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== Denialist == | |||
"Lomborg and the Copenhagen Consensus Center do not seem to deny that climate change is happening or man-made, but discuss the economics of the remedies." This is bullshit. ] does not just mean "deny that climate change is happening or man-made". There are other flavors, and Lomborg has some of them. --] (]) 11:59, 10 July 2020 (UTC) | |||
:Well boohoo, Thanks for the link to that attack page, I'll be editing it. So what is your personal definition of climate change denialism, other than ]? ] (]) 01:55, 11 July 2020 (UTC) | |||
::Nothing personal about it. That page is based on reliable sources, and if you try to inject anti-science denialist POV into it, you will fail. --] (]) 10:37, 11 July 2020 (UTC) | |||
:I think “climate change mitigation obstructionist” or something of the like would be the most appropriate way to describe him - although this is a bit too much of a mouthful. While Lomborg no longer denies the existence of climate change, it would appear he has spent much of his career as a professional apologist for those who oppose any kind of radical action to mitigate it. ] (]) 04:24, 28 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
::Misplaced Pages is supposed to be based on reliable sources. Unless they start calling him that, we cannot start calling him that. --] (]) 05:45, 28 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:: No longer? For at least 25 years he's agreed anthropogenic climate change is a thing. First edition of TSE 1998. ] (]) 09:13, 28 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::''Yeah I drink a lot but here are a bunch of reasons not to deal with it'' is in denial. ''I agree the climate is warming but...'' isn't a get-out-of-denial-free card. Lomborg is very much in denial. -- ] (]) 10:14, 28 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::{{tq|he's agreed anthropogenic climate change is a thing}} A tiny, non-threatening thing we can safely ignore. Which it is not. As I said above, {{tq|There are other flavors, and Lomborg has some of them}}. --] (]) 12:48, 28 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::::Uh, no, he just doesn't think it is a high priority and that adaptation can cope with the short term effects. I was specifically laughing at the 'no longer' phrase. Do you have ANY evidence he has ever claimed it didn't exist? I expect not, in which case 'no longer' is a complete falsehood. ] (]) 22:30, 28 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
::::::A climate change denier is somebody who is in denial about the problem of climate change. {{tq|Doesn't think it is a high priority and adaptation can cope with the short term effects}} is denialism. ] (]) 05:10, 29 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Are you being deliberately obtuse? Yes, I realise the Chicken Littles have redefined the word denial, the point I have been making is that the phrase 'no longer' is absurd. He has acknowledged AGW for at least 25 years, and as I've said if you can't find a RS in which he claims otherwise then 'no longer' is laughable. ] (]) 05:40, 29 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Using the phrase "Chicken Littles" for people who represent the scientific consensus is telling. Not that it needed telling anymore. | |||
::::::::We have the science on one side, and we have Lomborg, you, and others on the other side. Misplaced Pages follows the science. | |||
::::::::The words "no longer" are not in the article, and nobody wants to put them there. One user wrote them here. It is pointless to complain about them to other users who did not, or to demand evidence for them from other users who did not. --] (]) 06:38, 29 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Good, point settled. "No longer" is weasel words. And boring hint consensus !=science. it's politics] (]) 08:56, 29 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::{{tq|consensus !=science. it's politics}} That is just a denialist talking point, not reality. The denialist, non-consensus position is the only political one. --] (]) 09:17, 29 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
== "Warmist" == | |||
== Danish and English Misplaced Pages contradicts each other == | |||
Danish and English Misplaced Pages completely different explanaitions of the UVVU judgement of scientific dishonesty. The Danish Misplaced Pages has a completely different explanation about the whole business. Both these explanaitons can not be true at the same time. Maybe some political activists here on en.wikipedia.org needs to clean up their act? | |||
A drunk who insists their drinking isn't causing problems, and besides a little alcohol is good for you, and there are better things to think about, and maybe next year, is in ''denial''. | |||
== Please Consider == | |||
I have removed the Trivia section from this article, per the guideline and manual of style at ]. Please do not reinstate the trivia section unless you can make a compelling argument that is is necessary for this article and adds to its encyclopedic quality. ] 11:00, 6 July 2007 (UTC) | |||
