Friday, April 30, 2010
Blog Post #9 (Due Sunday 02 May 11:59 PM): '2 X 2' responses to the Poster Projects
I'm currently focused on the spatially-opposed 'Addictions' and 'Prisons' projects from Thursday--really intimately related in being so filled with ideology that the science is totally eclipsed and colonized. I heard Puritanism / esceticism everywhere—as we reject, fear and punish our pleasure-seeking bodies. Saw bunches of 'black boxes' sealed up because we really seem to want to impose ideology regardless of the facts. 'Crime is genetic. 'Crime is immoral and willful.' 'Crime is sinful.' 'Drunks are selfish.' 'Addicts are sick.' Yikes!, there's a field day here—theory and material.
Go for it. Make sure that we all find ourselves clearer on our common topics and ideas, and seeing things in the Poster Projects that we may have missed after we read your posts.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
two cultures
http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/are_we_beyond_the_two_cultures/
And going back to Washington Avenue in relation to this topic--today at the U: Karl Rove on one side, Cloud Cult on the other!
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
science + modern medicine
(from the Huffington Post)
"Today in America, every man, woman, and child is prescribed around 13 prescription drugs per year "
"29 percent of Americans used at least five prescription medications concurrently "
Monday, April 19, 2010
Ecuador includes rights of Mother Nature in its constitution
I just got this info in a newsletter that I subscribe to (from a Zen Center) which adds to our discussion. Vandana Shiva mentioned this in her talk at the U and I think I mentioned it in my re-cap, so...here is more info. on Ecuador including the rights of the Earth in its constitution (and lots of dramatic language)
Earth Day Exclusive: Eduardo Galeano
Nature knows full well that even the best human laws treat her as a piece of property, never as a holder of rights. But the revindication of nature is under way in Latin America.
Nature Is Not Mute
The world is painting still-lifes, forests are dying, the poles are melting, the air is becoming unbreatheable, and the water undrinkable, flowers are food and becoming increasingly plastic, and the sky and earth are going absolutely insane. At the same time, a country in Latin America, Ecuador, is debating a new constitution that opens up the possibility for the first time ever of recognizing the rights of nature.
Nature has a lot to say, and it has long been time for us, her children, to stop playing deaf. Maybe even God will hear the cry rising from this Andean country and add an eleventh amendment, which he left out when he handed down instructions from Mount Sinai: ‘‘Love nature, which you are a part of.’’
An Object that Wants to Be a Subject
For thousands of years, almost all people had only the right not to have rights. In reality, quite a few remain without rights today, but at least now the right to have rights is recognized, and this is considerably more than a gesture of charity by the masters of the world to comfort their servants.
And nature? In a way it could be said that human rights extend to nature because she is not a postcard meant to be viewed from afar. But nature knows full well that even the best human laws treat her as a piece of property, never as a holder of rights. Reduced to no more than a source of natural resources and good deals, she can legally be gravely wounded and even exterminated without her complaints being heard, and there is no law preventing those who harm her from acting with impunity. At the most, in the best of cases, it is the human victims who can demand a more or less symbolic indemnity, and this will always come after the damage has been done, though the law neither prevents nor deters assaults on the earth, water, and air.
It sounds odd, doesn’t it, that nature could have rights? Sheer madness. As if nature were a person. And yet it sounds perfectly normal in the United States that major businesses take advantage of human rights. In 1886, the U.S. Supreme Court, that model of universal justice, extended human rights to private corporations. They were recognized as having the same rights as people, the right to life, free expression, privacy, and all the rest, as if companies could breathe. More than 120 years have passed since then and it is still the same. Nobody has paid attention to it.
Cries and Whispers
There is nothing odd or abnormal about the bill that would include the rights of nature in the constitution of Ecuador. This country has suffered repeated devastation over its history. To give just one example, for more than a quarter of a century, until 1992, the Texaco oil company vomited 18,000 gallons of poison into the rivers, land, and the people. Once this gesture of beneficence in the Ecuadorian Amazon was completed, the company, which was born in Texas, was married to Standard Oil. By then Rockefeller’s Standard Oil had changed its name to Chevron and was being run by Condoleezza Rice. Afterwards, a pipeline carried Condoleezza to the White House, while the Chevron-Texaco family continued to pollute the world.
But the wounds cut into the body of Ecuador by Texaco and other companies are not the only source of inspiration for this great juridical innovation that some are trying to carry forward. Moreover, and this is equally important, the revindication of nature is part of a process of recuperating some of the most ancient traditions of Ecuador and all of Latin America. The bill under consideration would have the state recognize and guarantee to vital natural cycles the right to continue and regenerate. It is not by chance that the constituent assembly started by identifying their objectives of national growth with the ideal of ‘‘sumak kausai,” which means ‘‘harmonious life’’ in Quechua: harmony among people and between us and nature, which engendered us, feeds us, shelters us, and which has her own life and values independent of us.
These traditions remain miraculously alive despite the heavy legacy of racism, which in Ecuador, as in the rest of the Americas, continues to mutilate reality and memory. And it isn’t just the patrimony of its large indigenous population, which knew how to perpetuate them over the five centuries of prohibition and scorn. They belong to the whole country, and the entire world, these voices from the past that help us to divine another possible future.
Since the days when the sword and the cross made their way into the Americas, the European conquest punished the adoration of nature, which was seen as the sin of idolatry, with the punishments of whipping, hanging, and burning. The communion between nature and people, a pagan custom, was abolished in the name of God and later in the name of Civilization. Throughout the Americas, and the world, we are paying the consequences of this divorce.
UPDATE AFTER ARTICLE WAS WRITTEN: On September 28, 2008, the people of Ecuador voted by an overwhelming majority (64%) to approve the new constitution.
Ecuador [is] the first country in the world to codify a new system of environmental protection based on rights,” says Thomas Linzey, Executive Director of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund. The following clauses will be included in the constitution that [was] submitted to a countrywide vote.
Chapter: Rights for Nature
Art. 1. Nature or Pachamama, where life is reproduced and exists, has the right to exist, persist, maintain and regenerate its vital cycles, structure, functions and its processes in evolution. Every person, people, community or nationality, will be able to demand the recognitions of rights for nature before the public organisms. The application and interpretation of these rights will follow the related principles established in the Constitution.
Art. 2. Nature has the right to an integral restoration. This integral restoration is independent of the obligation on natural and juridical persons or the State to indemnify the people and the collectives that depend on the natural systems. In the cases of severe or permanent environmental impact, including the ones caused by the exploitation on non renewable natural resources, the State will establish the most efficient mechanisms for the restoration, and will adopt the adequate measures to eliminate or mitigate the harmful environmental consequences.
Art. 3. The State will motivate natural and juridical persons as well as collectives to protect nature; it will promote respect towards all the elements that form an ecosystem.
