New Scientist Weasels Out of Apology

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Update in BOLD below

New Scientist, a publication that is generally owed high regard, is apparently trying to weasel out of apologizing to NASA scientist Gavin Schmidt for an egregious misquote by the fallen science journalist Fredย Pearce.

Pearce bungled the quote in his coverage of โ€œpost normal scienceโ€ workshop in Lisbon, Portugal – really a denier fest dressed up as a reconciliation attempt. As Pearce reported in his original story, โ€œThe meeting was the brainchild of University of Oxford science philosopher Jerry Ravetz, an 81-year-old Greenpeace member who fears Al Gore may have done as much damage to environmentalism as Joseph Stalin did toย socialism.โ€

If you havenโ€™t already got a sense of the organizersโ€™ bias, consider a guest list that includes โ€œheroes of the sceptics such as statistician Steve McIntyre and economist Ross McKitrick, plus writers and bloggers such as Steve Mosher, the man who broke the Climategate story, and โ€˜hereticalโ€™ scientists such as Georgia Techโ€™s Judy Curry and Peter Webster.โ€ (By โ€œhereticalโ€ scientists, Iโ€™m assuming Pearce was trying to find a description for outliers like Curry who have decided to abandon actual scientific discourse in favour of playing patticake with the WattsUpWithThat crowd.)

The conceit of this event was that Ravetz would try to put these people into a room with some actual climate scientists and get them all to agree on โ€œmiddle groundโ€ – which is to say, the climate scientists would concede, by their mere presence, that there is a legitimate scientific disagreement. Game, set and match to the denierย side.

Of course, no smart scientist would agree to play. With a host of others, Gavin Schmidt declined, saying, โ€œNo โ€˜conflict resolutionโ€™ is possible between the science community who are focussed on increasing understanding, and people who are picking through the scientific evidence for cherries they can pick to support a pre-defined policy position.โ€

This sharp riposte was too clear for Pearce, who made up this response, instead: โ€œBut the leaders of mainstream climate science turned down the gig, including NASAโ€™s Gavin Schmidt, who said the science was settled so there is nothing toย discuss.โ€

When Schmidt objected to this invention, New Scientist went quiet and conspiracists and intermediaries, such as the secretive โ€œscienceโ€ blogger TallBloke offered a hosts of explanations (but no apologies) for Pearceโ€™s lack of professionalism. For full examinations of this story, you can head over to Deltoid or, for an even-more detailed dissertation, DeepClimate.

What you CANโ€™T do is read a clear admission that Pearce made up (or misreported) Schmidtโ€™s position and that he and New Scientist regret the error. Apparently – worryingly – theyย donโ€™t.

Update: Per the comment below, โ€œTallblokeโ€ writes that he has, indeed, apologized to Schmidt, adding that this was the actual quote from Schmidt that left people with a โ€œscience is settledโ€ opinion: โ€œNone of the seemingly important โ€˜conflictsโ€™ that are *perceived* in the science are โ€˜conflictsโ€™ in any real sense within the scientific community, rather they are proxy arguments for politicalย positions.โ€

I still donโ€™t read that to mean โ€œthe science is settled.โ€ I read it as a polite way of saying that the organizers of the Lisbon conference werenโ€™t the least interested in science; they were there to talk politics, or at least policy. Judging from the reports, thatโ€™s precisely whatย happened.

But kudos to Tallbloke for extending the apology. Would that Pearce and New Scientist had as much integrity. (And please read Tallblokeโ€™s comment below, in full.)

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