Lomborg has devoted much of his professional career to saying a little warming is good for you, and the world could better focus its attention elsewhere, and it isn't causing so much problem, and maybe in a few years we can do something. | |||
== "Cool It" == | |||
Consider this sentence: "The book demonstrates that the problem needs to be dealt with in a responsible way." The statement in the predicate is a truism that does not need demonstration, and so the whole assertion is either vacuous or a puff, which would be a pro-Lomborg POV. Use "underlines" instead, continuing with some explanation of what Lomborg understands as "responsible" (i.e. minimal). | |||
It is the same way a person can admit to drinking a lot of alcohol and deny there is a problem. We wouldn't call called them an "alcoholist" or say they are "skeptical." Lomborg is a denier. -- ] (]) 20:41, 10 July 2021 (UTC) | |||
Link to some of the hostile reviews of the book, which cite for example Lomborg's disregard for low catastrophic risks - a cavalier mistake in cost-benefit analysis. Example: http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2007/09/if-the-uncertai.html#more. | |||
:What do you call the alcoholic who comes up with a more complicated and drastic program every year to stop his drinking? And every year when he presents his new plan he admits that his drinking is a little bit worse, but his plan is better? And in the meantime ignores his cancer and his domestic abuse issue and his inability to pay his mortgage? --] (]) 15:24, 21 February 2022 (UTC) | |||
--] 14:21, 8 October 2007 (UTC) | |||
:Feel free to ] and edit it. I haven't read the book yet. But i suspect from readings of the SE that the above is correct. Keep it ] and with adequate ]. (the above link cannot be used since its a ], but i'm sure that you can find other sources). --] 16:42, 8 October 2007 (UTC) | |||
== Clarification Danish Committees on Scientific Dishonesty == | |||
I still think this paragraph distorts his position in relation to most global climate change scientists and activists. It reads: "Lomborg argues that there can be no ten-year quick-fix solution." In this case, he is in agreement, not argument: as I understand, the usual case is that climate change will take a long time to deal with (even setting aside the 'given' that actions taken on it will need to be kept up for a century, not just ten years). <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 13:19, 12 October 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
The link in footnote is dead, but it remains archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20150316130136/http://www.cprm.gov.br/33IGC/1343527. | |||
==Not a Trained Scientist?== | |||
Does Lomborg himself say he's not a trained scientist? A PhD in Political Science would technically qualify someone as a trained scientist. Any field that uses the scientific method and empirical data would qualify, actually. I've modified that section of the article in light of this. ] 07:59, 16 October 2007 (UTC) | |||
I'm adding the full quote: "one couldn't prove that Lomborg had deliberately been scientifically dishonest, although he had broken the rules of scientific practice in that he interpreted results beyond the conclusions of the authors he cited", because I think it is more nuanced than "it misrepresented scientific facts." Pushback welcome, particularly because it might be too long for the header section. | |||
As far as I know, political scientists are only broadly classified as "scientists" (in the-search-for-knowledge meaning of the term): since political science is technically a social science, and he's writing about natural science, I think that that this revert is justified because it emphasizes that he's not writing in his area of expertise. Furthermore, since he openly admits to not being a trained scientist, then he probably really isn't a trained scientist in *some* meaning of the term. ] (]) 06:39, 20 November 2007 (UTC) | |||
] (]) 11:09, 28 September 2021 (UTC) | |||
::Any field that uses the scientific method is a science, and that would make Lomborg a scientist. It doesn't matter if the data and hypotheses relate to plate tectonics or voter turnout. I suspect his claim of not being trained in the sciences was a reference to climate or natural science, and not meant as a broad claim (the provided link provides no information on this point). I'm going to try a compromise edit, and change the article to "not trained in the natural sciences". ] (]) 18:39, 18 December 2007 (UTC) | |||
:The report from the Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty is available on the web: . It does not contain what you quoted. In sum: by the standards of science, the book is dishonest. But Lomborg doesn't do science in those areas, and the book isn't science, so they can't prove he intended to commit fraud. They sum it up nicely here: | |||
Political scientists are not scientists. They have essentially no training in scientific methods, and rarely attempt to apply such methods to their work. Social scientists are arguably scientists, but many physical scientists (including myself) view social science with disdain. Lomborg does not appear to be a scientist to me. Certainly he is not working in an area of demonstrated expertise. To the contrary, he appears to be way over his head much of the time. <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 14:57, 26 June 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
{{blockquote |text= | |||
Subject to the proviso that the book is to be evaluated as science, there has been such perversion of the scientific message in the form of systematically biased representation | |||
But he has been a statistics lecturer - statistics is surely a science? (Applied maths anyway.) ] (]) 17:26, 13 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
that the objective criteria for upholding scientific dishonesty-cf. Danish Order No. 533 of 15 December 1998-have been met. In consideration of the extraordinarily wide-ranging scientific topics dealt with by the defendant without having any special scientific expertise, however, DCSD has not found-or felt able to procure-sufficient grounds to deem that the defendant has misled his readers ''deliberately'' or with ''gross negligence.'' | |||
}} | |||
== Environmentalist Author?== | |||
:That quote immediately precedes the ruling, which says the same thing. I propose to replace the quote in the article with this one or the ruling. Both versions contain some clear language and some confusing language. -- ] (]) 12:37, 28 September 2021 (UTC) | |||
::I worry that I don't see a date and a bunch of signatures in that pdf. How can one be sure it's the official government product, not a draft? ] (]) 14:43, 28 September 2021 (UTC) | |||
His caption listed him as an environmentalist author. Just because he asserts that he's an environmentalist (''The Skeptical Environmentalist'') doesn't make it true. Since the rest of the article doesn't refer to him as an environmentalist, I think it's fair to remove this. Note that his views don't fit in with traditional environmentalism. I see his self-classification as an environmentalism more as political framing, subterfuge, or "green washing." ] (]) 06:25, 20 November 2007 (UTC) | |||
:::The money quote (as it were), the first sentence in the blockquote above, is also quoted in a contemporaneous article in The Guardian.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2003-01-09 |title=Debunker of global warming found guilty of scientific dishonesty |url=http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2003/jan/09/highereducation.science|access-date=2021-09-28 |website=the Guardian|language=en}}</ref> | |||
:::But I agree finding the report itself would be good. I went looking for it on the agency web site, which has been renamed. The web site didn't seem to have case reports going back that far. It did have annual reports from 2002 and 2003. The 2002 annual report mentions the controversy and says the case report was issued in early 2003, which is consistent with the date on the Guardian article. But the 2003 annual report drops the matter. Some digging is needed. -- ] (]) 14:51, 28 September 2021 (UTC) | |||
He writes on environmental issues, and aims to improve the environment. Surely this is sufficient for him to be an environmentalist author. And just because he is not a traditional environmentalist doesn't mean he's not an environmentalist. ] (]) 17:28, 13 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
: He aims to improve the environment by doing nothing to cut GHG emissions. He's an environmentalist in the same way Bush was an advocate for science. ] (]) 19:38, 23 January 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: MonoApe, your statement makes clear that you have not read his book. Lomborg's concern for the environment is immense. He merely recognizes that we have limited resources with which to make improvements, and he believes that the monies that some propose spending on massively reducing GHG emissions could have a far greater and far more positive effect if spent on ''other'' concerns. ]]] 06:47, 24 January 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: I don't need to buy and read his book to be familiar with his arguments. I've read his output, watched him in debate and seen the science-based response. He denies scientific reality (while saying he accepts it) and proposes inaction that will very likely cause mass species extinction and global chaos for humanity. "Lomborg tends to choose one scenario and discuss it, while ignoring other possible scenarios. This works fine if one wants to make a political point, but it is not good science." - http://www.fredbortz.com/review/CoolIt.htm t ] (]) 18:45, 24 January 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Biased profile == | |||
This is one of the most biased, incomplete and misleading profiles I have ever read. It was clearly written by someone who has an uncritical acceptance of the man-made global warming hypothesis. Articles like this help give Misplaced Pages a bad name. | |||
] (]) 17:41, 3 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
:Then fix it. ] (]) 18:12, 3 February 2008 (UTC) | |||
::Better yet, let it stand. Misplaced Pages deserves a bad name ] (]) 03:05, 11 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
