The downside of dependence

Does anyone know though what Greer is talking about when Sheldrake put science to "it's own test" and having it fail miserably? I can't seem to find any reference to that exact "test".

Yes, Greer mentions that the editor said Sheldrake's book should be burnt. That was John Maddox the editor of Nature in 1981 talking about "A New Science of Life" and "Morphic Resonance". Greer says "he'd subjected the basic assumptions of science itself to experimental test, and showed that they don't hold water." Well, that's wishful thinking to say the least.
 
The energy density of nuclear is so high that it changes all the rules. Unlike fossil fuels, the fuel costs of nuclear are the smallest cost involved.

This is something that TFian can't seem to wrap his head around, that the energy density of uranium is so high that it's value (rather than it's cost) is so high that the cost could go up increadbily high and it would still be worth extraction.

I'd be willing to bet that even if we didn't have plenty of uranium here on earth (and we do) it would still be cost effective to get the stuff from space.

Of course, we do have plenty of Uranium down here. The point that TFian is trying to make (but not even willing to state explicitly) is that it's too expensive to get at the Uranium that we have. The problem is, as I said, the value that Uranium has (and that value comes from the energy that we can get out of it) is enormous. Its hard to understand how great that value is, which is why he is incapable of understanding how little effect that increased cost of getting uranium from, for instance, sea water, has on the actual cost of the energy that comes out of it.
 
Instead of telling us what you are not talking about, how about telling us what you are talking about?

I don't know if you are jut having a bad day, or are resentful at the way some people are responding to your posts, or are frustrated by the lack of reception of these ideas in the U.S. or are angry at the short-sidedness of the establishment, but I really must suggest that you step back and reconsider how you are responding to posts in this thread. You are not winning converts and you are closing more minds than you are opening.

I'd have to second this. TFian, you're not going to make people believe your way of thinking is superior by being flat out obnoxious as you've so far been. I do hope you keep that in mind in the future...
 
...I believe Sharon Astyk (a rising figure in the Peaknik community) is *mostly* simply concerned about the rise of poverty in the United States, and how best for individuals to alleviate it (I don't really agree with her, but I don't think she's as misleading as the "Archdruid")
You should know that she just glowingly reviewed a new Greer post. How did she get on ScienceBlogs, anyway?

No problem. I think it can be demonstrated a lot of the "Peakniks", both leaders and followers, oftentimes have a reason outside pure empirical observation for their beliefs.
I would agree, but actually by looking at the question the other way around.

Many of the science-based skeptics and rationalists I know, or that I have read online, seem to look at the facts first (or try to). Only then do they derive proposals for policy, social adjustment, or economic changes.

Other people, and perhaps the majority of people, start from the other end, with a set of cultural desires, an idea of the kind of place in which they would want to live. It isn't a question about what is fact and what is fiction, it is about desires and values and cultural connections with other people who value the same things they do. Facts come later, and (by necessity) selectively.

In recent years I have come to the (tentative) conclusion that most skeptics imagine that non-skeptics think the way that skeptics do, only badly. "You're doing it wrong," they say. "Here are the real facts that you are missing." But these skeptics are mistaken to assume their method is universal.

Their debate partners are not usually making scientific arguments, they are instead making cultural arguments for the way life should be lived. Objective facts are not central or the starting point, as they are in the minds and arguments of those of us with a scientific bent. But these cultural critics know they have to use scientific-sounding language because science has been so successful in the past few centuries it now has great authority. Their rhetoric has to use the "language" that has currency. They also try to hang their goals on whatever facts can be used to "objectively" justify them.

I thought of this first regarding creationism. I don't think that the creationists are making or even trying to make a scientific argument. Instead it's about culture, a way to organize social life, and what social practices society should value and pass down. Since that is the "Truth", the facts must obviously support it. I also think the same could be said for doomers and primitivists.

So the more doomeristic peak-oilers are not making a scientific argument, even when they are using fancy graphs and charts. Instead, they are implicitly saying (1) the better life is this other way, (2) we are moving farther and farther away from being able to live how we want because the dominant way of life makes it impossible, so (3) only a massive collapse of the status quo will free us to live in a way that expresses our cultural values, so furthermore (4) careful discernment of the times shows us that the status quo will soon be shaken and we'll finally get to live free of interference, hooray.

You can see the logical fallacies there. But I think that that's what people like Greer and Kunstler and D. Jensen, and TFian here, are doing.

A parallel assumption seems to be that (1) we can't argue that our cultural desires should prevail because most people don't like them or don't even care enough to have an opinion, and (2) there is no way to win moral/value arguments through logic, but (3) objective facts trump beliefs so people will have to listen to that, and (4) as we have seen above, the facts are on our side, so (5) we can do more to promote our cultural values by pointing out the status quo's inevitable self-destruction than we would by simply promoting our beliefs as good things in and of themselves.

I could say more, but this is already a very long post.

Does anyone think I'm seeing this correctly?
 
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Does anyone think I'm seeing this correctly?
You are seeing it correctly.

