Judith Curry Was For Me Before She Was Against Me

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I first got to know Judith Curryโ€”the Georgia Tech researcher who blogs at โ€œClimate, Etc.,โ€ and has been drawn into controversyย for, in her words, โ€œchallenging many aspects of the IPCC consensusโ€โ€“when I was working on my second book, Storm World. I spent a fair amount of time with Curry, and with the other scientists profiled in the bookโ€”interviewing them in person, getting to understand their research. This is what science writersย do.

At the time, Curry and her colleagues were just coming off a media feeding frenzy after having published papers linking hurricanes to global warming right in the middle of the devastating 2005 hurricaneย season.

When Storm World came out, it is no exaggeration to say that Curry gave it a rave review. I want to quote in full from her Five Star endorsement at Amazon.com, which is entitled โ€œScience writing at its very best.โ€ Bear with me, this will all become very relevant; and I’ve italicized a few importantย parts:

To provide a frame of reference for this review, I and my colleagues Peter Webster and Greg Holland are among the scientists that are featured prominently in Storm World. Our involvement in the issue of hurricanes and global warming began when we published an article in Science shortly before the landfall of Hurricane Rita, where we reported a doubling of the number of category 4 and 5 hurricanes globally since 1970. When Chris Mooney first approached me with his idea for writing a book on this topic, I was somewhat skeptical. I couldn’t see how this could be accomplished given the rapid changes in the science (I was worried the book would be outdated before it was published), the complexities of the technical aspects of the subject, a concern about how the individual scientists would be treated and portrayed, and a concern that the political aspects of the issue would be handled in a partisan way. Over the course of the past year and a half, it became apparent that Mooney was researching this issue extremely thoroughly and was developing a good grasp of both the history and technical aspects of the subject. Upon finally reading the book, I can only say Storm World has far exceeded any hope or expectation that I could have had for a book on thisย subject.

The book is surprisingly rich in technical detail, and Mooney has grasped the nuances of the breadth of scientific arguments and uncertainties. He provides a fascinating history with rich insights into the current controversy. The individual scientists are portrayed accurately as well as sympathetically and colorfully. The political aspects are treated in an insightful and nonpartisan manner. I am most impressed by the fresh insights provided by this book, which besides being a โ€œgood read,โ€ Storm World is an important and timely contribution that deserves careful consideration in the dialogue and debate on hurricane policy in the U.S. Storm World is science journalism at its absoluteย best.

After Storm World came out, Curry also invited me to speak at Georgia Tech, where sheย works.

Given that I got to know Curry and greatly appreciated her support for my endeavors, I avoided criticizing her in subsequent yearsโ€“even though we were increasingly on different โ€œsidesโ€ of the highly polarized web battle over global warming. And for the most part, she didnโ€™t really seem to criticize me either (or at least, not that Iย noticed).

So imagine my surprise when I came across this post at Curryโ€™s blog, about my new book The Republican Brain. Unlike Storm World, Curry admits she has not read the book. Nevertheless, she cites a variety of criticsโ€”none of whom seem to have read the book, eitherโ€“and uses labels like โ€œneurotrashโ€ and โ€œneurobabblingโ€ to describe what, she seems to think, I am upย to.

In the process, Curry repeats a common but fundamental misunderstanding of the research on the psychological or biological underpinnings of ideologyโ€“suggesting that Iโ€™m claiming that โ€œa defensive ideology is hardwired into [conservativesโ€™] brain.โ€ Nope. Wrong.

Continuing her misunderstanding of the subject matter, Curry posed a classic falseย choice:

Multiple choice test:ย Republicans are more skeptical than Democrats about climate changeย because:

a) ย A defensive ideology is hardwired into theirย brain

b) ย A growing distrust of scientific institutions because of the politicization ofย science

First, and to repeat, there is no โ€œhardwiring.โ€ That is not the โ€œpsychology of ideologyโ€ thesis. But there is such a thesis, and it is based on a great deal ofย research.

Second and more important, the conservative distrust of science is America a combination of both conservative psychology and also developments in the political environment. This is something I explain in detail in the book that Curry has not read. It is also something I explain in a new item today at Salon.com.

To draw an analogy with the hurricane climate debate, these sorts of errors are roughly on par with saying that global warming โ€œcausedโ€ an individual hurricane (nonsense), and with saying that if we have a quiet hurricane season, then there must be no global warming, or no global warming effect on hurricanes (nonsense). The hurricane-climate issue is scientific complex and characterized by uncertainty, and so is the psychology-politics issueโ€“but that doesn’t mean there isn’t serious science on both topics, or a need to report onย it.

I fully expect dismissive reviews from ideologues who have not read my book, and from ย contrarians who donโ€™t want to admit what the science has to say about political ideology. But from someone who has called my previous work โ€œscience writing at its absolute bestโ€, and extolled me for grasping โ€œthe nuances of the breadth of scientific arguments andย uncertaintiesโ€?ย 

I am not asking Curry to suddenly become an expert in political psychology. All Iโ€™m asking is this: Doesnโ€™t a writer who, in your own words, ย practices โ€œscience journalism at its absolute best,โ€ merit a more, shall we say, engagedย treatement?

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