:::''It was clearly written by someone who has an uncritical acceptance of the man-made global warming hypothesis''. Like Lomberg himself, and almost everyone in the scientific community? Are you a self-parodist or something? ] (]) 03:20, 18 May 2008 (UTC) | |||
== Three of the four orginal articles == | |||
<!-- Keep reflist-talk at the bottom of this section. -->{{reflist-talk}} | |||
Three of the four articles published in politiken in 1998 was reprinted in an issue the right winged journal Libertas (Libertas.dk) and these have now become available for free: | |||
http://www.libertas.dk/indhold/pdf/libertas27_28.pdf | |||
== Deleting reference to "Business Insider" == | |||
Here are some quotes I found interesting: | |||
{{ping|PhotographyEdits}}: Since the article is tagged as needing tertiary sources, please don't delete this tertiary source. Also, since the next paragraph starts critiquing Lomborg, I think it is important to maintain the third-party reference to "Business Insider", which confirms that Lomborg is a global player in the area of climate controversies. I would ask you to revert the deletion. --] (]) 12:26, 28 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
"Vi løber aldrig tør for olie eller ressourcer." | |||
:The sentence was added on by ], changed on by ], removed on by PhotographyEdits with edit summary = "Seems a bit undue weight, feel free to discuss on talk". The cited article is by ]. To me it seems a bit due weight, though I would advocate revert of Espoo's edit per ]. ] (]) 14:04, 28 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
(eng: We will never run out of oil or resources) | |||
{{ping|PhotographyEdits}}: My view coincides with ] and ], including the latter's preference for the original version--"In 2009, '']'' cited Lomborg as one of "The 10 Most-Respected Global Warming Skeptics".--which I consider more straightforward, succinct and neutral. It provides global context to Lomborg's positioning in the overall public climate change debate. I suggest reverting to the original version. ] (]) 16:43, 28 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
"Drivhuseffekten er yderst tvivlsom" (eng: The greenhouse effect is extremely doubtful) | |||
:Sure, feel free to revert it. I was a bit too ] I guess :) ] (]) 18:37, 28 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
"... siges det, at vi kan forvente “knaphed og kraftige prisstigninger” på olie og gas et stykke ind i det næste årtusind (p4). | |||
::{{done}} --] (]) 21:32, 28 May 2023 (UTC) | |||
Vi har hørt historien før. Og der er stadig ikke belæg for den." | |||
(eng: ... it is said, that we can expect “sparseness and large increases in prices”) on oil sometime in the next century (p4). | |||
We have heard the story before. And there is still no justification for it) | |||
== Encyclopedic/Informational Tone == | |||
] (]) 07:46, 3 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
I should bring this here to avoid an edit war: I had removed "incorrectly" under "Views on Climate Change" and suggested that any reversion at least offer a source, and be more professional and academic in tone. Someone provided a source, which is appreciated, but added "but he was wrong," which sounds even more polemical, and frankly immature. I reviewed the source and summarized its assertions, but now it has been reverted back to "but he was wrong." Surely there's a more thoughtful and careful way to express whatever it is that needs to be expressed here. | |||
:"''Vi løber aldrig tør for olie eller ressourcer''." (eng: ''We will never run out of oil or resources'') | |||
] (]) 13:46, 2 August 2023 (UTC) | |||
:This sounds crazy, if you don't understand the context. Look, have we run out of whale oil? Sure, it has become very scarce, but when it became scarce we turned to something else to light our homes, and today there '''''is''''' still whale oil out there—we didn't run out, because we never got far enough to run out. Lomborg does not question the finite amount of petroleum, he merely states that as it becomes increasingly scarce, we will turn elsewhere for our energy and eventually, we will quit using oil. '''''Not''''' because we've run out of it, but because scarce supply will make us turn to other sources ''before'' we run out. ] (]) 02:57, 4 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:That is not a question of tone but of accuracy. We cannot omit that fact or camouflage it behind misleading language. | |||
::Actually in that particular article, Lomborg ''is'' arguing that we wont run dry. He reasons that we will always find more resources, and the we will get more efficient at using it, so that price will never rise. (kinda ironic in the current environment, but short timespan should never be used this way). He uses the example, that oil prices haven't risen during any other oil-crisis, despite claims of us running out. --] (]) 05:03, 4 June 2008 (UTC) | |||
:The goal of denialists (like Lomborg) is to generate the impression in the general public that what they say is somehow on the same level as real science, but Misplaced Pages cannot help them in that dishonest endeavor. --] (]) 14:30, 2 August 2023 (UTC) | |||