So it's not that "TFian can't seem to wrap his head around, that the energy density of uranium is so high that it's value (rather than it's cost) is so high that the cost could go up increadbily high and it would still be worth extraction" -- he as far as he is concerned, it is a priori false because otherwise his whole worldview falls apart.

Yes, very much like creationists.
 
You should know that she just glowingly reviewed a new Greer post. How did she get on ScienceBlogs, anyway?

Heh, thanks for that. I've known she's been buddy buddy with the "Archdruid" for a while, and I believe even Greer considers her his "adopted kid sister" (whatever that means). To be honest, I consider Greer to simply be a sort of figure Peakniks go to read to justify & reinforce their beliefs and emerging(?) luddite culture. I think it's why on his blog, he leaves no room for criticism or even questioning of his pre suppositions, he's simply interested in a cult following of people who already agree with his premises, and wants to shape them in his direction. For what reason, I'm not sure, I figure money is at least somewhat involved, it seems he abandoned his new age financial ventures for Peak Oil stuff, which has given him some modest success. But then there's his "Green Wizard" project, and I'm not sure what he's trying to do with that. Maybe he really does believe the days of textile artisans are returning. As for why Sharon is on scienceblogs, I've wondered that myself for a while. I've read a good deal of her blogs, and I don't see much "science" in them at all, they seem more fit for something like "The Oil drum" rather than scienceblogs. I still contend though, that she's at least somewhat different than other doomers who almost come off with glee at the prospect of mass death, crumbling infrastructure and a return to "Shaman" style medicine.

I also thought this comment was amusing

Why is this turning up in Brains & Behaviour feed? If I wanted to read misunderstandings of Monbiot cobbled together with third-rate clichés, I'd stick with CiF. I gave up reading The Archdruid (*snigger*) report years ago and, strange, I know, I have no desire to irritated further by that twat.

Posted by: Dan | May 9, 2011 7:16 PM


Does anyone think I'm seeing this correctly?

I think you're correct. When I was first getting into peak oil some years ago, overtime I came to an easily observed realization with the people I was talking to, Peak Oil is much more a religion than an actual concern for them, with all kinds of intricate predictions and differing views. There's actually a number of what I'd call "sects" in Peak Oil, that while agree with the general premises of so and so, often differ widely on what the "best future" will be. It's quite amusing really.
 
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Many of the science-based skeptics and rationalists I know, or that I have read online, seem to look at the facts first (or try to). Only then do they derive proposals for policy, social adjustment, or economic changes.

Other people, and perhaps the majority of people, start from the other end, with a set of cultural desires, an idea of the kind of place in which they would want to live. It isn't a question about what is fact and what is fiction, it is about desires and values and cultural connections with other people who value the same things they do. Facts come later, and (by necessity) selectively.
I'd go so far as to state there has never been a single human who has been so utterly free of desires and values and cultural connections as to be capable of pure and unbiased evaluation of any complex set of facts with significant social, economic, or political implications. Even the idealized "rationalist" you present does, at some point, become biased enough toward one position to enable him to make proposals regarding various courses of action. Depending on what he has at stake personally and professionally, he may then find himself motivated to defend that position, and he may begin collecting and interpreting facts in an increasingly biased way, probably without even being aware that he is doing so. A great deal of political discourse is comprised of primarily of opposing idealogues taking turns accusing each other of this very thing. It is the very reason for the existence of the scientific peer review process.

So the more doomeristic peak-oilers are not making a scientific argument, even when they are using fancy graphs and charts. Instead, they are implicitly saying (1) the better life is this other way, (2) we are moving farther and farther away from being able to live how we want because the dominant way of life makes it impossible, so (3) only a massive collapse of the status quo will free us to live in a way that expresses our cultural values, so furthermore (4) careful discernment of the times shows us that the status quo will soon be shaken and we'll finally get to live free of interference, hooray.

You can see the logical fallacies there. But I think that that's what people like Greer and Kunstler and D. Jensen, and TFian here, are doing.
And, of course, you are quite confident that it's not what YOU are doing, and that your observation that it IS what "they" are doing will help to reinforce the cultural connections you have established in this little enclave of science-based skeptics and rationalists.
 
And, of course, you are quite confident that it's not what YOU are doing, and that your observation that it IS what "they" are doing will help to reinforce the cultural connections you have established in this little enclave of science-based skeptics and rationalists.

Well said. We'd all do well to remember that we are all human and have the same foibles, the same desire to feel we are right which can often overcome our desire to actually be right.

Which is why I think the "You think that because you're irrational in this way..." arguments, even if they have some truth in them, are likely not very useful. We all have psychological baggage. Now, let's get back to actually discussing the facts. And if "the other side" doesn't actually listen to what we have to say, at least we can try to listen, objectively, to what they have to say.

I say "try" because it's never easy.
 
You people spend time and effort "debating" someone whose sig is:

What a piece of **** is man, in form and moving, how like a filthy vermin. How like a disgusting bacterium is he. Playing out the grotesque misery of his life, in this world of ours, which is not but a cesspool.