Art. 4. The State will apply precaution and restriction measures in all the activities that can lead to the extinction of species, the destruction of the ecosystems or the permanent alteration of the natural cycles. The introduction of organisms and organic and inorganic material that can alter in a definitive way the national genetic patrimony is prohibited.
Art. 5. The persons, people, communities and nationalities will have the right to benefit from the environment and form natural wealth that will allow wellbeing. The environmental services are cannot be appropriated; its production, provision, use and exploitation, will be regulated by the State.
“Public organisms” in Article 1 means the courts and government agencies, i.e., the people of Ecuador would be able to take action to enforce nature rights if the government did not do so.
—By Eduardo Galeano, a Uruguayan writer and journalist, the author of “The Open Veins of Latin America,” “Memories of Fire,” and “Mirrors/An Almost Universal History.” 2008—Update: Climate and Capitalism Ecosocialism or Barbarism: There is no third way, September, 2008
my blog post (a week late): Christians and Climate Change
(later)
Here is the website I am looking at: http://christiansandclimate.org/
It's a really beautiful, polished site, without any distracting ads flashing at you. There are, however, a few footnotes.
"As American evangelical Christian leaders, we recognize both our opportunity and our responsibility to offer a biblically based moral witness that can help shape public policy in the most powerful nation on earth, and therefore contribute to the well-being of the entire world.1 Whether we will enter the public square and offer our witness there is no longer an open question. We are in that square, and we will not withdraw."
Other issues they are working on include: sex trafficking, AIDS, and genocide. Grouped with these, Climate Change (CC from here on) is obviously a serious and dangerous matter.
They offer four claims in their Call to Action.
Claim 1: Human Induced CC is Real
(sound familiar?)
They note that "from 1988—2002 the IPCC’s assessment of the climate science was Chaired by Sir John Houghton, a devout evangelical Christian." also "In a 2004 report, and at the 2005 G8 summit, the Bush Administration has also acknowledged the reality of climate change and the likelihood that human activity is the cause of at least some of it." I guess saying that there are reliable Christians who have been working on this for quite a while.
Claim 2: Consequences will be significant and will hit the poor the hardest.
Claim 3: Christian Moral Convictions Demand Our Response to the CC Problem
emphasizing biblical passages stating god's call for the stewardship of earth, reminding people to love their neighbor
Claim 4: The need to act is urgent--for governments, businesses, churches, individuals
Many of the consequences haven't happened yet, people keep trying to build more coal plants,etc. ending with saying there is a need to help the poor adapt to the consequences of CC.
There is a section on "what others our saying about our initiative." It includes comments from the following:
DuPont
John McCain
Joseph Lieberman
Lindsay Graham
Olympia Snow
Editorial comments from newspapers in Atlanta, S. Florida, and Philadelphia
William F. Buckley
There is a Pray section and an Act section. The Pray section has prayers you can say about CC. I thought this part was nice and very friendly to science studies:
"We pray that our concern and attention to the issue of climate change would not cause spiritual division in your body, but that You would grant humility and a teachable spirit to all of us (Phil 2:1-11)."
The Act section talks about reducing carbon missions in one's own life, encouraging our country to do so, and again, helping the poor adapt. It uses the concepts of mitigation and adaptation:
"Just as in our own homes we would have to both mop up the damages from an overflowing sink (adaptation) AND fix the running faucet that’s causing the problem (mitigation), so also both adaptation and mitigation are necessary to solve the global warming crisis."
There are ten suggested actions for individuals and families, beginning with prayer and bible study, and continuing on to include compact fluorescent bulbs, renewable energy, and supporting green businesses.
Then there are steps churches can take to be more green (though they aren't using that word) and ways citizens can act to affect change.
The tone of the whole site is very calm and rational and not excited, though urgent. I find fascinating the continuing return to the care for the poor. This of course is central to the life of Jesus and to the teachings of the Bible (well, depending upon who you ask I guess). But it seems that, though in a lot of ways this site is a typical liberal CC call to action, there is this very human element thrown in. They do allude to science, but it the bulk of the site is not slinging facts at facts at facts. The bulk of it is tapping people's, or Christian's, sense of their humanity and their sense of caring and connectedness. In a way this is similar to the idea of a drowning polar bear (and the site opens with an image of two presumable poor kids, cute and smiling by a pile of rubble), but the drowning polar bear is working mainly, I think, of identifying with something cute and beautiful dying. This site is alluding to that, but also to a sense of moral obligation it knows its audience must have, as Christians.
In a way, this makes their job easier--there are known people identified as Christian leaders, who have groups of people that follow and trust them. (unlike Politicians, whose followers most likely distrust them a lot of the time). There is also, of course, God backing them up. And, for a believer, God probably trumps science in reliability. So fascinating.
I haven't figured out who specifically made this site and runs it....that should enter in here as well...
Of course this website could totally have holes shot through it by Kenner. What is really unique about it in the midst of all the CC dialogue (rhetoric?) is that it appeals to humans responsibility to each other. I feel like so much of the dialogue these days is a lot of F-U, I-don't-want-to-help-you-as-long-as-things-are-working-for-me dialogue. I think a lot of the "scientists are all corrupt and dishonest" arguing fuels that sentiment. It reminded me of when Amy asked in class "What's wrong with living sustainably for the sake of living sustainably?" instead of just doing it because the planet is about to blow up? In that sense, I think this site is giving individuals more credit and agency, and not just leaving them in the hands of the facts of scientists. Or at least making them feel that way???
Thursday, April 15, 2010
npr is all over this stuff
Fresh Air with Terry Gross On today's show: Jeff Goodell on the international battle against global warming...
on us 'n' them, "over here" and "over there":http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2010/04/dont_get_too_comfortable_the_p.html
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
The Science of Empathy...
Really interesting study, gives a neurological basis for understanding each other, and in a way, being human.
At one point it suggests that autism may be caused by a non-firing of these mirror neurons; I wonder if it could help explain the apathy and void of sympathy from which some humans suffer...
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/04/100412162112.htm
EEK! What are we going to tell the children?
...
http://dnr.wi.gov/org/caer/ce/eek/earth/air/global.htm#effect
...
I'll offer a more regional look at global warming... if it is indeed possible that this exists.
Yes, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources is another state service doing its part to keep younger folks up to speed with the ever-heating debate (hah!) on Global Warming, through a section of its site called EEK! (Environmental Education for Kids!).
They start with a rudimentary introduction, careful to explain that the sun is not evil, but provides us with life and cold Wisconsin winters; in some ways one might say this is a great approach - relating the focal topic to students' immediate surroundings, keeping the tone objective...
Oh wait, I almost forgot! How did this site for kids get past my science studies lens?
Could it be the years I spent in elementary school - in Wisconsin no less - internalizing the settlement of a reality that I had no way of challenging at the time?
Alright, reading on...
"For the past 10,000 years, the earth has had relatively stable temperatures. But, for the past 100 years or so, scientists have noticed the Earth seems to be warming up more than usual. This phenomenon is called global warming."
I think the stakes become clear at this point: whoever the authors are, they know that they can't be 'objective' and support one side of this issue, and yet it seems that they do favor the the science behind the GW argument. So they compromise and put out the science around - what led us to - Global Warming, explaining the Greenhouse Effect, but including little bits of 'what if it's real.' That is, "What might happen if the Earth heats up?" followed by a list of the worst-case scenarios (cue our classmate's GW-disaster-movie montage from last week). What it's missing, in my opinion, is the list of "Who might lose a lot of money if it does, and who has the most to gain?"
The "fact" is, we're doing the kids a disservice by simply "catching them up to speed" without really going into the nitty-gritty, violent, money-driven, twisted struggles that make it possible to 'settle' into this no-win realm of objective storytelling in the first place.
The DNR, and most 'straight-forward education' is skipping a step - and in Comic Sans, no less.
More on Vaccines
Even separately from autism, vaccines are constantly in question regarding their safety. There are always risks and possible side effects. It's a matter of weighing the risks and the benefits. For example, another vaccine that is talked about a lot in recent years and has created a little bit of controversy is the HPV vaccine. I think that this visualization does a great job of presenting probabilities to help people see the likelihood that they would be putting themselves at risk or benefiting from getting the vaccine.
Do any of you know anything regarding laws which require that kids be vaccinated before going to school and what has to be done to get around this? I know that there have been laws proposed at the state level to require that girls have the HPV vaccine in order to enter middle school and only a few of them have passed and all of them have included an opt out policy. I assume that the laws for vaccinations before entering kindergarten are similar but I really don't know anything about it.
Also, just out of curiosity: Have you guys received the chicken pox vaccination or did you get the disease when you were a kid or neither? I, personally, got the disease and have scars to prove it and I only recently realized that most kids now never get the disease because public schools require the vaccination.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
vandana shiva and lucy lippard
here are the links to the two talks at the U i blogged about earlier (and a few more), for your enjoyment:
*Lucy Lippard*
http://mediamill.cla.umn.edu/mediamill/embed/65150
*Vandana Shiva*
http://mediamill.cla.umn.edu/mediamill/embed/66584
*Water Dance Spoken Word*
http://mediamill.cla.umn.edu/mediamill/embed/65667
*Gemma Bulos*
http://mediamill.cla.umn.edu/mediamill/embed/65886
*Sandy Spieler*
http://mediamill.cla.umn.edu/mediamill/embed/67215
Climate Change for Kids!
http://epa.gov/climatechange/kids/index.html
I find this site particularly interesting for a lot of reasons. First of all, you know it has to be easy to read and won't find an excess of "scientific lingo" that only a small percentage of the population can comprehend.
What is really interesting to me is the way that the information is presented in comparison to the "typical" global warming websites. The website seems to take advantage of the idea that all children need to hear in order to believe "facts" is that the information came from scientists. Just the word scientists is enough to establish authority and legitimize the information that is presented. No need to cite studies or provide evidence–the only links that are provided lead to "fun sites for more games and information about Climate Change". And of course, politics are completely left out (kids just repeat what they hear their parents say about politics anyway). This is definitely the most upbeat view of global warming that I've seen. This site isn't trying to play on the fear of children or make the "other side" of the debate look bad. It's just trying to tell kids that We Can Make a Difference! (and maybe even have fun while doing it)
This website also has a link for teachers, which makes me wonder if this is a topic which is frequently discussed in schools and to what extent. Do they have "skeptic" sites for kids? Is this subject banned in schools in Texas? Do kids care about global warming?
“Getting skeptical about global warming skepticism”.
It’s a site that is clearly trying to convince its audience that global warming exists. It does this by laying out over 100 common, yet simple arguments used to refute the existence of human caused climate change. They address the more intelligent points of skepticism as well as some of the more stupid ones. For example;
Skepticism #10: “Antarctica is gaining ice”
Answer: “While the interior of East Antarctica is gaining land ice, overall Antarctica is losing land ice at an accelerating rate. Antarctic sea ice is growing despite a strongly warming Southern Ocean.”
Skepticism #14: "It's freaking cold!"
Answer: “Since the mid 1970s, global temperatures have been warming at around 0.2 degrees Celsius per decade. However, weather imposes its own dramatic ups and downs over the long-term trend. We expect to see record cold temperatures even during global warming. Nevertheless over the last decade, daily record high temperatures occurred twice as often as record lows. This tendency towards hotter days is expected to increase as global warming continues into the 21st Century.”
I found the argument to be quite “rich”. They are able to lay it out in a way that even a child would understand, yet it still makes sense to a well educated adult. They refute these arguments of global warming by displaying scientific as well as historical facts. The site also gives off a sense of authority by the sheer number of points of skepticism that they were able to dismiss. How could one dispute it if it’s so easy to argue against?
Monday, April 12, 2010
L...A...W...Y...E...R...S - - WHAT DOES IT SPELL?!?!
I will start from a personal anecdote and try to build upon that to make my case that lawyers are such an integral part of global warming, such massive producers of CO2, producers, consumers and beneficiaries of disputation, that we must make haste to adopt my manifesto, the NONO Protocol.
I have a friend. He is a lawyer. He is an environmental lawyer. He is also a lobbyist. Lobbyists tell legislators which laws to write (and how to write them) if they want to get re-elected. Getting re-elected costs a lot of money. Lobbyists work for people/places/organizations with LOTS of money. Lobbyists are lawyers. Are you still with me?
My friend the lawyer is a very good lawyer and he works for a very important law firm. My friend plays golf (he sucks). My friends plays golf with the Governor and other really important Minnesota personalities like the Chairperson of the Big Bucks Committee and the Secretary of Blah-dee-Blah. My friend lets these important people win at golf and buys them drinks. Laws are made at the 19th Hole.
My friend the attorney is a good attorney and a good lobbyist (but he sucks at golf). He is for hire. Sometimes he works for the people with smiley faces on their lapels, but other times, he works for the great big meanies! Since he is a really good lawyer, he is good all the time - he is either on your side, or he is on the other side. Which side are you on? Are you a smiley or a meanie?
Today, you can get a ticket for not wearing a seatbelt. You don't have to do anything wrong besides forget to wear your seatbelt in order to get a ticket. Not wearing a seatbelt is a primary offence. That was my friend's work - yay! Guess who paid for that work? Five years worth of my friend's time is NOT cheap! Do you think that auto insurance companies would like this law or hate this law? Would Sarah Palin like this law or hate this law? What does this have to with the environment? Nothing! Yay!
I like my friend. He is nice. He lets me win at golf and tells me funny stories about lawmakers - yay! Lawmakers, for all of their importance in our lives, live in constant fear. Sometimes, lawmakers ARE lawyers, but lots of times (in state legislatures) they are not. The only thing they know about laws is that they have their staffers read them so they can know which way to vote. As long as their staffers tell them "vote yes!", they vote yes. Their staffers are often, yep, very young lawyers - yay!
