. 490-491).
We decided to leave a more thorough treatment of climate change for another time. In fact, Michael and I have been working on articles over the last six months (so even before the book was published we had already begun tacking climate change in a more direct fashion) presenting the fuller version - which builds on what is the in the book. I am also spearheading the publication of a special issue of JITP and a book anthology on integral approaches to climate change. These publications will not only present Michael's and my views but the views of a dozen+ other integral scholar-practitioners working directly on climate change using integral theory in a variety of contexts and at different scales. It would be great if Barbi poured some of her passion and insight into submitting a piece for this special issue - clearly she has a lot to say and some solid ideas about the interface of integral principles and climate change. So it should be noted that the first major post-Integral Ecology publication that I am taking on is addressing climate change from an integral perspective. This is being done in large part because it is one of the most important issues on the planet and because our book didn’t get into it as much as I would have liked (because, as noted above, the focus was intentionally different).
Michael and I both value the natural sciences tremendously esp. those connected to climate change. So we are quite cognizant I believe of the climate science. And at the same time we want to point out that the current approach to climate change is dominated by LR and orange/green altitude views. Part of our apparent lack of emphasis on natural science is that we want to highlight under utilized perspectives that we feel do have a contribution to make to the discussion (e.g., the arts, humanities, social science). It is quite a stretch I feel to suggest, as Barbi does, that we exclude or ignore the right-hand exterior quadrants/zones. I would like to argue that the fields of research that Barbi claims “are useless in and of themselves in addressing climate change” (e.g., psychoanalytic ecology, zoosemiotics, acoustic ecology) actually do have something “in and of themselves” to offer towards the solution. Barbi’s overemphasis of LR science I feel is part of the limits of non-integral approaches to climate change. It is also worth mentioning that of the 4 (of 200) schools she picks to make her point she ignores many other schools that have an even more obvious contribution to make such as: agricultural ecology, biogeochemistry, bright green environmentalism chaotic ecology, ecological economics, ecosystem ecology, to name just a few.
One of the big reasons we highlight the controversy around climate change opposed to the consensus is that when you consider amber, orange, and green perspectives – it is anything but a straightforward consensus driven by straightforward science. Thus, we want to open the space as wide as we can so that all healthy perspectives can be at the table. We are not as ready as Barbi appears to be to dismiss all dissenting or contradictory perspectives into the dustbin of skeptics and deniers. In other words, we feel that there are important lessons to learn and insights to take from some of the perspectives which at first glance might appear to be a version of neoconservative views funded by the oil companies. In other words, not every one who contests different aspects of the so-called consensus is pathological (as Barbi explicitly suggests).
Also keep in mind there isn’t in our view a monolithic consensus. While the global majority can be viewed as united in their stance that climate change is happening – within that there are many different and even contradictory views. In other words, it isn’t enough for us to all agree that climate change is happening or that we should mitigate greenhouse gases– that doesn’t really say much or point to concrete next steps or policy. The devil is in the details and the issue of climate change has a lot of details that can be viewed from many perspectives without being a “denier” or “skeptic.” My ongoing experience is that it is hard to talk about climate change from an integral perspective because so many in the conversation – even in the integral community – tend to polarize it into the Deniers vs. the Alarmists or Skeptics vs. Consensus. I feel Barbi’s post does this in several ways after all, she largely is associating our viewpoint wrongly with the skeptics and is emphasizing the under represented truth of the consensus. She doesn’t as far as I can tell – make much of an effort to understand why we might be saying what we are and she is quick to mistake her interpretation of our view with our actual view. This emotional strategy doesn’t lend itself well to deeper conversations and more nuanced explorations. For example extreme statements like “anything other than climate change realism is a sign of pathology at this point” say more about Barbi I feel than it does about those who don’t fully conform to her version of climate change realism. Neither Michael nor I want to give undue credence to naïve skeptics or amber or orange deniers. That would not serve our goals or the important effort of addressing climate change in an urgent fashion. If our section on climate change gives that impression then we definitely were not successful with our aims within that section. Our intent, which I feel is obvious within the larger context of the book (and here lies the possible cautionary tale of just reading 5/7 pages out of 800) is that we have to be able to momentarily suspend even our most cherished beliefs about hot-button issues like climate change so that legitimate positions that are different than our own might be able to shine forth and inform us and contribute to the larger effort to address these complex issues. So on the one hand we don’t want to elevate nonsense perspectives to equal value with established and thoughtful scientific opinion and at the same time we don’t want our preference for a unified consensus blind us to important considerations that might not currently be represented in the larger consensus.
