Posts archive for: 7 May, 2006
  • Sunday 7th May 2006

    Questioning Global Warming Orthodoxy instantly banishes you to outer darkness…with holocaust deniers and conspiracy theorists as your cellmates. The abuse poured on Michael Crichton for getting State of Fear into the US bestsellers list is a case in point. Use Google to locate the columns of journalistic vitriol. Psychologically this is perhaps more interesting than the fear that a challenge to the global warming orthodoxy itself engenders. Let me discuss the Scientific Enterprise as seen by a former Minister for Science and Technology in a Socialist Government.

    Scientific tradition derives from six main principles: (1) an insistence upon maintaining a rigorous regime of accurate scholarship; (2) a practice of subjecting hypotheses arising from research to the critical scrutiny of the scientific community which then judges those results by the highest possible standards; (3) a determination to defend and entrench academic freedom to protect scientists from improper pressures which might lead them to abandon their research or to corrupt their results to suit the powers that be; (4) an acceptance of the importance of dissent within the scientific tradition allowing scientists to seek to establish new hypotheses even though these may run counter to the conventional scientific wisdom of the day; (5) the maintenance of an output which overrides political, theological or ideological divisions between nations; (6) the assertion of the importance of publishing results so that the whole world may benefit from the new knowledge as it is acquired.

    In Dare To Be A Daniel Tony Benn then goes on to contrast these scientific traditions and principles with the ideas that lie at the root of parliamentary democracy. Benn’s view…which was also the official view of Sir James Goldsmith’s Referendum Party when I stood as their Parliamentary Candidate for Oldham West and Royton in 1997... is that in Britain the idea of democracy is not based on the sovereignty of Parliament or Government but upon ‘the sovereignty of the people as a whole who have a moral right to govern themselves.’ By exercising their vote they lend their sovereign powers to members of Parliament to be used on their behalf for the duration of a single parliament…and these powers must be returned intact to the electorate to lend again at a subsequent election.’

    Benn then points out that ‘in the end the people can dismiss ministers without bloodshed, and replace them by others’ and that it is this ‘destructive power of democracy that gives it its vitality, because ministers who know they can be dismissed are obliged to listen.’ So Benn’s democratic theory rests on being able to kick the rascals out because ‘in this way the capacity to dismiss changes the relationship between those who govern and those who are governed.’

    For Benn the role of the elected representative is not to reproduce the expertise of the expert but to subject him or her to rigorous cross-examination on behalf of the people. In Dare To Be A Daniel the 80-year old veteran of countless socialist rallies…and the best Prime Minister this country never had… is reflecting on projects that came up on his watch…like Concorde and Nuclear Power rather than Climate Change. But general principles are just that and indicate the direction he was leaning in his thinking. Here are the first nine of Benn’s Ten Questions for Scientists.

    1. Would your project promise benefits to the community? What are they? To whom and when will they accrue?
    2. What are the disadvantages? Who experiences them? What remedies might correct them? And when?
    3. What are the demands on skilled manpower? Can this be met?
    4. Is there a cheaper, simpler, less sophisticated way to achieve all or part of the objectives? What are the options?
    5. What new skills would people need to acquire? How are they to be created?
    6. What old skills would be rendered obsolete? How serious is this for those involved?
    7. Is the work being done elsewhere? Is there experience elsewhere to help assess the proposed project?
    8. If the project happens what disadvantages would accrue to the community? What are the alternative approaches?
    9. What other supporting projects are needed to cope with consequences or subsequent stages?

    Benn regarded his tenth question as very important. ‘If an initial decision to proceed is made, for how long will the option to stop remain open, and how reversible will this decision be at progressive stages beyond there.’ It is on this tenth point that I took Kirk Sale to task in an e-mail exchange this week when commenting on the Global Warming lobby’s abuse of the Precautionary Principle…which has now become a policy of convenience to environmentalists.