ROFL. dnftt
 
In what way was it "total crap"? Could you elaborate? I did my best to source well, be fair, and constructive. A more detailed response would be appreciated.

Well one, you're building a strawman, that John Michael Greer is nothing more than a scam artist peddling books for money. You'd have to prove that before you make such an accusation.

Second, Rupert Sheldrake actually has done a great job proving his point, so JMG is in the right here.

Third, the theory of catabolic collapse is accepted as academically sound.
 
Yes, Greer mentions that the editor said Sheldrake's book should be burnt. That was John Maddox the editor of Nature in 1981 talking about "A New Science of Life" and "Morphic Resonance". Greer says "he'd subjected the basic assumptions of science itself to experimental test, and showed that they don't hold water." Well, that's wishful thinking to say the least.

Actually Shaldrake has done a great job proving his point, and defending his theories. And calling for the burning of any book is just plain ol' uncivilized.
 
Well thanks for coming out to play. I see you're taking your ball and going home :p No defense of your leader? It was a great takedown which part got to you the most?

It wasn't a great takedown, the near slander got to me the most though.
 
He's obviously talking about everything that hasn't been debunked yet -- the topic of the gaps, if you will. In other words, after 3 pages, he's not talking about much of anything anymore.

Actually he is talking about something, "appropriate" technology, as envisioned by E. F. Schumacher, author of "Small is beautiful". Peak oilers gush over it (including Greer). That's the staple for their own particular "techno solution".
 
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We are in control of the whole thing and will probably never lose it save for an unexpected natural disaster. My many descendants will walk the Earth proudly in stewardship. Too bad you don't get to share in this glory seeing as you're weeding yourself out of existence as part of a new age religion.

Come on, respond to the nuclear energy post, why are you here if not to debate? Picking the easily obfuscated stuff still?

You said your "descendants" would get it... which means you would not share in it either, no?
 
Where does he imply this except for in your imagination? What he implies is that human nature shows us that we shouldn't collectively try and stop using oil because that will fail. Instead we need to do something much harder than "business as usual" and cooperate in ways we have never dreamed of before...

But isn't that all ultimately to make it so that oil is not needed anymore? Isn't that, therefore, "stopping the use of oil"?

And could getting the ability to do that kind of cooperation lead to lasting changes to our politics and relations, so maybe we could have a sort of "world peace" and "united Earth"?
 
This is something that TFian can't seem to wrap his head around, that the energy density of uranium is so high that it's value (rather than it's cost) is so high that the cost could go up increadbily high and it would still be worth extraction.

The difficulty TFian has in grasping this is why I initially dumbed it down.

We know how many thorium and uranium atoms there are lying around.

We know how much energy is contained in each one.

We know that there is enough to last us millions of years (multiply first number by the second number).

It's all so basic that it's mind-boggling that someone could flatly deny it as he does.

I'd be willing to bet that even if we didn't have plenty of uranium here on earth (and we do) it would still be cost effective to get the stuff from space.

Of course, we do have plenty of Uranium down here. The point that TFian is trying to make (but not even willing to state explicitly) is that it's too expensive to get at the Uranium that we have. The problem is, as I said, the value that Uranium has (and that value comes from the energy that we can get out of it) is enormous. Its hard to understand how great that value is, which is why he is incapable of understanding how little effect that increased cost of getting uranium from, for instance, sea water, has on the actual cost of the energy that comes out of it.

Just as was pointed out in the paper I linked to. One ton of uranium in the 14 million dollar per tonne scenario posited by Meneley and Pendergast et al in an IFR or TWR will still produce more energy than 240 million dollars of coal.

There's just no scenario involving rising energy prices that doesn't end up making nuclear look dead sexy compared to everything else.

BTW, TFian, just one of the sources I quoted above, is a nuclear engineer who has authored more than a dozen peer reviewed papers, made more than 50 addresses and presentations to nuclear industry conferences and helped design a reactor in use in seven different countries with more than 40 individual reactors among them.

Your source for information on nuclear energy is an overrated World of Warcraft character.
 
Well one, you're building a strawman, that John Michael Greer is nothing more than a scam artist peddling books for money. You'd have to prove that before you make such an accusation.

Not quite, but I did somewhat insinuate that, didn't I? I didn't flat out say he's a scam artist, just that he moved onto peak oil when it turned out more profitable than his new age ventures.

Second, Rupert Sheldrake actually has done a great job proving his point, so JMG is in the right here.

I don't know enough about the case to really comment, but I seriously doubt it.

Third, the theory of catabolic collapse is accepted as academically sound.

It is? By what academic body? As far as I know, it was never peer reviewed. But for the sake of the thread, here is the "Theory" of Catabolic collapse. Anyone more knowledgeable want to take a further stab at it? http://209.217.209.33/~esorg/transcripts/greer_on_collapse.pdf (The original thread referenced as well http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?p=6576505)

Btw, it seems you ignored the Ph.D physicist who directly responded to Greer. (Critically)
 
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