::I agree that accuracy is foremost. That's why I think that the article should reflect what the sources say. Nothing more, nothing less. If you want to make stronger claims, find reliable sources that make those claims. Treating the subject of the article as an enemy to be defeated seems like ], noble as the pursuit may be. ] (]) 18:47, 2 August 2023 (UTC) | |||
:] added "incorrectly" on . ] removed it on . Hob Gadling re-inserted it on . Jmaranvi re-removed it on .] inserted "but he was wrong" . Jmaranvi changed to "others have noted that this claim is speculative, and unlikely to hold true, given historical trends" on . Hob Gadling changed back to "but he was wrong" on . I believe that ] wording -- "If it is to be restored without significant change, consensus must be obtained first." -- is relevant since Hob Gadling's re-insertion included the same word and M.Boli's change was to something not significantly different. I also regard the citing of the changed words to which predicts "Over the coming century, human-caused warming will continue, with natural variability periodically speeding up or slowing down the pace from decade to decade." is not proof that Mr Lomborg's prediction is wrong, and it doesn't specifically mention Mr Lomborg's prediction which according to a Guardian blogger was "It does probably indicate that the high temperature increases - the very scary scenarios that get banded around - are much less likely simply because they are not nearly as likely to compare with the findings of the models compared to reality." In that case ] applies. I conclude that Jmaranvi acted correctly. ] (]) 15:02, 2 August 2023 (UTC) | |||
::I'm inclined to delete Lomborg's prediction entirely. He has written extensively his views on global warming. This is one murky almost off-hand remark. It was specifically referring to a particular "pause", the reference I added is public outreach from NOAA saying the pause on question didn't slow the rate of global warming. So I think it isn't ''very'' synthetic, I think it's use to contextualize lomborg is ok. But there is zero reason for Lomborg's prediction to be here. -- M.boli ] (]) 19:58, 2 August 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::(I just noticed the continuation of this thread in August.) There were just two honest options here: include his false prediction and add that it is false, or not include it. Both are consistent with ]. Including the claim without adding that it was false would have been dishonest as well as inconsistent with ]. --] (]) 13:44, 14 December 2023 (UTC) |
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Denialist
"Lomborg and the Copenhagen Consensus Center do not seem to deny that climate change is happening or man-made, but discuss the economics of the remedies." This is bullshit. Climate change denial does not just mean "deny that climate change is happening or man-made". There are other flavors, and Lomborg has some of them. --Hob Gadling (talk) 11:59, 10 July 2020 (UTC)
- Well boohoo, Thanks for the link to that attack page, I'll be editing it. So what is your personal definition of climate change denialism, other than wp:i don't like it? Greglocock (talk) 01:55, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
- Nothing personal about it. That page is based on reliable sources, and if you try to inject anti-science denialist POV into it, you will fail. --Hob Gadling (talk) 10:37, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
- I think “climate change mitigation obstructionist” or something of the like would be the most appropriate way to describe him - although this is a bit too much of a mouthful. While Lomborg no longer denies the existence of climate change, it would appear he has spent much of his career as a professional apologist for those who oppose any kind of radical action to mitigate it. Ottawajin (talk) 04:24, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages is supposed to be based on reliable sources. Unless they start calling him that, we cannot start calling him that. --Hob Gadling (talk) 05:45, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
- No longer? For at least 25 years he's agreed anthropogenic climate change is a thing. First edition of TSE 1998. Greglocock (talk) 09:13, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
- Yeah I drink a lot but here are a bunch of reasons not to deal with it is in denial. I agree the climate is warming but... isn't a get-out-of-denial-free card. Lomborg is very much in denial. -- M.boli (talk) 10:14, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
he's agreed anthropogenic climate change is a thing
A tiny, non-threatening thing we can safely ignore. Which it is not. As I said above,There are other flavors, and Lomborg has some of them
. --Hob Gadling (talk) 12:48, 28 June 2023 (UTC)- Uh, no, he just doesn't think it is a high priority and that adaptation can cope with the short term effects. I was specifically laughing at the 'no longer' phrase. Do you have ANY evidence he has ever claimed it didn't exist? I expect not, in which case 'no longer' is a complete falsehood. Greglocock (talk) 22:30, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
- A climate change denier is somebody who is in denial about the problem of climate change.