Here is a really cool website where the rubber meets the road (yay!):
http://www.law.columbia.edu/centers/climatechange
Wow! Columbia University! In New York!!
This little manufactory of lawyers has a specialty line of Environmental Lawyers that they are producing (yay!). They churn them out by the dozens because, you guessed it, "The Center for Climate Change Law is committed to providing robust and up-to-date online resources related to the burgeoning area of climate law. Please see links to our various resources" (http://www.law.columbia.edu/centers/climatechange/resources).
Did you notice the word that matters most? Burgeoning!! Yay! Environmental Law is burgeoning! Now we all know that burgeoning means budding, flourishing, growing at a rapid rate; the more laws we write about the environment, the more environmental lawyers we need to help us fix the laws and get us out of the mess we are in. We need lawyers and lobbyists to tell the lawmakers which laws to write so that they can stay in office and write more laws and then new lawyers can come and challenge the laws (or they can try to save the laws). It doesn't matter which side the lawyer is on, the lawyer gets paid. Pretty neat, huh?!
Folks, the good guys, the bad guys, the lawyers, the legislators, the chemical producer, the little old lady who lives at the end of Love Canal Lane all have an ax to grind. Crichton has not stopped being a showboating public "intellectual" since the day he dropped. He's no dummy, but his approach to the science and, more specifically, his disingenuous claim of working toward a de-politicized science is a populist move. Science free of politics YAY!! FREE...THE...SCIENCE!!....FREE...THE...SCIENCE!! YAY!! Populism riles up the people (i.e. Joe the Plumber) with lots of fun promises: lower taxes!, smaller government!, drill baby drill! free science! (yay! yay! yay! yay!). I like the sound of all of these things and I say yay! to each of them.
But I also believe that an illiterate child in our country is a criminal act - NO! I think that law upon law upon law, interpreted by lawyers, for lawyers, through lawyers, is a criminal act - NO! We are no longer able to know or rely on much of anything at all, this includes our scientists, unless the non-disclosure agreement has been signed (with a witness), the waiver of liability has been signed in the presence of a parent or guardian. Crichton, corporation, President, lobbyist, lawyer, legislator, us. Do you even feel like you're a part of it any more? The NONO Protocol requires the gradual reduction in the production of any person, place or thing which derives its root from legis, law or any close relative thereof.
I want your children to have clean air and water and I believe that Crichton wants the same for his kids, but as long as the legal profession has absolute ownership of our country, we will always have a hard time knowing what is right. The black box rests.
Climate Hot Map
An Inconvenient Truth
Aaaaaand DISCUSS.
Above is a lovely clip from one Don Blankenship, a normally reclusive coal magnate with a history of massive political coffer-stuffing and occasional reporter-punching. Recently, you may have seen his jowly, mustachioed mug on the news because one of his biggest mines in West Virginia collapsed last week, killing twenty-nine workers in the worst American mining disaster in four decades. The mine that collapsed, by the way, had been hit with fifty-seven safety violation citations in the previous month alone. Mr. Blankenship has been a longtime advocate of free-market, deregulated capitalism of the Milton Friedman/Ayn Rand variety, and he was also a major booster of the recent Supreme Court ruling to completely abolish restrictions on corporate spending in the electoral sphere. Whether he keeps his job or not will be up to his investors, but he probably isn't planning on applying for a position at the EPA.
Well, at least not until Sarah Palin's President. Then I reckon he'll be kind of a shoo-in.
His argument here is so diffuse and paranoid that I'm too exhausted to try and dissect it, but feel free to discuss it in the comment section.
Also, if you're interested in making a charitable donation to a fund set up for the families of the Upper Big Branch miners killed in the explosion and ensuing collapse, the only reputable one I could find was run by the West Virginia Council of Churches (wvcc.org), and they're state-approved and everything. Otherwise I'm sure the Red Cross is doing their thing there with whatever resources aren't being taken up with their work in Haiti and Brazil (which are both still in desperate need, by the way, but I don't want to lay too big a guilt trip on anybody) and elsewhere. Okay, back to work.
Image: The Climate Deniers vs. The Consensus
His conclusion? “What a nightmare.”
“I was generally shocked and appalled by how difficult it was to source counter arguments. The data was often tucked away on extremely ancient or byzantine websites. The key counter arguments I often found, 16 scrolls down, on comment 342 on a far flung realclimate.org post from three years ago. And even when I found an answer, the answers were excessively jargonized or technical.”
He pitted these arguments by—experts? anonymous forum posters?—against “The Larger Scientific Community,” taking most of his information from realclimate.org (a blog staffed by some of the world’s leading climatologists and unaffiliated with any environmental or political organization). The image has since then been amended in several ways due to enormous feedback.
The graph:
Like everything else posted to Information Is Beautiful, much of the message’s power is visual and relates to placement. There are a lot of small, deliberate factors to parse. For example, the arguments of global warming skeptics on the left and the scientific consensus on the right shapes how we take in the information. We read left to right, so we look over the skepticisms first and the “facts” second. What is meant to stick with us is the rebuttal, the final thing we read.
Note the colors of the headings—pink for the skeptics and green for the scientists. Pink is basically a derivative of red—at times a “warm” color; here, a loud and angry color. (It may imply Red State Republican. Hell, it may also imply an anti-Crichtonian “Global warming skeptics are totally gay.”) Green is “cool” and composed and, of course, has eco-friendly connotations.
Not only do the charts and graphs in the middle give us an example of the data in question . . . they also physically divide the two schools of thought. They demonstrate part of how convoluted the situation has become, saying that half of the fight is caught up in how to read a single set of data.
Conclusion:
Clearly, McCandless stands by his belief in human-driven global warming—right from pitting mere “Skeptics” against “The Scientific Consensus” in the header to the coloring and placement of many elements in the graphic. And I’m with him.
He points out that researching and building the image was a “mammoth undertaking, especially for someone like me, unschooled in climate science.” He shares this bit of information to thank anyone who finds errors and lets him know how to fix them, but it’s more loaded than that. Unschooled in climate science, eh? …Well, at least he admits it.
Thankfully, he lays bare all his sources (in a ZIP of all the data he collected plus a spreadsheet of all the sources) in an act of legitimation.
So, why bother with all the research, especially if it was jargonized and confusing? To repair the explanatory failures of the higher ups by polishing them and presenting them prettily. McCandless said, “This has got to be one of the reasons why scientists and leaders are struggling to convince sections of the populace that the threat of climate change is real. Because they’re doing such a terrible job explaining it.” It hearkens right back to Crichton and to Balder’s team of lawyers struggling to present information on global warming interestingly to a jury (or, in Crichton’s nonfictional case, to a reading audience).
Global warming and economic blogger arguments
"
- Human activities are changing the composition of Earth's atmosphere. Increasing levels of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere since pre-industrial times are well-documented and understood.
