F.D. Flam, Columnist

Conservatives' New Climate Argument Fails

Sure, blind faith in scientists is bad. But so is stubborn distrust in the face of overwhelming evidence.

Given the inherent uncertainties in data, who's to say the earth is round?

Photograph: Paolo Nespoli - ESA/NASA via Getty Images
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A new argument has started to crop up in debates over climate change. It goes like this: Science couldn’t predict the outcome of the last election, or the bumps in the economy, so why should we believe scientists when they try to predict the future of Earth’s climate?

For example, a recent New York Times column -- the first from new op-ed writer Bret Stephens -- starts with a cautionary tale about the failure of data analytics to guide Team Clinton to victory in 2016, then segues into a discussion of climate-change skepticism. Given the “inherent uncertainties of data,” Stephens argues, doubters have a right to distrust “overweening scientism.” He writes: