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The Age of Global Warming: A History Kindle Edition
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- Publication dateJune 2, 2013
- LanguageEnglish
- File size2181 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
A definitive and clear-eyed history of global warming alarmism --Michael Barone
'Like most of those on both sides of the debate, Rupert Darwall is not a scientist. He is a wonderfully lucid historian of intellectual and political movements, which is just the job to explain what has been inflicted on us over the past thirty years or so in the name of saving the planet ... Scientists, Rupert Darwall complains, have been too ready to embrace the "subjectivity" of the future, and too often have a "cultural aversion to learning from the past". If they read this tremendous book they will see those lessons set out with painful clarity' --Charles Moore, Daily Telegraph
'A superb and compelling book' --Mail on Sunday
'This is a brilliant piece of work that every climate change negotiator should have in his front pocket' --Jon Snow
'A great achievement ... Rupert Darwall has written a compelling and balanced account of a story that needs to be told' --Nigel Lawson, former British Chancellor of the Exchequer and author of An Appeal to Reason
'A total masterpiece' --James Delingpole
'Gripping ... Darwall's book has been widely praised as a welcome addition to our understanding of this extraordinary story, which as he says reflects a historic shift in the global balance of power between the West and those fast-rising nations to the east led by China and India' --Spectator
'Rupert Darwall has told a story of frauds and fools thoroughly and well. His truth may be inconvenient for some. For the rest of us, it is a breath of fresh air' --The American Spectator --. --This text refers to the paperback edition.
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Product details
- ASIN : B00D5RJ0W4
- Publisher : Quartet Books (June 2, 2013)
- Publication date : June 2, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 2181 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 497 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,055,446 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #317 in Globalization (Kindle Store)
- #1,453 in Globalization & Politics
- #50,130 in History (Kindle Store)
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on July 21, 2022
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''The South Central Climate Science Center bi-weekly Journal Club will meet on Thursday September 13th at 1:30PM CST in the Oklahoma Climatological Survey's conference room located on the second floor of the National Weather Center. This week's discussion will focus on "Cool dudes: The denial of climate change among conservative white males in the United States." by McCright and Dunlap (2011).''
(BTW, the cool dudes that were examined don't deny carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, and don't deny that climate changes).
And this announcement for the Region 6 Transportation-Climate Summit:
''BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Our transportation systems are facing increasing challenges due to extreme weather and climate variability. For example, rising seas, increasing storm severity, extreme temperature cycles, severe winter snows and droughts are creating increasing demands on infrastructure and operations."
Although the last chapter of "The Age of Global Warming: A History" is not a journal article, I highly recommend that participants in the journal club download the Kindle edition for 10 bucks and start with the last chapter. There we read a bit about the intellectual history of Vienna in the 1920s:
''Popper's search for a principle to distinguish science from pseudo-science was sparked by the contrast between Einstein's theory of relativity and Marx's theory of history, Freud's psycho-analysis and Alfred Adler's `individual psychology'. Einstein's theory was supported by passing the severe test conducted by Eddington, a test it could have failed. By contrast, subscribers to the theories of Marx, Freud and Adler found confirmatory evidence wherever they looked. Their theories seemed to explain practically everything within the fields to which they referred. Whatever happened always confirmed it.''
''Common to the three, Popper noted, was their treatment of unbelievers - or, to use the terminology of global warming, sceptics and deniers. Their defiance in the face of manifest truth had a ready explanation, for, as we've already seen, "unbelievers were clearly people who did not want to see the manifest truth; who refused to see it, either because it was against their class interest, or because of their repressions which were still `un-analysed' and crying out for treatment."''
As other reviewers of this book have noted, the details of the diplomatic history can be difficult to follow, if you are not predisposed to remember the names of all the players. A less tedious option might be a book such as the Manga Guide to Climate Diplomacy, if such a book is ever published. However, the broad theme of the diplomatic history is not difficult to follow. The system of international governance, nurtured by the UN, has worked as designed, giving voice and power to the disenfranchised and downtrodden of our planet. The final agreement reflected the needs and desires of humanity, the quality of the science, and the discount rate that even the participants (politicians, climate scientists, NGO members included) apply in their personal lives. The international political system works. Celebrate it!
Okay ...as scientists we are not supposed to make exclamatory statements about policy decisions that are balancing needs outside our purview.
A more parochial history for us scientists is reviewed in the book, namely the various aspects of climategate. Here is one conclusion from the book: ''The prospect of planetary salvation inflated the science so it became too big to fail, justifying the anti-scientific practice of withholding data and methods from potential critics and de-legitimising critical argument.''