    The Precautionary Principle should mean that we do not meddle around implementing half-cock solutions that are just as likely to make matters worse...the dynamics of complex systems often means that things get worse before they get better for instance...until we understand what their long-term and intermediate impacts will be. The Precautionary Principle is being misapplied to justify ignorant meddling in very complicated processes that are not understood.

    By the way I should warn you that Michael Crichton owns the patent for ‘essay or letter criticizing a previous publication’. So I am taking this stance on Global Warming to avoid getting sued…and not because of threats by right wing corporations to withdraw their funding of my Life of Reilly as a Mad Blogger and Journeyman Tenor.

  • Saturday 6th May 2006

    Today’s marching orders were to attend a Greek Wedding in Camber…well half a Greek wedding…the bride’s half. Of such is the life of a Journeyman Tenor. There was a commercial break half way through the service. The Church Doors were flung open and in trooped the other half of the bridal contingent. Some found room with us in the choir stalls. They had not been caught up in Rye’s six weeks of road chaos en route from Nikosia…as first suspected…but had simply driven past the church and got halfway to Folkestone before discovering the error of their ways.

    Arriving at Folly Wall at the appointed hour for my ride out to Camber, I woke Alan Catt from his midday nap. Either he recovered well or has impeccable social graces because while awaiting Frances Catt’s return I was well looked after with a gin and tonic and good conversation. Just time for a quick lunch before being wafted across the marshes.

    The Catts have been sheep farmers on Romney Marsh for generations…and have one of the purest breeds of Romneys around. Fifteen years ago a boatload of ewes, rams…and sheep dogs…from the Catt’s Romney Marsh flocks was shipped out to The Azores on the instructions of some World Bank experts. I wonder how they have fared? Alan tells me that this year the rain came just in time to put enough grass on the fields for the lambing season.

    The Catts and their guests from Battersea and America went off on a Bluebell Safari after we returned from the wedding…the woods are blanketed with bluebells at the moment. I was tempted to join them but instead buried my head in a PCHut computer for a couple of hours before taking myself off for a drink in The Ship Inn.

    Herewith the second of two weblogs on social morphology…with extracts from The Foundations of Structural Sociology...see yesterday's weblog for the first instalment. In the inverted state the letters spelling the name of each mechanism have been reversed and run from right to left...Leonardo da Vinci knew a thing or two. This reversal indicates that in the Inverted State not only has the Hierarchy of Dominance inverted...this is the Societal Inversion to which Thomas Robertson refers in his 1947 book Human Ecology...but the goal of each mechanism has become the reverse of what it would be in the Natural Order.


    sociology

    The Natural Order----------------------------------------------------The Inverted State

    This is the Bad News. But consider the other possibility. Once the Inverted State has destroyed the Natural Order and a Money Culture has elbowed aside the Cathedral Culture then the constituent institutions of society will be under great stress. Under the right conditions small changes in a subsystem can lead to a sudden shift in the structure of the whole system. Living in an Inverted Society means being alive in interesting times…which is the Good News.

    Ilya Prigogine referred to such structures as Dissipative Structures and won a Nobel Prize for his scientific explorations into their nature. Ilya Prigogine was interested in social analogies. Perhaps he never knew that Bernard Shaw...a man greatly skilled in his use of metaphor...had come up with one.

    In The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism Shaw asks rhetorically whether his young woman reader had seen a curiosity called the Prince Rupert Drop. He explains that it is a bead of glass in such a state of internal strain that if you break off the tiniest corner the whole bead flies violently to bits. Europe was like that in 1914 he added before switching off from big things like empires and their wars to little familiar things like pins. The world is like that today...and getting worse. Shaw's image of the Prince Rupert Drop is powerful but where is the hope? Who will sweep up the pieces? The Great Charlady in Heaven? Structural sociology is more hopeful.

    Nothing is so firmly believed as that which is least known. Montaigne was no doubt thinking of religious fervour when making this remark…but with Global Warming on the agenda for tomorrow I will give it a different spin.

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