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Science on the Credibility Bubble Surely there must have been
serious men and women in the hard sciences who at some point
worried that their colleagues in the global warming movement were
putting at risk the credibility of everyone in science. The nature
of that risk has been twofold: First, that the claims of the
climate scientists might buckle beneath the weight of their
breathtaking complexity. Second, that the crudeness of modern
politics, once in motion, would trample the traditions and culture
of science to achieve its own policy goals. With the scandal at the
East Anglia Climate Research Unit, both have happened at once. I
don't think most scientists appreciate what has hit them. This
isn't only about the credibility of global warming. For years,
global warming and its advocates have been the public face of hard
science. Most people could not name three other subjects they would
associate with the work of serious scientists. This was it. The
public was told repeatedly that something called "the
scientific community" had affirmed the science beneath this
inquiry. A Nobel Prize was bestowed (on a politician). Global
warming enlisted the collective reputation of science. Because
"science" said so, all the world was about to undertake a
vast reordering of human behavior at almost unimaginable financial
cost. Not every day does the work of scientists lead to galactic
events simply called Kyoto or Copenhagen. At least not since the
Manhattan Project. What is happening at East Anglia is an epochal
event. As the hard sciences-physics, biology, chemistry, electrical
engineering-came to dominate intellectual life in the last century,
some academics in the humanities devised the theory of
postmodernism, which liberated them from their colleagues in the
sciences. Postmodernism, a self-consciously "unprovable"
theory, replaced formal structures with subjectivity. With the
revelations of East Anglia, this slippery and variable intellectual
world has crossed into the hard sciences. This has harsh
implications for the credibility of science generally. Hard
science, alongside medicine, was one of the few things left
accorded automatic stature and respect by most untrained lay
persons. But the average person reading accounts of the East Anglia
emails will conclude that hard science has become just another
faction, as politicized and "messy" as, say, gender
studies. The New England Journal of Medicine has turned into a
weird weekly amalgam of straight medical-research and propaganda
for the Obama redesign of U.S. medicine. The East Anglians'
mistreatment of scientists who challenged global warming's
claims-plotting to shut them up and shut down their ability to
publish-evokes the attempt to silence Galileo. The exchanges
between Penn State's Michael Mann and East Anglia CRU director
Phil Jones sound like Father Firenzuola, the Commissary-General of
the Inquisition. For three centuries Galileo has symbolized dissent
in science. In our time, most scientists outside this circle have
kept silent as their climatologist fellows, helped by the cardinals
of the press, mocked and ostracized scientists who questioned this
grand theory of global doom. Even a doubter as eminent as
Princeton's Freeman Dyson was dismissed as an aging crank.
Beneath this dispute is a relatively new, very postmodern
environmental idea known as "the precautionary
principle." As defined by one official version: "When an
activity raises threats of harm to the environment or human health,
precautionary measures should be taken even if some cause and
effect relationships are not fully established
scientifically." The global-warming establishment says we know
"enough" to impose new rules on the world's use of
carbon fuels. The dissenters say this demotes science's
traditional standards of evidence. The Environmental Protection
Agency's dramatic Endangerment Finding in April that greenhouse
gas emissions qualify as an air pollutant-with implications for a
vast new regulatory regime-used what the agency called a
precautionary approach. The EPA admitted "varying degrees of
uncertainty across many of these scientific issues." Again,
this puts hard science in the new position of saying, close enough
is good enough. One hopes civil engineers never build bridges under
this theory. The Obama administration's new head of policy at
EPA, Lisa Heinzerling, is an advocate of turning precaution into
standard policy. In a law-review article titled "Law and
Economics for a Warming World," Ms. Heinzerling wrote,
"Policy formation based on prediction and calculation of
expected harm is no longer relevant; the only coherent response to
a situation of chaotically worsening outcomes is a precautionary
policy. . . ." If the new ethos is that
"close-enough" science is now sufficient to achieve
political goals, serious scientists should be under no illusion
that politicians will press-gang them into service for future
agendas. Everyone working in science, no matter their politics, has
an stake in cleaning up the mess revealed by the East Anglia
emails. Science is on the credibility bubble. If it pops, centuries
of what we understand to be the role of science go with it. Write
to henninger@wsj.com About Daniel Henninger. Daniel Henninger is
deputy editor of The Wall Street Journal's editorial page. Mr.
Henninger joined Dow Jones in 1971 as a staff writer for the
National Observer. He became an editorial-page writer for the
Journal in 1977, arts editor in 1978 and editorial features editor
in 1980. He was appointed assistant editor of the editorial page in
1983 and chief editorial writer and senior assistant editor in
October 1986, with daily responsibility for the "Review &
Outlook" columns. In November 1989 he became deputy editor of
the editorial page. Mr. Henninger was a finalist for a Pulitzer
Prize in editorial writing in 1987 and 1996, and shared in the
Journal's Pulitzer Prize in 2002 for the paper's coverage
of the attacks on September 11. In 2004, he won the Eric Breindel
Journalism Award for his "Wonder Land" column. He won the
Gerald Loeb Award for commentary in 1985. In 1998 he received the
Scripps Howard Foundation's Walker Stone Award for editorial
writing, for editorials on a range of issues, including the
International Monetary Fund, presidential politics and cloning. He
won the 1995 American Society of Newspaper Editors'
Distinguished Writing Award for editorial writing, and he was a
finalist in that award in 1985, 1986 and 1993. A native of
Cleveland, Mr. Henninger graduated from Georgetown University with
a bachelor's degree from the School of Foreign Service.
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