- The atmospheric buildup of CO2 and other greenhouse gases is largely the result of human activities such as the burning of fossil fuels.
- An “unequivocal” warming trend of about 1.0 to 1.7°F occurred from 1906-2005. Warming occurred in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, and over the oceans (IPCC, 2007).
- The major greenhouse gases emitted by human activities remain in the atmosphere for periods ranging from decades to centuries. It is therefore virtually certain that atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases will continue to rise over the next few decades.
- Increasing greenhouse gas concentrations tend to warm the planet. "
"
Important scientific questions remain about how much warming will occur, how fast it will occur, and how the warming will affect the rest of the climate system including precipitation patterns and storms. Answering these questions will require advances in scientific knowledge in a number of areas:
- Improving understanding of natural climatic variations, changes in the sun's energy, land-use changes, the warming or cooling effects of pollutant aerosols, and the impacts of changing humidity and cloud cover.
- Determining the relative contribution to climate change of human activities and natural causes.
- Projecting future greenhouse emissions and how the climate system will respond within a narrow range.
- Improving understanding of the potential for rapid or abrupt climate change.
Addressing these and other areas of scientific uncertainty is a major priority of the U.S. Climate Change Science Program (CCSP). The CCSP is developing twenty-one Synthesis and Assessment products to advance scientific understanding of these uncertainty areas by the end of 2008. More information.
"
So the official position of the US government is now that Global Warming is real and Crichton is wrong (under "what is known" see: many of the points Crichton's book endeavors to make us unsure of).A government website should be a trustworthy, citable source, ideally. So if they say that these things are "known", one might expect that a few people (perhaps just liberals, who love their government?) will believe them. And really, they took a damn long time to buy into what scientists, activists, etc had already been sure of for years. My father has been concerned with the "climate change" issue since the 80s - perhaps one of the first few 'believers' as Crichton would say.
My belief is that the government is not a good legitimating agency. In fact, if anything, us government-weary folk probably are more likely to believe in Global Warming if the government refuses to acknowledge it. Kids in grade school will look up Global Warming on google and get the EPA site as one of the top hits - and maybe they'll do their class presentation or poster on these 'facts' - but adults who are hypothetically concerned about educating themselves who don't already "believe" probably aren't going to trust a government agency to provide them with their facts. So, who do people trust?
I sometimes read this blog, "Marginal Revolution", which is written by a sort of libertarian economist person (not, in my mind, what most people think of when they think of a libertarian) who takes many anti governmental positions and whose followers are those who are interested in economics, libertarianism, or just sick of bipartisanship, etc - in short he has a lot of followers and I have been recommended this blog from multiple disparate sources. In 2006, the blogger, Tyler Cowen, wrote his own opinion on the Global Warming crisis. (http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2006/05/my_views_on_glo.html)
I was somewhat surprised to find that his position was that it is ridiculous to deny that global warming is man made (this means that the science, the 'facts', the act of legitimating the concept of global warming, has come a long way.) His argument doesn't include so much depth, but he summarizes points that many people are hinged on - with industrialization occurring in China and India, how could global warming possibly be reversible, even if the entire first world converted to Nuclear, Wind, and Solar power? What is our "plan of action" when the great economic industrializing machine cannot (and perhaps should not) be stopped? He takes the position that Global Warming is real, a serious problem, but then poses questions to his readers for discussion - does it matter if it was manmade, as long as its happening? What can we do to mitigate the effects, what do we do for the people unfortunate enough to live somewhere that is adversely affected?
Really the most fascinating part of this blog, though, were the responses. Many 'believers' and 'non believers' provided mini analysis on why they do or don't care about the issue. I think they're interesting enough to summarize:
Arguments of bloggers who were pro GW:
1: Glad that an economist is sensible, but why does this economist believe that the world would fall apart if economic growth discontinued? (What would it take to get India and China to cease economic growth... and if we could, what would the effect be on their populations.)
2: Is it worth sacrificing a percentage or two of global growth to buy 30 years? (Maybe they meant stopping some major industry, but if this reduces funding for research, than the technophiles and the economists will howl.)
3: If oil stays super expensive, the economic incentive to research alternate energy would potentially save us. At that, scientific progress is really all that can save us.
4: GW is real - but the government is the problem, and this brings us back to Pollen and Corn! " If we could only follow Brazil's model and displace, say, 20% of current gasoline consumption we would be much better of. It's not likely to happen because our farmers, and their subsidies, are wedded to inefficient corn-based ethanol and have tariffs in place for imported ethanol."
5: GW is real, but the government and technophobes are the problem, because they aren't willing to try things that geoscientists propose like the "Geritol Solution" or "Iron fertilization" - which involves dumping iron dust into the ocean in order to stimulate phytoplankton blooming... (here is a link about some of the crazy 'solutions that have been proposed' : http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2007/3/16/153121.shtml ) in 2007, they did try the Geritol Solution.
6: The models show we are f*cked, there is nothing we can do about it, our beach houses are gone.
7: Global warming will lead to lower temperatures if the north pole melts.
8: The earth will never reach "venusian levels" (ie, the state of Venus) which would be unsustainable for life globally, but the least developed countries, such as bangladesh, won't be able to handle the short term warming.
9: "it is probably a much easier world political and economic problem to compensate the Bangladeshis and Pacific Islanders than solve global warming through international agreements not to burn carbon fuels." (wow...)
10: The little ice age and medieval warming period are lies propagated by political advertising agencies.
11: "Anyway, if you don't believe in making policy recommendations based on climate models and theory, how can you make policy recommendations based on economic models and theory, where the data is sparser, the models less thorough, and the subject matter responds to your recommendations? So many fans of the market, who cite their favored economists, while ignoring climate scientists. Tip: meteorology is closer to "hard science" than economics."
12: "A group of researchers recently sampled 10,000 papers on climate change published in major journals like Science and Nature. Out of 1,000 papers randomly selected, they found zero that contradicted anthropogenic GW. That's right, none, nada, zilch, zip. Yet during that same period, 52% of the papers cited in the media contradicted anthropogenic GW (the 2% was probably because of Fox News...the rest were just trying to be "balanced".). Is it any wonder people are misinformed?"
NON Believers:
1: What about the medieval warming period, the little ice age, and glaciers that used to be around and aren't anymore? These mean that GW is not caused by man! (Therefore, not our problem?) Or that this is an unstoppable act of nature, or that this is an act of nature that won't need to be stopped, etc.
2: The computer models are bunk.
3: The last ~7 years show a cooling trend, not a warming trend.
4: "It's hard to believe, but Tyler may have bought into an argument that anyone familiar with McCloskey should be very skeptical of." (When I looked up McCloskey, I found this website which supposedly analyzes the international coal market... awkward coincidence? http://cr.mccloskeycoal.com/ )
5: I am going to quote this entire thing because I think its a fascinating bit of statistical reasoning :P. as a later blogger pointed out, it is ridiculous to assign 50% bayesian probabilities. "
1. For lack of better data, let's say I place the odds of a sustained trend of global warming at 50%. Why so low? Remember that in the 1970s everyone was fussing about global cooling.
