Byย John Cook,ย George Masonย University
A famous psychology experiment instructed participants to watch a short video, counting the number of times players in white shirts passed the ball. If you havenโt seen it before, I encourage you to give the following short video your full attention and follow theย instructions:
ย
Global temperature records from NOAA, NASA, Berkeley, Hadley, and Cowtan & Way.ย Zeke Hausfather, Carbon Brief,ย Authorย provided
One way to distract from the strong understanding of how our climate is changing is to resort to the so-called blowfish fallacy. Recently, U.K. journalistย David Roseย claimed thatย methodological flaws by NOAA scientists cast doubtย on the global temperature record. Rose neglected to acknowledge that the data he was attacking had been independentlyย replicated by a number of other scientific teams.
Roseโs misinformation wasย promptlyย andย comprehensivelyย debunked. Within days, the so-called โwhistle blowerโ who was the source of the articleย distanced himself from Roseโs characterizations. Contrary to Roseโs breathless conclusions, data scientist John Bates said there was โโฆno data tampering, no data changing, nothingย malicious.โ
Roseโs out-of-proportion response was bestย summed up by science writer Scott Johnson:
โโฆitโs not much more substantial than claiming the Apollo 11 astronauts failed to file some paperwork and pretending this casts doubt on the veracity of the Moonย landing.โ
The Climate Changeย Gorilla
The case for climate change is a loud, unmissable gorilla. Our acceptance that global warming is happening is based onย tens of thousands of lines of evidence: not just thermometer readings butย melting ice sheets,ย migrating species,ย retreating glaciersย andย rising sea levels, to name just aย few.
Similarly, our scientific understanding that human beings are causing modern global warming is based onย many independent human fingerprints, observed byย satellites,ย surface measurements of infrared heatย and, in fact, theย shifting structure of our atmosphere.
To avoid seeing the climate gorilla requires conspiracy theories and distracting techniques such as the blowfish fallacy. Often these arguments are accompanied with the false narrative that our scientific understanding of climate change is like a house of cards โ remove one card and the whole edifice topplesย down.
Science is more like a jigsaw puzzle, with each line of evidence building a more complete picture. Removing one piece doesn’t change the overall picture. In the case of humanityโs role in causing climate change, we have many pieces and the picture isย clear.
John Cookย is Research Assistant Professor at the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
Main image: Lego guy in a gorilla suit Credit: GreenPlasticAmy,ย CC BY–NCย 2.0
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