There is no god in the climate change machine (Charles Battig, MD, Engineer)

Page 1

February 22, 2017

There's no god in the climate change machine By Charles Battig Some say "God" might reside in a computer...the Deus ex Machina. Among those individuals are those divining climate with computer-based general circulation models. This has generated a belief system to the effect that all variables that drive global climate at all time scales have been identified, that they have been quantified as to individual contribution and interactions, and that chaotic variability is foreseeable. At the current state of scientific knowledge, such belief is intellectual hubris masquerading as achieved scientific endeavor. Massachusetts Institute of Technology pioneering meteorologist and mathematician Professor Edward Lorenz doubted this ability in the 1960s. The serendipitous discoverer of chaos theory postulated, "Is there such a thing as a climate?" Is there a definable "normal global climate" from which deviations might be termed abnormal? Lorenz's 1965 paper includes the following: "if in addition the present state or the present and past states are not known with complete accuracy, any forecasting procedure will lead to poorer and poorer forecasts as the range of prediction increases, until ultimately only the periodic component can be predicted in the far distant future." His statement is a description of what has become known as chaotic behavior. Such systems are characterized by the fact that tiny changes in initial conditions may result in wildly different final outcomes over a period of time. Climate behavior aptly fits the definition. Short-term changes are known as weather, and weather prediction accuracy has improved out to a week or so over the decades. Now Judith Curry has had the courage to note the absence of clothes on the climate-computer emperor. Professor Curry, the author of over 180 scientific papers on weather and climate, recently retired from the Georgia Institute of Technology, where she held the position of professor and chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. She authored "Climate Models for the Layman," in which the fundamental problems inherent in computer modeling Page 1


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.