2. Similarly, let's place at 50% the odds that the Earth doesn't regulate its own temperature through endogenous means (for instance, an increase in algae to decrease CO2 when temperatures rise). Complex systems often work this way.
3. 50% odds once again that global warming is anthropogenic. After all, Mars is warming too. It could be unusual solar activity.
4. Lets say 50% odds that an increase in temperature would be a net bad. After all, what are the odds that the earth right now is at exactly the optimal temperature? One or two degrees C warmer could increase agricultural output, etc.
5. Why not place at 50% the odds that the cheapest solution is not to do nothing. Doing nothing is often a reasonable choice. I've seen it estimated that its five times cheaper to provide every human being with clean drinking water than to implement Kyoto.
6. What are the odds that if all of the above is true, that warming will affect, me, my children, or my grandchildren. I'll peg it at, oh, 50%.
If my estimates are about right, that means there is a less than 2% chance that I should be concerned about global warming. If any 4 of the 6 are about right, that still puts it at 6%. I'm perfectly content to relax and have a beer instead of fretting about climate change."
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- basically, you should all read this thread in full, because its fascinating. My conclusion after reading it is that really, pro "Climate Change" wins. Even in this population - people who are more conservative than liberal, people who dislike the environmental movement, people who are skeptical of government and pro technology and pro free market capitalism and pro for-profit are convinced that it is in our best interest to make it profitable to invest in alternate energy, move away from coal, etc.
Back to the EPA site: There is a section under the heading, "What can you do" (http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/wycd/index.html) which will calculate your green house gas emissions, give you tips on how to reduce your carbon footprint, reduce waste, etc - perhaps once you have been filled with fear and you are driven to check a government website for tips on how to save yourself, you will do exactly what the economists think you should do - even if it wont save us from the industrialization of China and India - you will invest in the market of "green technology" - you'll buy green energy, different lightbulbs, - and you'll do some things that only some economists think you should do, like stop investing as much in plastics, ...
Or, because you can't change the structure of the global economy enough to save us from the industrialization of India and China, because you can't force any non-climate-threatened territory to adopt a billion climate refugees, you will do nothing, but perhaps bleakly believe that future technological innovation (solar power?) might yet save us, but perhaps it'll be too late.
What I want to know is: What if coal wasn't cheap? What would the world look like then? Even super duper pro market people are crying about this (If only we could factor the "real cost" into the pricing ... )
Counterpoint
Real Climate breaks apart Critchon's arguments from the book, providing counter-evidence to Michael Crichton's evidence in the book against global warming. They first comment on the slight ridiculousness of the plot and the characters, especially everyone's favorite badass, Kenner. Being a Crichton fangirl, I was blinded to the ludicrousness of Kenner, whom they describe as "a MIT academic-turned-undercover operative who clearly runs intellectual rings around other characters." This is totally and completely true. It's funny that Kenner is an academic badass. I guess Crichton is trying to make academics cool.
The article goes on about the CO2 evidence from 1940-1970, where the average temperatures in North America actually cooled during that period, thus making the argument that how do we know if CO2 is the cause for the current global warming? Their answer was other forcings such as land use, solar irradiance, etc. They next challenge Crichton's definition of global warming. RealClimate contends that global warming is "defined by the global mean surface temperature." In State of Fear Crichton talks about local cooling as support for the non-existence of global warming, but RealClimate insists that local cooling doesn't contradict global warming. RealClimate also points out some selective bias on Crichton's part. They also tear apart some of his points in his author's message, especially the one about estimates. They also mentioned how Crichton met with the person reviewing the book and a few of his colleagues.
Those Wiley Limeys
I don't know if anyone else is familiar with the work of the peerless British satirist Chris Morris, but here's an excerpt from his unspeakably brilliant send-up of sensationalist news magazine shows, "Brass Eye." This episode is concerned with the question of whether "Science" has "Gone Too Far." As was his habit, Morris managed to convince several prominent British celebs and TV personalities (and one CBE!) to endorse patently ludicrous causes and read some of the most hilarious fake data ever fabricated. Subjects as diverse as "Mutant Clouds," "Heavy Electricity," and two-mile-tall "Vertical Tube Farms" are treated with utter seriousness, and none of the "experts" seem to have a clue what the hell they're talking about.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=usTT3RuWu_g
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Michael Crichton is dead.
At any rate, I will delve into this more when I edit this post tomorrow. But I thought you might want to know.
You can't change nature, but you can change your reaction to it.
It would be nice if more people thought this way.
This video is by a man named Greg (username wonderingmind42). He is a high school science teacher, and he can explain ideas well and is proficient in science (two aspects of legitimation). First, he creates a chart with four scenarios: global warming is false and action is taken anyway, global warming is false and no action is taken, global warming is true and action is taken, and global warming is true and no action is taken. This is his seeing device for the argument: viewing the situation from a hypothetical standpoint.
Row A: GW is false & we act / GW is false & we don't act
Row B: GW is true & we act / GW is true & we don't act
Column A: GW is false & we act / GW is true & we act
Column B: GW is false & we don't act / GW is true & we don't act
The point of this video is this: it is more productive to think in terms of the columns rather than in terms of the rows. The question isn't really whether global warming is true or not, because it's so uncertain. But what we can decide on is whether we act or not. And the risk of not acting (if global warming is true) is greater than the risk of acting (if global warming is false).
With this thinking, books like State of Fear really don't matter. Who cares if you aren't fully convinced about global warming? Even the slightest possibility should cause you to take some sort of action. In my opinion, I'm not the hugest global warming advocate, but I do my share to use fewer resources. Maybe we can all use fewer resources and be more environmentally responsible, and rest easy that we are prepared for disaster if it happens to strike.
Oil's Well that Ends Well
This page links to a .pdf file of an article from Eos, a journal published by the American Geophysical Union. This excerpt is from the "Forum" section, where letters to the editor and op-ed pieces are published, and we see here an example of a robust debate over Mr. Crichton and his geophysical and climatological bona fides. The first letter was issued by the Council of the American Quaternary Association (AMQUA), and it is made quite clear early on that the association has a bone to pick with our Main Man, and also with the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG), who had recently awarded Mr. Crichton their annual award for excellence in journalism. The selection of Mr. Crichton--a novelist without any evident training in either geology or journalism--constituted--in the opinion of AMQUA--an inappropriate endorsement of the blurring of the lines between fiction and fact, and between scientific explication and political advocacy. Tactically, AMQUA goes right after Crichton, and are clearly trying to make him out to be--scientifically speaking--kind of an infantile joke. They describe the novel as a cross between "Scooby Doo" and "The Lone Ranger," and observe--quite trenchantly, I think, that Crichton seems less concerned with understanding than with winning, and the "debates" in the book are structured accordingly. The letter cites hard studies and government websites, and its list of co-signatories is certainly impressive. They thereby position themselves as experts who know of what they write, and are ready to back up their claims.