One thing that struck me about Barbi's post was the tone and rhetorical style. I'm fine with the posturing she presents but we made a conscious choice to avoid such a rhetorical strategy in our own writing as it is our sense and experience that such an approach typically works at cross purposes with an integral inquiry. In other words, along side her critiques I don’t experience much of a position of reflectivity or an effort at bridge building in her comments. I feel her important critical comments would have much more persuasive impact if she highlighted some strengths and value of what we are doing. But as it is we are mostly left with what might be called a “rant” that does a good job of telling us her view of climate change but fails in my assessment to deepen the conversation (though some of her better points had the potential to do that). Her style of communicating in this post runs the risk of giving the informed reader the impression that when her particular perspective of climate change and integral wasn’t mirrored back to her by our book she felt insulted and decided to attack.
While I often don't agree with certain points that she makes, she makes a number of great points - many of which Michael and I do agree with. I trust that our soon-to-be published pieces on climate change will do a much better job of articulating our positions than the IE book has. Though, I also suspect that what we have to say won’t totally conform to her view of what an integral approach to climate change ought to be.
I look forward to her thoughts after she reads the book - both in terms of what aspects of her position she feels are confirmed and in terms of what aspects she revises in light of a full engagement with the entire book. Though if her recent post is much of an indication I fear we will likely disappoint, simply because by her own admission she is looking for something else out of the book than what I feel it offers.
Clearly Michael and I have our work cut out for us – to do a more thorough job of presenting climate change and an integral approach to it. I appreciate Barbi’s alarm sounding post as to the current thinness of what is presented in Integral Ecology and the potential ways it could be misconstrued to represent a position that neither I nor Michael subscribes to. I’m looking forward to the special issue of JITP (and the associated book) on climate change wherein more time will be spent (approximately 150-200 pages) on these crucial matters. Also the State of the World Forum is an exciting event that will provide all of us more opportunity to dig into these matters in a way that is enlightening, challenging, and engaging.
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Hard Science
Posted May 2nd, 2009 by Richard LaymanWay to hold their integral feet to the fire, Barbi!
I have just joined the IL blogs and have posted a few comments about the lack of real estate devoted to hard science. I in NO WAY have the chops you show in this thread, Barbi, but I hear you and YOU WIN, hands down.
My impression so far is that the majority of the integral cohort considers natural science as something of a quaint or rustic craft akin to blacksmithy because it is not integral per se. I liked your point about the logical impossibility of hard science being integral (warm, fuzzy science?). In an integral world view natural science is not sufficient but it is necessary and all to often, it seems, in short supply.
Integral Ecology is probably over my head but from the discussion I would venture a guess that on some level the authors feel some kind of kinship with the "mavericks" in the climate debate. I doubt that they are actually apologists for the dark side.
As for the integral vineyards in general, integral theory may be so far out on the hypothetical limb that it looks at scientists and their pruning tools with some fear and a little loathing.
I also take Brian's point about THE MONEY. No doubt, the climate change "controversy" is ultimately brought to us by money/power/elite interests. I wonder how much the money affects this website? I doubt anyone is so sensitive to the "controversy" when it comes to evolution.
Richard
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There is no answer. There is no solution. There is only practice. (Anon.)








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Posted April 19th, 2009 by admin