The connection between climate skepticism and climate denial and what has become known as post‐truth culture has become the subject of much interest in recent years. This has lead to intense debates among scientists and activists about how to respond to this changed cultural context and the ways in which it is held to obstruct wider acceptance of climate science. Drawing on research in the sociology of scientific knowledge, science and technology studies, social psychology, and philosophical reflections on evidential reasoning, it is argued that these debates are focused on the wrong topic. The idea of post‐truth implies that a once‐straightforward linear relationship between scientific evidence and decision‐making has been eroded. But such...
We are deeply disturbed by the recent escalation of political assaults on scientists in general and ...
Why is it that if you characterize yourself as “very conservative,” you are twenty times more likely...
The article by Cook et al offers an interesting new methodological approach to the debate about (sup...
Scientists overwhelmingly agree that climate change exists and is caused by human activity. It has b...
The science of anthropogenic climate change (ACC) is not new, but has been built up like any science...
Any attempt to offer an overview of the climate science literature is bound to be controversial; the...
International audienceDespite the established scientific consensus on the existence of anthropogenic...
Belief in climate change does not divide into a simple dichotomy of (good) believers and (evil) non...
This paper reviews and interrogates theories of climate science denialism, and climate science skept...
In this article I argue that the climate controversies of 2009 and 2010 should be seen as a contest ...
This paper argues that the resistance to climate science from so-called deniers cannot be explained ...
National and international policies aimed at mitigating and adapting to anthropogenic climate change...
In this paper, I interrogate the relationship between two seemingly separated themes playing an incr...
Adam Corner argues that social views and cultural beliefs predict climate change denial, and not peo...
Why is disbelief in anthropogenic climate change common despite broad scientific consensus to the co...
We are deeply disturbed by the recent escalation of political assaults on scientists in general and ...
Why is it that if you characterize yourself as “very conservative,” you are twenty times more likely...
The article by Cook et al offers an interesting new methodological approach to the debate about (sup...
Scientists overwhelmingly agree that climate change exists and is caused by human activity. It has b...
The science of anthropogenic climate change (ACC) is not new, but has been built up like any science...
Any attempt to offer an overview of the climate science literature is bound to be controversial; the...
International audienceDespite the established scientific consensus on the existence of anthropogenic...
Belief in climate change does not divide into a simple dichotomy of (good) believers and (evil) non...
This paper reviews and interrogates theories of climate science denialism, and climate science skept...
In this article I argue that the climate controversies of 2009 and 2010 should be seen as a contest ...
This paper argues that the resistance to climate science from so-called deniers cannot be explained ...
National and international policies aimed at mitigating and adapting to anthropogenic climate change...
In this paper, I interrogate the relationship between two seemingly separated themes playing an incr...
Adam Corner argues that social views and cultural beliefs predict climate change denial, and not peo...
Why is disbelief in anthropogenic climate change common despite broad scientific consensus to the co...
We are deeply disturbed by the recent escalation of political assaults on scientists in general and ...
Why is it that if you characterize yourself as “very conservative,” you are twenty times more likely...
The article by Cook et al offers an interesting new methodological approach to the debate about (sup...