After that letter, however, is where things get interesting.
There are two letters which take aim at the AMQUA piece, and at AMQUA itself, both written by people with a serious vested interest in the denial of so-called anthropogenic (sexy, sexy word, that) climate change. The first is by an emeritus professor from the University of Virginia at Charlottesville--hard to argue with that title--who seems to have founded something called the "Science & Environmental Policy Project." Sounds legitimate enough, and their website (sepp.org) has a friendly-looking, green and blue logo, so why not trust his word? Well, a little reading around on the site reveals that SEPP is clearly an industry-funded think tank whose stated goal is to advocate free-market solutions to environmental issues (i.e., provide scientific justification for the abolition of government regulations on industrial pollution, etc.).
The next letter is along the same lines--attacking the motives of AMQUA and trying to brand them as a political advocacy group for having voiced the majority view among geologists and climatologists--and it's by a man who identifies himself with "Sequoia Production, LLC." Sequoia--that sounds pretty green, right? I mean, isn't that a really pretty kind of tree? Well, it turns out it's also some kind of petroleum prospecting/extraction/something-or-other company. A quick googling turned up Sequoia's name on a list of clients of "New Tech Engineering Companies," which describes itself as "a group of individual companies providing services in the petroleum industry." So we have AMQUA--a professional association of scientists--up against a think tank and an oil industry service provider. Whom to trust?
(For the record, I'm with AMQUA--and not just because it's got the best acronym)
the truth about what is true
and let the sea rise
crazy Jesus people
So this article is from 2006 but it was nice to read something that was less one sided. This actually makes it a little harder to analyze in this way but I'm gonna give it a shot anyway. Not choosing a side is still a stance and the author uses forms of legitimation to support this stance.
The article starts by briefly stating the common portrayal of global warming by the media and then he questions these conclusions with the statement "...we need to separate interpretations from facts."
The author then legitimizes himself by indirectly stating his credentials in the statement "Practically all atmospheric scientists (the author included) agree that global warming has occurred."
By questioning the extreme views and agreeing with the "facts" he attempts to establish himself as an objective writer. He then goes on to write about the warming that has occurred and the possible reasons for it.
"However, if all the greenhouse gases have caused an increase by 60% CO2 in equivalency units, and man has only warmed the atmosphere about 0.6°F, then these climate simulations are much too sensitive to the effects of CO2." He puts doubt on the severity of the warming effect of greenhouse gasses effects by questioning the methods (in the previous paragraph) used for prediction but he agrees that they are part of the reason for the warming.
"Unfortunately, the media and proponents of significant technology-induced global warming have demonized many qualified critics..."
The author ends his article by saying that more research is needed and that each person should test for himself both sides of the issue. Being a biblically based scientific website he ends the article with a statement that is consistent with his stance. "Although God gave us the command to have dominion over the earth, He also instructs us to care for and be good stewards of it." I was very happy that he included this because I get very annoyed when my fellow Christians use the first half of that statement to defer responsibility for taking care the earth.
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Blog Posting #8 (Due Sunday 4/11, 11:59 P.M.): Michael Crichton ('global warming') on the Web--the public rhetoric and 'semantic contagion' of science
In a sense, State of Fear is a massive 'intervention'--one that made Dr. Crichton a good deal of money, but more importantly: got him invited to the White House and to testify to Congress, and which probably changed more minds than any more familiarly scientific discovery could. Bruno Latour details how much work Pasteur had to go through to get us to 'believe in germs (ferments).' South Park has made us all knowing cynics.
Visit one of the global-warming websites we posted (or another you found, if you wish). Find a complex rich 'argument' about global warming--for, against, whatever. Show us how it works to construct a view of science, atmospheric science, authority, scientists, politicians, the world, the polis, industry, progress, fear, human agency--whatever. You pick the site, the argument (remember that arguments are typically more than words; when the idea comes out of Cartman's mouth, it's a different argument from if it came from Al Gore), the issue. Work it for us. Show us how the world of ideas gets formed.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
please tell your artists
as part of my intervention project, there is this website and a call for art for a show i'll be hosting this summer. if you have artists in your life who might be a good fit for this call, would you pretty please pass this along to them? and in any case take a peek at the site.
thanks!
julie
_____________________________
Hello friends and acquaintances and all those good things--
I'm organizing an exhibit at Chakra Khan this summer on the unique experience created by getting food through a CSA farm (Community Supported Agriculture)....you can read more about it when you follow the link below:
http://csalove.tumblr.com/
Please check out the Call for Art! listed on the site, and please pass this along to all the artsy people you know and love.
Then stay tuned to the site for info. on this summer's events!
Thank you!
Julie Kesti
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Climatologists vs. Meteorologists
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
i am late due to Friedrich Nietzsche, he keeps bumming me out.
I had to make a decision about what to put at the top of the list, this posting didn't make it this week - I promise I'll do better!
Crichton and I go way back (1994) to watching "ER" with my mom. She is a nurse who worked for 35 years in every conceivable nook and/or cranny of the medical world; I am a former adrenaline junky who went from working as a volunteer firefighter for five years in to the ER at what is now Regions Hospital (i.e. a very busy trauma center). Crichton has long known how to push many of my buttons, but I was and am convinced that he should have stuck to writing for television. I do not wish to engage in an attack on writing style, it's not what we're here to do, but I will go on the record saying I don't enjoy his books.
I will jump on the lawsuit bandwagon for a moment - Crichton is an MD and he knows all about lawyers and lawsuits. We are a nation of laws, ostensibly, we like it that way. But we have made a move toward, and Crichton uses this very effectively, becoming a nation which derives some its physical structure from the weight of its codes. Crichton utilizes our nation's fearful understanding of what it CAN mean to have a good cadre of lawyers and an unlimited budget: "The NERF, an American activist group, announced that it would join forces with Vanutu in the lawsuit, which was expected to be filed ... George Morton ... would personally finance ... more than $8 million" (xi). It matters not which side of an argument you are on when you have the money and the PR machine to make noise - Crichton plays on our knowing this, and it is an effective use of the national paradigm, fueled, codified, and acted upon by members of the legal profession.
"Of course he knew that these particular charts had been chosen to prove the opposition's point" (490) states what, for me, is the most salient point of this book, or any book, or any science or any argument. If my argument is timely, if I am in a good position to provide you with my authority and credentials, if you are the right public to hear what I am peddling, if I have selected my data carefully - I am - at least for the next news cycle - correct. The issue at hand does not matter, everybody has their ax to grind on any issue. Some people hold a position that is similar to yours, some are very much opposed to your values, but you can bet your bottom dollar that there is a data set out there that can be used to support your issue. All you need is the right seeing device, the correctly selected issue, a nice paradigmatic wind at your back and you are on your way. (A good lawyer wouldn't hurt, either).