Doesn't think it is a high priority and adaptation can cope with the short term effects
is denialism. M.boli (talk) 05:10, 29 June 2023 (UTC)- Are you being deliberately obtuse? Yes, I realise the Chicken Littles have redefined the word denial, the point I have been making is that the phrase 'no longer' is absurd. He has acknowledged AGW for at least 25 years, and as I've said if you can't find a RS in which he claims otherwise then 'no longer' is laughable. Greglocock (talk) 05:40, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
- Using the phrase "Chicken Littles" for people who represent the scientific consensus is telling. Not that it needed telling anymore.
- We have the science on one side, and we have Lomborg, you, and others on the other side. Misplaced Pages follows the science.
- The words "no longer" are not in the article, and nobody wants to put them there. One user wrote them here. It is pointless to complain about them to other users who did not, or to demand evidence for them from other users who did not. --Hob Gadling (talk) 06:38, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
- Good, point settled. "No longer" is weasel words. And boring hint consensus !=science. it's politicsGreglocock (talk) 08:56, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
Example text
That is just a denialist talking point, not reality. The denialist, non-consensus position is the only political one. --Hob Gadling (talk) 09:17, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
- Good, point settled. "No longer" is weasel words. And boring hint consensus !=science. it's politicsGreglocock (talk) 08:56, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
- Are you being deliberately obtuse? Yes, I realise the Chicken Littles have redefined the word denial, the point I have been making is that the phrase 'no longer' is absurd. He has acknowledged AGW for at least 25 years, and as I've said if you can't find a RS in which he claims otherwise then 'no longer' is laughable. Greglocock (talk) 05:40, 29 June 2023 (UTC)
- A climate change denier is somebody who is in denial about the problem of climate change.
- Uh, no, he just doesn't think it is a high priority and that adaptation can cope with the short term effects. I was specifically laughing at the 'no longer' phrase. Do you have ANY evidence he has ever claimed it didn't exist? I expect not, in which case 'no longer' is a complete falsehood. Greglocock (talk) 22:30, 28 June 2023 (UTC)
"Warmist"
A drunk who insists their drinking isn't causing problems, and besides a little alcohol is good for you, and there are better things to think about, and maybe next year, is in denial.
Lomborg has devoted much of his professional career to saying a little warming is good for you, and the world could better focus its attention elsewhere, and it isn't causing so much problem, and maybe in a few years we can do something.
It is the same way a person can admit to drinking a lot of alcohol and deny there is a problem. We wouldn't call called them an "alcoholist" or say they are "skeptical." Lomborg is a denier. -- M.boli (talk) 20:41, 10 July 2021 (UTC)
- What do you call the alcoholic who comes up with a more complicated and drastic program every year to stop his drinking? And every year when he presents his new plan he admits that his drinking is a little bit worse, but his plan is better? And in the meantime ignores his cancer and his domestic abuse issue and his inability to pay his mortgage? --2607:FEA8:FF01:4E54:3DBD:5499:8EC2:B712 (talk) 15:24, 21 February 2022 (UTC)
Clarification Danish Committees on Scientific Dishonesty
The link in footnote is dead, but it remains archived at https://web.archive.org/web/20150316130136/http://www.cprm.gov.br/33IGC/1343527.