The book is a history book, with a lot of deep history. ''To this, scientists brought their cultural aversion to learning from the past.
For them, history is not so much a closed book as irrelevant to the problems of the future.'' I feel that claim is generally true, and this aversion is nurtured by the system of higher education that I am familiar with. From freshman year to the Ph.D. hooding ceremony in the football stadium, the only historical knowledge required is what is needed to pass a token undergraduate history requirement, generally regarded as a joke. I hear no lament about this where I work. The grumbling I heard was about Laplace Transforms being dropped from the undergraduate curriculum.
But it has all happened before. Here is one gem of historical analysis within the book:
''In medicine what matters is not the motive of the practitioner but the efficacy of the therapy. A century ago, Professor Lawrence Henderson of Harvard drew attention to the remarkable advances in medical science, technology and therapy. 1912, Henderson claimed, marked a `Great Divide' when `for the first time in human history, a random patient with a random disease consulting a doctor chosen at random stands a better than fifty-fifty chance of benefiting from the encounter'.''
''When did reputable doctors retrospectively become quacks and when did clinical interventions, based on the medical science of the day, become of net benefit to patients? Even with the benefit of hindsight, it's hard to know. One answer is certainly wrong - at doctors' evaluation of their own abilities. Good intentions and strength of belief are highly misleading indicators of the quality of scientific knowledge. Physicians had been swearing the Hippocratic Oath to do no harm for twenty-three centuries prior to Henderson's Great Divide.''
Here is one error that I found in the book: ''By the end of the twentieth century, the Milanković cycles had fallen out of favour. Scientists now favoured theories that explained climate change in terms of changes in the atmosphere.'' Milanković cycles are not out of favour for predicting climate changes on time scales of 10,000 years or more.
This is a difficult and complex story to tell; partly because it involves virtually every nation on Earth, with each nation having its own problems, priorities, and policies; but also because it has taken place over a period of more than five lustrums, during which time some claim that socialism, political bias, and the corruption of climate science have played an important role in forcing the issue, while much of the process has taken place behind closed doors.
To illustrate, consider this brief summary: Despite the fact that there was no 'specific' evidence of global warming, or that carbon dioxide was causing it; a `consensus' was reached among climate scientists associated with the IPCC, who inferred that industrialization (US capitalism, in particular) was causing it. This led to a further consensus that if the world waited until there was clear evidence that the Earth `was', in fact, warming and that man, through his CO2 emissions, `was' causing it; it would be too late to act. So, although the Earth's temperature remained relatively stable at the time, the situation was deemed so critical that if decisive International action wasn't taken immediately to drastically reduce CO2 emissions world-wide; civilization, as we know it, was doomed --- sometime in the distant future. This led to a series of International Earth Summits, starting in Rio in 1988, and Conferences of the Parties (COPs), starting in Berlin in 1995, all aimed at forging an International agreement among all nations, both `developed' and `developing,' to drastically reduce and limit their carbon dioxide emissions. Little thought was given to the economic impacts of those reductions. The meetings are still on-going, but thus-far have been largely unproductive. The economic impacts of the changes made, thus far, however, have been severe.
The author of this book does an outstanding job of addressing and analyzing this complex sequence of events. But, even so, you may be a bit confused as you read the book. For, in all likelihood you'll find yourself puzzling over why those pressing for immediate Global action are so fanatical when no evidence is offered to support their belief in man-made global warming. But don't despair. When you reach the book's final chapter, `Reflections', starting on page 293, much of this will be clarified to some extent. That chapter offers a succinct overview explaining `how' it all got started and `why' the true believers are so convinced.
So, before getting into another argument over `Climate Change' around the water cooler, I strongly suggest you read this book. It will tell you everything you need to know to formulate informed and supportable arguments regarding the subject. By reading it, in fact, you may even be able to decide, once-and-for-all, whether you believe that man's activities are causing the Earth's atmospheric temperature to rise, perhaps catastrophically; or that the unstated evidence is unconvincing and that, until proven otherwise, you simply can't believe it.
In any case: based on this read, it appears that politicians, climatologists, and ideologues will continue to meet in exotic locals around the world to solve the problem of 'climate change' until, at last, they throw up their hands in despair and give up.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 21, 2022
Top reviews from other countries
People are so misinformed by uneducated (even corrupt) media that a book like this is really opportune and desired.
It brings such a trove of references and a welcome breeze in the vast desert of present mystification of beliefs such as Global Warming and the gloomy future ahead for "our descendants".
All unsubstantiated "beliefs", not facts.
So, kudos to mr. Rupert Darwall!
He is doing a great contribution to clarify murky waters deliberated done such with the single purpose of greed and blind passion.

