Edward E. David Jr.
Credentials
- Sc.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technologyย (1950).1โEdward E. David,โ Nixon Presidential Library & Museum. Accessed January, 2012.
- M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technologyย (1947).2โEdward E. David,โ Nixon Presidential Library & Museum. Accessed January, 2012.
- B.S. degree in electrical engineering, Georgia Institute of Technologyย (1945).3โEdward E. David,โ Nixon Presidential Library & Museum. Accessed January, 2012.
Background
Edward David is an American electricalย engineer. He served as a past science advisor to president Richard M. Nixon. He resigned from his position with Nixon in 1973, because of โdisappointment that his advice had not been heeded.โ4Lyons, Richard D. (January 3, 1973). Science Adviser to Nixon Leaving for Industry Job. New York Times
David was past president of Exxon Research and Engineering Company and Vice-President of Science and Technology of Exxon Corporation.5โScience and Technology in the National Interest: The Presidential Appointment Process (2001),โ Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy. The National Academies Press. See page 10. 6โOverview of Policy Issues: Panel Report,โ NYAS, Vol. 334, Pages 108-115 (December, 1979).
He was also the past executive director of Bell Telephone Laboratories, and President of his own investment firm, EED, Inc. He is now retired.7โCorporate Membership: Edward Emil David, Jr. ’47,โ The MIT Corporation. Accessed January, 2012.
Stance on Climate Change
David was one of sixteen โscientistsโ who signed an inflammatory Wall Street Journal opinion piece titled โNo Need to Panic About Global Warmingโ that stated:8โNo Need to Panic About Global Warming,โ The Wall Street Journal, January 27, 2012.
โThe lack of warming for more than a decadeโindeed, the smaller-than-predicted warming over the 22 years since the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) began issuing projectionsโsuggests that computer models have greatly exaggerated how much warming additional CO2 can cause. Faced with this embarrassment, those promoting alarm have shifted their drumbeat from warming to weather extremes, to enable anything unusual that happens in our chaotic climate to be ascribed to CO2.โ
Key Quotes
โThe time has come for a closer and more intimate relationship between industry and academia.”9Edward E. David Jr. โScience Futures: The Industrial Connection,โ Science, 203(4383), March 2, 1979: 837. Quoted in โBig Oil U.โ (PDF), Center for Science in the Public Interest.
Key Deeds
January 27, 2012
David is one of 16 scientists who appended their signatures to a Wall Street Journal article titled โNo Need to Panic About Global Warming.โ10โNo Need to Panic About Global Warming,โ The Wall Street Journal, January 27, 2012.
The article argues that elected officials should avoid implementing climate change policy because it would โdivert resources from real needs and are based on alarming but untenable claims of ‘incontrovertible’ evidence.โ
Other โscientistsโ whose signatures appear include Claude Allรจgre, J. Scott Armstrong, Jan Breslow, Roger Cohen, William Happer, William Kininmonth, Richard Lindzen, James McGrath, Rodney Nichols, Burt Rutan, Harrison H. Schmitt, Nir Shaviv, Michael Kelly, Henk Tennekes, and Antonino Zichichi..
Interestingly, 255 members of the United States National Academy of Sciences wrote their own essay, this on the realities of climate change, which had been rejected by the Wall Street Journal in favor of the sixteen-scientist letter.11Peter Gleick. โRemarkable Editorial Bias on Climate Science at the Wall Street Journal,โ Forbes, January 27, 2012.
Media Matters also reported on the WSJ article, and also found that most of the scientists who signed the Op-Ed โDo Not Actually Publish Peer-Reviewed Climate Research.โ They also contacted Yale Economist William Nordhaus who had been cited by the article, and he replied that it was a โComplete Mischaracterization Of My Work.โ12โThe Journal Hires Dentists To Do Heart Surgery,โ Media Transparency, January 30, 2012.
Affiliations
- Exxon Research and Engineering Company โ President of Research and Engineering, 1977 – 1986.13โScience and Technology in the National Interest: The Presidential Appointment Process (2001),โ Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy. The National Academies Press. See page 10.
- The Washington Advisory Group โ Past โPrincipalโ14โThe Washington Advisory Group Page,โ November 23, 2004, Smokerhistory.com. Accessed January, 2012.. The group’s website no longer exists, and it is unclear whether it is still in operation.
- John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation โ Trustee (1982 – 1998). Past trustees included skeptic Frederick Seitz (1973 – 1983).15โThe Edward E. David Jr. Page,โ Smokerhistory.com, September 27, 2003. Accessed January, 2012. 16โBoard of Trustees 1997,โ John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Archived January 24, 1998.
- Scientists’ Institute for Public Information โ Past Member, Board of Trustees (As of May, 1993).17Allen B. to Gomez. Scientists Inst. for Public Information, 1993. Retreived January, 2012, from tobaccodocuments.org.