I'm adding the full quote: "one couldn't prove that Lomborg had deliberately been scientifically dishonest, although he had broken the rules of scientific practice in that he interpreted results beyond the conclusions of the authors he cited", because I think it is more nuanced than "it misrepresented scientific facts." Pushback welcome, particularly because it might be too long for the header section.
Aristotles (talk) 11:09, 28 September 2021 (UTC)
- The report from the Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty is available on the web: https://stephenschneider.stanford.edu/Publications/PDF_Papers/DishonestDane.pdf. It does not contain what you quoted. In sum: by the standards of science, the book is dishonest. But Lomborg doesn't do science in those areas, and the book isn't science, so they can't prove he intended to commit fraud. They sum it up nicely here:
Subject to the proviso that the book is to be evaluated as science, there has been such perversion of the scientific message in the form of systematically biased representation that the objective criteria for upholding scientific dishonesty-cf. Danish Order No. 533 of 15 December 1998-have been met. In consideration of the extraordinarily wide-ranging scientific topics dealt with by the defendant without having any special scientific expertise, however, DCSD has not found-or felt able to procure-sufficient grounds to deem that the defendant has misled his readers deliberately or with gross negligence.
- That quote immediately precedes the ruling, which says the same thing. I propose to replace the quote in the article with this one or the ruling. Both versions contain some clear language and some confusing language. -- M.boli (talk) 12:37, 28 September 2021 (UTC)
- I worry that I don't see a date and a bunch of signatures in that pdf. How can one be sure it's the official government product, not a draft? Peter Gulutzan (talk) 14:43, 28 September 2021 (UTC)
- The money quote (as it were), the first sentence in the blockquote above, is also quoted in a contemporaneous article in The Guardian.
- But I agree finding the report itself would be good. I went looking for it on the agency web site, which has been renamed. The web site didn't seem to have case reports going back that far. It did have annual reports from 2002 and 2003. The 2002 annual report mentions the controversy and says the case report was issued in early 2003, which is consistent with the date on the Guardian article. But the 2003 annual report drops the matter. Some digging is needed. -- M.boli (talk) 14:51, 28 September 2021 (UTC)
- I worry that I don't see a date and a bunch of signatures in that pdf. How can one be sure it's the official government product, not a draft? Peter Gulutzan (talk) 14:43, 28 September 2021 (UTC)
References
- "Debunker of global warming found guilty of scientific dishonesty". the Guardian. 2003-01-09. Retrieved 2021-09-28.
Deleting reference to "Business Insider"
@PhotographyEdits:: Since the article is tagged as needing tertiary sources, please don't delete this tertiary source. Also, since the next paragraph starts critiquing Lomborg, I think it is important to maintain the third-party reference to "Business Insider", which confirms that Lomborg is a global player in the area of climate controversies. I would ask you to revert the deletion. --Melchior2006 (talk) 12:26, 28 May 2023 (UTC)
- The sentence was added on 24 April 2015 by Tsavage, changed on 8 January 2023 by Espoo, removed on 28 May 2023 by PhotographyEdits with edit summary = "Seems a bit undue weight, feel free to discuss on talk". The cited article is by Joe Weisenthal. To me it seems a bit due weight, though I would advocate revert of Espoo's edit per WP:CLAIM. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 14:04, 28 May 2023 (UTC)
@PhotographyEdits:: My view coincides with Melchior2006 and Peter Gulutzan, including the latter's preference for the original version--"In 2009, Business Insider cited Lomborg as one of "The 10 Most-Respected Global Warming Skeptics".--which I consider more straightforward, succinct and neutral. It provides global context to Lomborg's positioning in the overall public climate change debate. I suggest reverting to the original version. Tsavage (talk) 16:43, 28 May 2023 (UTC)
- Sure, feel free to revert it. I was a bit too WP:BOLD I guess :) PhotographyEdits (talk) 18:37, 28 May 2023 (UTC)
- Done --Spiffy sperry (talk) 21:32, 28 May 2023 (UTC)
Encyclopedic/Informational Tone
I should bring this here to avoid an edit war: I had removed "incorrectly" under "Views on Climate Change" and suggested that any reversion at least offer a source, and be more professional and academic in tone. Someone provided a source, which is appreciated, but added "but he was wrong," which sounds even more polemical, and frankly immature. I reviewed the source and summarized its assertions, but now it has been reverted back to "but he was wrong." Surely there's a more thoughtful and careful way to express whatever it is that needs to be expressed here. Jmaranvi (talk) 13:46, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
- That is not a question of tone but of accuracy. We cannot omit that fact or camouflage it behind misleading language.
