Well, for what it’s worth, here are two pieces of mine that address concerns that David mentions below: both the labelling problem – whether there is a morally relevant distinction between CDR and SRM – and the moral hazard problem.
Benjamin Hale
Associate Professor/Graduate Director (ENVS)
Philosophy and Environmental Studies
University of Colorado, Boulder
Tel: 303 735-3624; Fax: 303 735-1576
http://www.practicalreason.com
http://cruelmistress.wordpress.com
Center for Science and Technology Policy Research
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The paradox of knowability is a logical result suggesting that, necessarily, if all truths are knowable in principle then all truths are in fact known. The contrapositive of the result says, necessarily, if in fact there is an unknown truth, then there is a truth that couldn't possibly be known. More specifically, if p is a truth that is never known then it is unknowable that p is a truth that is never known. The proof has been used to argue against versions of anti-realism committed to the thesis that all truths are knowable. For clearly there are unknown truths; individually and collectively we are non-omniscient. So, by the main result, it is false that all truths are knowable. The result has also been used to draw more general lessons about the limits of human knowledge. Still others have taken the proof to be fallacious, since it collapses an apparently moderate brand of anti-realism into an obviously implausible and naive idealism.
The take away thought on the intergenerational justice issue is that we may want to look beyond the current technical frame work of SSI v. CDR and explore stratigies that can negate the paradoxes which you are detailing. It is in everyones' benifit to view our options through the eys of a future historian not the curent best selling author.
Dear David—Very interesting effort to summarize the ethical aspects. The problem I have with the analysis is that it seems to me to totally leave out the adverse consequences of global warming that would be alleviated. That is, the whole intent of geoengineering is to reduce risks from CO2-induced changes in climate, and your analysis seems to be commenting on SRM, in particular, in terms of just doing it without the offsetting benefit, as if it were being proposed back in the 1950s when there were ideas of melting the Arctic ice to get at the region’s resources. The notion now is to, considering the gradual offsetting approach, to keep the climate about as it is or recently was (thus avoiding major losses of biodiversity, ice sheets, etc.) and so, if mitigation were pursued actively to keep us under, say 2.5-3 C, would be used to keep us at -.5 to 1 C above preindustrial (so much less SRM needed as compared to that to reverse a full doubling of CO2) and the idea would be to continue to phase up mitigation and CDR so one could phase out SRM over time, so there would be an exit strategy.
I would also like to offer a different perspective on this issue of uncertainties about SRM that is raised, Clive Hamilton, for example making a case of it. If we have enough confidence in the models and our understanding of the physics (and ecology, etc.) to be using our projections of the climate warming 4 C or so (hence, well into the range where models have not been tested and where the world has not been for tens of millions of years) to justify telling the world that it must get quickly get off of the fossil fuel energy system that provides 80+% of the world’s energy--and I am on the side that is convinced of that, then I just do not understand how it can be argued that the uncertainties of SRM, using techniques that have a natural analog we can learn from, aimed at keeping the climate about as it is now (so in the range models have been tested on), can be so great that we should not consider the approach. I do not disagree that there is much to learn and that there are issues of governance and ethics involved, but it seems to me that arguing that the uncertainties in the modeling is too large just plays into the hands of the deniers on model uncertainties. My view is that we should actually be evincing confidence in the model abilities to simulate the major aspects of what would result from SRM (and CDR) and that what the model results show is that there are limits in how well GHG-induced climate change can be offset (I think these limits can likely be moderated by some clever thinking about how to do SRM) and that there are complex issues and implications of such a course (and the most complex of the governance issues may well be how to maintain the SRM effort when the public has not had to actually experience the adverse impacts that are being offset). I just think the framing to date is well off the mark.
Best, Mike MacCracken
On 1/26/14 12:47 AM, "Rosemary Jones" wrote:
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