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The Age of Global Warming: A History Paperback – April 28, 2014
- Print length354 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherQuartet Books Ltd
- Publication dateApril 28, 2014
- Dimensions6.25 x 1.25 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100704373394
- ISBN-13978-0704373396
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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 --.
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Quartet Books Ltd; Reprint edition (April 28, 2014)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 354 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0704373394
- ISBN-13 : 978-0704373396
- Item Weight : 1.15 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 1.25 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,578,941 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,559 in Climatology
- #3,606 in Environmental Science (Books)
- #5,609 in History & Philosophy of Science (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book eminently researched, brilliantly written, and historical. They also describe the writing style as complete, well-written, and philosophical. Readers also say the book provides a good summary of the history of global warming.
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Customers find the book's content eminently researched, compelling, and full of references. They also say the author does an outstanding job addressing and analyzing the complex political hoax.
"...The author of this book does an outstanding job of addressing and analyzing this complex sequence of events...." Read more
"...It's a great book and very well researched, with tonnes of references...." Read more
"...It is very clear and logical and most interesting and informative. I've recommended this book to my meteorologist friend...." Read more
"This an excellent treatment of the science and particularly the politics surrounding the idea of anthropogenic global warming...." Read more
Customers find the writing style well-written, unique, and accessible. They also say the book is clear, logical, and easy to read.
"...The author's style is clear and easy to read...." Read more
"...It is very clear and logical and most interesting and informative. I've recommended this book to my meteorologist friend...." Read more
"...very well written and not very philosophical but it is a very good summary of the history not only of the global warming movement but of the long..." Read more
"...subject with deep research (as with many others) but with uniquely accessible language...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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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.
The author's style is clear and easy to read.
He goes all the way back from Malthus (remember, that priest that said there wasn't going to be enough food to feed everyone) to today to show that doomsayers have always existed in the scientific community.
His basic thesis is that whenever a theory about Earth's demise from global warming or other climate related calamity arose, part of the scientific community would always overlook the scientific process and take the warnings as truth, influencing policy debate and decisions.
However, the last episode, which started around 1988 and ended with the ClimateGate and the Copenhagen Summitt, took that lack of regard to such new heights and got so entrenched into politics that we were lead to question the integrity and credibility of the way the scientific community made science.
It's a great book and very well researched, with tonnes of references.
There is also a philosophical aspect to the book besides the journalistic one.
The author discusses Karl Popper, the Economics of climate change, the concerns about an "elitecised" (like "politicised", but as in "elite") scientific community, etc.
There's still 30% of the book left but I can say that the case for global warming is looking weaker than ever.
I believe we should all familiarise ourselves with arguments from both sides of a discussion before taking a side. However, in this case, I think the debate is over.
In reading the story of the Hockey Stick section in which the author refutes the theory that the temperature of the world was fundamentally flat for 900 years the suddenly started to rise rapidly I would recommend as further reading Global Crisis by Geoffrey Parker which relates the horrors of the seventeenth century as related to the "Little Ice Age".
Mark Patterson
Top reviews from other countries
Darwall's writing throughout is erudite and academic and supported by countless references. Rather than re-hashing the science to create another Climate Change pot-boiler, he's made an important addition to the literature and written an accessible and entertaining book. He also takes a balanced and dispassionate view of his subject, lending his ultimate conclusions much greater weight than if he had taken a more partisan position through the body of the book.
Like many, over the last few years I have undergone a complete reversal of my views on Global Warming. Up until 2009, I believed the hype and had been thinking about the future - mine and my children's - in a negative, fatalistic way. The political and media message about impending climate disaster had so convinced me that I envisioned the next generation contending with inundated coastal cities, food shortages and wars. Al Gore's film An Inconvenient Truth depressed me so much that I couldn't bear to finish watching it. I was genuinely pessimistic about the Human race's future. I felt sorry for my children.
In 2009 I decided I should find out more about this subject that had so affected me. I read two books from opposite ends of the spectrum of views - James Lovelock's "The Revenge of Gaia" and Christopher Booker's "The Real Global Warming Disaster". It was the latter that began my change of view - one that has been supported by devouring just about every book published on the subject, and paying daily visits to Anthony Watts's excellent blog. It's clear to me now that, far from the science being "settled", as we are told, the science behind the Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming (CAGW) hypothesis is so debatable that it does not even meet the basic scientific qualifications to be termed a theory.
The most instructive thing for me has come from the behaviour and language used by those on either side of the debate. The Skeptical views are overwhelmingly presented in a reasoned way, typically by those with the courage to speak out against the prevailing consensus and look objectively at the facts. In complete contrast, the proponents of CAGW are typically shrill, hectoring, overbearing - rather than debate the facts (where they will founder) they will attack the motives of those who argue the Skeptical view, typically by accusing them of being in denial or in the pay of "Big Oil". The very use of the term "Denier", with its connotations of holocaust denial, should sound a warning about their motives and the underlying weakness of their arguments - if you cannot attack the argument, attack the person making it. What has appalled me even more is that organisations such as the BBC and Wikipedia, supposedly voices of truth and objectivity, have become utterly compromised. Bias permeates much of the BBC's coverage of climate issues - which I might expect from an overtly left-wing source like The Guardian, but not our treasured, supposedly impartial BBC! I am not in denial and I'm not in the pay of Big Oil - I have been systematically deceived and I am angry about it! Once any thinking person becomes aware of this bias that surrounds us, it is impossible to miss. The scales have dropped from my eyes.
Some reading this review may think I am just another selfish "denier" who wants to bury his head in the sand and carry on living my profligate Western way of life. If so, I urge them to read this book - and at least one of the many books on the science - and begin thinking for yourself rather than simply believing what the politicians and the media feed to you.
The modern environmental movement holds in great reverence certain individuals, such as Paul Ehrlich. He wrote books endlessly predicting chaos caused by an increasing human population, and in them he made very specific predictions - none of which came true.
From these influences various non-elected groups were formed such as `The Club of Rome' and portentously made great pronouncements about too much economic development, too much growth, too many people etc. These anti-human beliefs chimed with the post mid-1980's Environmental movement, and they waited ... until there was thought to be enough science around to demonize CO2 and Man made Global Warming was born.
After spreading belief in this `new age' religion in the guise of science to the highest government levels; the attempts to control CO2 world-wide have been one laughable failure after another. At the end the computer model predictions of warming ( solid science ) have not come true and the rest of us are left wondering what the hell has been going on.
The author finishes the book with a very good warning, that even with the collapse of man-made warming/climate change ideology, the `types' who support this sort of thing will be back with another scare - scientifically based, of course - that blames wicked mankind for some sort of imagined catastrophe, and demanding unquestioning obedience and money from the rest of us.
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.