- The goal of denialists (like Lomborg) is to generate the impression in the general public that what they say is somehow on the same level as real science, but Misplaced Pages cannot help them in that dishonest endeavor. --Hob Gadling (talk) 14:30, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
- I agree that accuracy is foremost. That's why I think that the article should reflect what the sources say. Nothing more, nothing less. If you want to make stronger claims, find reliable sources that make those claims. Treating the subject of the article as an enemy to be defeated seems like WP:RGW, noble as the pursuit may be. Jmaranvi (talk) 18:47, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
- Arcahaeoindris added "incorrectly" on on 17 September 2022. 2604:ca00:11b:99b3::668:20cd removed it on 5 June 2023. Hob Gadling re-inserted it on 6 June 2023. Jmaranvi re-removed it on 1 August 2023.M.boli inserted "but he was wrong" 1 August 2023. Jmaranvi changed to "others have noted that this claim is speculative, and unlikely to hold true, given historical trends" on 1 August 2023. Hob Gadling changed back to "but he was wrong" on 2 August 2023. I believe that WP:BLPRESTORE wording -- "If it is to be restored without significant change, consensus must be obtained first." -- is relevant since Hob Gadling's re-insertion included the same word and M.Boli's change was to something not significantly different. I also regard the citing of the changed words to Caitlyn Kennedy's post which predicts "Over the coming century, human-caused warming will continue, with natural variability periodically speeding up or slowing down the pace from decade to decade." is not proof that Mr Lomborg's prediction is wrong, and it doesn't specifically mention Mr Lomborg's prediction which according to a Guardian blogger was "It does probably indicate that the high temperature increases - the very scary scenarios that get banded around - are much less likely simply because they are not nearly as likely to compare with the findings of the models compared to reality." In that case WP:SYNTH applies. I conclude that Jmaranvi acted correctly. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 15:02, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
- I'm inclined to delete Lomborg's prediction entirely. He has written extensively his views on global warming. This is one murky almost off-hand remark. It was specifically referring to a particular "pause", the reference I added is public outreach from NOAA saying the pause on question didn't slow the rate of global warming. So I think it isn't very synthetic, I think it's use to contextualize lomborg is ok. But there is zero reason for Lomborg's prediction to be here. -- M.boli M.boli (talk) 19:58, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
- (I just noticed the continuation of this thread in August.) There were just two honest options here: include his false prediction and add that it is false, or not include it. Both are consistent with WP:FRINGE. Including the claim without adding that it was false would have been dishonest as well as inconsistent with WP:FRINGE. --Hob Gadling (talk) 13:44, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
- I'm inclined to delete Lomborg's prediction entirely. He has written extensively his views on global warming. This is one murky almost off-hand remark. It was specifically referring to a particular "pause", the reference I added is public outreach from NOAA saying the pause on question didn't slow the rate of global warming. So I think it isn't very synthetic, I think it's use to contextualize lomborg is ok. But there is zero reason for Lomborg's prediction to be here. -- M.boli M.boli (talk) 19:58, 2 August 2023 (UTC)
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