- EED Inc. โ Past President.18โDr. Edward E. David, Jr.,โ Center for Science and Technology Policy Research. Accessed January, 2012.
- Protein Polymer Technologies โ Director, 1989 – 2003.19โProtein Polymer Technologies 2002 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2002.
- Spacehab Inc. โ Past director (1993).20โSpacehab 2002 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2002.
- Charles A. Dana Research Institute for Scientists Emeriti (RISE) at Drew University โ Member, Advisory Board.21โThe Edward E. David Jr. Page,โ Smokerhistory.com, September 27, 2003. Accessed January, 2012.
- Inter VU Inc. โ Founding Director.22โInterVU Inc. 2000 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2001.
- Century Foundation โ Past Member, Board of Trustees.23โThe Centuary Foundation Annual Report 2000: Trustees and Officersโ (PDF), The Century Foundation. Archived January 13, 2003 at tcf.org.
- Intermagnetics General Corp. โ Member, Board of Directors (1987 – 2000).24โIntermagnetics 2000 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2001.
Publications
According to a search of Google Scholar, there do not appear to be any publications in peer-reviewed journals by an โEdward E. David Jr.โ
The search does list him as the โPanel Chairโ for a 1979 policy report at the New York Academy of Sciences. The report discusses alternative energy sources. At the time he was President of Exxon Research and Engineering Company, and Vice-President of Science and Technology of the Exxon Corporation.
The report’s introduction states that โAny hope of utilizing fusion, photovoltaics, the breeder, biomass, solar, or solar thermal energy on a large-scale economically feasible basis in the next two decades is based on a thin thread of optimism, as is the hope for massive reductions in energy demand through end-use conservation.โ25โOverview of Policy Issues: Panel Report,โ NYAS, Vol. 334, Pages 108-115 (December, 1979).
Other Resources
Resources
- 1โEdward E. David,โ Nixon Presidential Library & Museum. Accessed January, 2012.
- 2โEdward E. David,โ Nixon Presidential Library & Museum. Accessed January, 2012.
- 3โEdward E. David,โ Nixon Presidential Library & Museum. Accessed January, 2012.
- 4Lyons, Richard D. (January 3, 1973). Science Adviser to Nixon Leaving for Industry Job. New York Times
- 5โScience and Technology in the National Interest: The Presidential Appointment Process (2001),โ Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy. The National Academies Press. See page 10.
- 6โOverview of Policy Issues: Panel Report,โ NYAS, Vol. 334, Pages 108-115 (December, 1979).
- 7โCorporate Membership: Edward Emil David, Jr. ’47,โ The MIT Corporation. Accessed January, 2012.
- 8โNo Need to Panic About Global Warming,โ The Wall Street Journal, January 27, 2012.
- 9Edward E. David Jr. โScience Futures: The Industrial Connection,โ Science, 203(4383), March 2, 1979: 837. Quoted in โBig Oil U.โ (PDF), Center for Science in the Public Interest.
- 10โNo Need to Panic About Global Warming,โ The Wall Street Journal, January 27, 2012.
- 11Peter Gleick. โRemarkable Editorial Bias on Climate Science at the Wall Street Journal,โ Forbes, January 27, 2012.
- 12โThe Journal Hires Dentists To Do Heart Surgery,โ Media Transparency, January 30, 2012.
- 13โScience and Technology in the National Interest: The Presidential Appointment Process (2001),โ Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy. The National Academies Press. See page 10.
- 14โThe Washington Advisory Group Page,โ November 23, 2004, Smokerhistory.com. Accessed January, 2012.
- 15โThe Edward E. David Jr. Page,โ Smokerhistory.com, September 27, 2003. Accessed January, 2012.
- 16โBoard of Trustees 1997,โ John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Archived January 24, 1998.
- 17Allen B. to Gomez. Scientists Inst. for Public Information, 1993. Retreived January, 2012, from tobaccodocuments.org.
- 18โDr. Edward E. David, Jr.,โ Center for Science and Technology Policy Research. Accessed January, 2012.
- 19โProtein Polymer Technologies 2002 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2002.
- 20โSpacehab 2002 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2002.
- 21โThe Edward E. David Jr. Page,โ Smokerhistory.com, September 27, 2003. Accessed January, 2012.
- 22โInterVU Inc. 2000 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2001.
- 23โThe Centuary Foundation Annual Report 2000: Trustees and Officersโ (PDF), The Century Foundation. Archived January 13, 2003 at tcf.org.
- 24โIntermagnetics 2000 DEF 14A,โ Securities and Exchange Commission, 2001.
- 25โOverview of Policy Issues: Panel Report,โ NYAS, Vol. 334, Pages 108-115 (December, 1979).