Does this mean that you can never believe in data or science or paradigmatic winds? Be suspicious of data and science and always face into the winds of paradigm so you can see what is about to hit you in the face. We have never needed a healthy dose of skepticism more than we need it now.
Star Trek's take on Genetic Engineering
Excerpt:
"
During Earth's 20th century, efforts to produce "superhumans" resulted in the Eugenics Wars. Genetically engineered individuals such as Khan Noonien Singh attempted to seize power. (TOS: "Space Seed")
This would lead to the banning of genetic engineering on Earth by the 22nd century, even research which could be used to cure critical illnesses. This ban was implemented because of the general fear of creating more tyrants such as Khan. It was also felt that parents would feel compelled to have their children genetically engineered, especially if "enhanced" individuals are allowed to compete in normal society."
...hmmmmmm. Relevant to us?
http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Genetic_engineering
Monday, April 5, 2010
part b of intervention: Cyborg painting
Part of my intervention project involved this painting. The writing is impossible to read in this photograph but its basically a list of cyborg technology that we currently use (including pen and paper) and a few ideas I find interesting - The cyborg as a means of liberation, transcendence through the use of technology. The consequences of being substrate/subject of new technology. The redefinition of human experience through technologies.I painted the cyborg this way because I think a particular controversy surrounding the Uncanny Cyborg/Android present revolves around mechanizing sexual companionship, or around molding the female form to fit a particular sexual ideal. Engineers design sex bots and women get breast implants and liposuction. This is one thing mentioned in the paper, which is linked below.
Thanks for looking!
Respond to my intervention if'n you want :)
Here is the link - it was a really long (6 page) post so I decided to put it on my LJ...
http://esther-mantra.livejournal.com/
Sunday, April 4, 2010
State of No Opinion
The seeing device used in this book is a complete inversion from life as I know it. The majority of characters reject the idea of global warming, where as the few who embrace the idea are looked down upon as naïve “sheeple.” Quite frankly, this makes me feel better about my lack of belief. Not that I actively reject global warming, but shaking up norms is always refreshing. It shows that maybe some people that are adamant about global warming aren’t as well informed as they appear, and are just parroting Al Gore instead of looking at articles published by universities for themselves.
I noticed another curious writing style of Crichton’s. I haven’t read any of his other books, but in this one I noticed (like Julie) huge discrepancies between men and women. Men had long introductions describing credentials: employers, education, and other accomplishments. Women were introduced by their looks and sexual abilities/potential. No matter how smart a woman is in this book, the readers know her hair color, eye color and body type before the character has a chance to speak. Men, on the other hand, get a fanfare praising their Ph.D.’s. I still have no idea what any of the male characters look like, yet I know what Margo (who isn’t even a major character, at least so far) looks like in a towel.
Appendix 1 is a controversial piece of writing; Crichton had a lot of guts putting it in. Comparing anything to Hitler is as far as you can go on the evil scale. Unfortunately for Crichton, people who do this lose credibility (in my mind at least) for being ridiculous and melodramatic. It’s a cliché. The only similarity I see between eugenics and global warming is the suppression of the opposition: calling them ignorant and uninformed, etc. The difference is that global warming is a matter of hard numbers and observation, whereas “inferior people” is subject to multiple opinions. Eugenics would be a difficult topic to study in a science department at a university, whereas global warming, while labor-intensive, seems more measurable. Indeed, Crichton admits that “there was no scientific basis for eugenics. In fact, nobody at that time knew what a gene really was” (727). So how does that compare to a controversy that actually has a scientific basis? Perhaps a better comparison would have been the evolution/intelligent design controversy. At least one side there has science.
my passages. I hope this makes sense. i have the flu so bare with me please
Within any important issue, there are always aspects no one wishes to discuss. _George Orwell (4 pages after the cover)
Term/concept from the science studies
The first term that comes to mind when reading this passage is seeing devices. Each person has their own set of seeing devices and so some of those issues that no one wants to talk about are a seeing device of one person. I also think paradigm has to do with this passage as well. A paradigm in some way is you don’t know what they know. Well here is a perfect example of you doing know what they know but they also don’t know what you know and no one wants to talk about it. I thought this was a great quote to put in right at the beginning of the book because so much of the book covers the things that no one wants to talk about.
One passage from the novel
“Wait a minute” Evans said. “Global warming is going to raise the temperature, so more moisture will evaporate from the ocean, and more moisture means more clouds.” (pg 235)
Term from the literary studies
In this passage Michel Crichton has started to set a hostile tone. The beginning of this chapter he set the tone as peaceful and sleepy. But suddenly when Kenner starts to talk about the world and what a mystery it is Evans begins to get angry and aggressive because he is a firm believer in global warming. I thought this is an ingenious way of writing because the twists and turns on each page keep the reader hooked as well as making the characters come to life.
haven't read a book this fast in a while
Peter Evans: Pwn'd by John Kenner
Initial reactions
My initial reaction to State of Fear was pretty good. Probably because I was really glad to be reading a “story” and not a textbook for a class. I haven’t gotten to do that since I was in high school. As I continued to read I became a little off put with the way environmentalists were being portrayed. I don’t consider myself an environmentalist but I still know that they are not out to harm us like Chrichton depicts. I understand that it’s a story but he is still clearly trying to base it on truth (with the real footnotes, etc.)… I have a very hard time believing that any environmentalist group would try to conjure up natural disasters in order to make the public believe in global warming. It’s just far too silly.
In the front matter Crichton says “The United States, the largest economy in the world, was also the largest emitter of carbon dioxide and therefore the largest contributor to global warming”. I really hate this passage. I think that it has something to do with the way he writes it so matter of factly. I imagine him saying it in a really cocky voice. He also drastically over simplifies things. I also hate it because it’s simply not true. China is the world’s largest contributor of CO2 emissions. But I guess that I better get used to made up facts if I’m going to get through the next 400 pages. The language he uses in this book is also very simplified. Like you said Ben, it’s seems like it’s written at a 4th grade level. I’m not complaining because this makes for a quick read… but… come on! I expected a little more out of the infamous Michael Crichton.
“The nasty little apes that call themselves human beings can do nothing except run and hide. For these same apes to imagine they can stabilize this atmosphere is arrogant....” This is a very interesting passage to me. The romantic in me likes the idea that we have no control over our atmosphere and that it is what it is … Even though I know that this isn’t true. It actually makes me think about myself. I also just like hearing humans being referred to as “nasty little apes”. I always get a great deal of satisfaction when Robin refers to us as little pinkish brown monkeys. Sorry, off topic.
My final reaction to the book actually has nothing to do with the story. Anyway, It could easily be 300 pages shorter if he just decreased the font size to that of a normal novel. It just bugs me.