James Ephraim Lovelock was the much honoured British scientist famous for a beautiful and irresistible idea known as the Gaia hypothesis. Although his work up to that point had been in the medical field, in 1961 he was engaged by NASA to develop instruments for the study of the atmospheres of other planets. He invented an electron capture detector, which led to the discovery that chlorofluorocarbons were depleting the Earth’s ozone layer. He was studying the planet Mars, knowing that if life existed on the planet it would have altered the composition of its atmosphere. It was the inert stability of the Martian atmosphere, with its dearth of oxygen, hydrogen or methane and its disproportionate abundance of carbon dioxide, that told him that the planet was dead: a stark contrast with the chemically dynamic nature of Earth’s biosphere. It was as a result of this that he began to develop his ideas about dynamic homeostasis and the functioning of a living planet.
Essentially the Gaia concept is that the animate and inanimate components of planet Earth together constitute a self-regulating, interactive system that can be thought of in its totality as a single living organism. The biosphere, in other words, has a regulatory effect on the environment that acts to preserve the balance necessary to sustain life. It builds on the so-called CLAW hypothesis (an acronym of the names of four collaborating scientists, Charlson, Lovelock, Andreas and Warren) proposing negative feedback loops between oceanic ecosystems and earth’s climate. As an example, Lovelock detailed the role of marine phytoplankton’s production of dimethyl sulphide in response to rises in temperature. The sulphide rises into the atmosphere, seeding clouds, the resultant albedo effect then cooling the surface. The feedback also works in reverse, falls in temperature leading to lower production of sulphide, decreased albedo, and an increase of sunlight reaching the surface. The Gaia hypothesis is built on numerous and diverse examples of such negative feedbacks which contribute to a planetary-scale homeostasis: “a biocybernetic universal system tendency”, in Lovelock’s original formulation.
The hypothesis has that quality of many brilliant ideas, that once conceived it seems utterly obvious, and amazing that nobody had articulated it before. The only people who couldn’t accept it were militant materialists like the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, to whom the idea that nature might attain spontaneous balance and order seemed a little too redolent of an intelligent system to suit his nihilistic view of the universe. John Maynard Smith, who made his name by the application of game theory to evolution, called the Gaia hypothesis an “evil religion” in a quite maniacal outburst.
Presumably both these gentlemen were forgetting Le Chatelier’s well-established principle in chemistry and thermodynamics, which finds a tendency towards balance even in entirely inanimate systems: “If the equilibrium of a system is disturbed by a change in one or more of the determining factors (such as temperature, pressure, or concentration), the system tends to adjust itself to a new equilibrium by counteracting as far as possible the effect of the change.”
Lovelock’s theory does not go beyond the parameters of science; any such inferences are left to others to make. It’s true that a teleological inference is invited by the personification of homeostatic earth systems as Gaia, the Greek Earth goddess, but it was intended merely as shorthand for a complex theory. The name, without which one doubts whether the idea would have become so well-known beyond scientific circles, was suggested by Lovelock’s neighbour and friend, the novelist William Golding, and Lovelock certainly encouraged the inference by constantly referring to his ‘system tendency’ as ‘She’, ‘Mother Nature’ and so on. But it’s a metaphor, not intended to be taken literally.
“The Gaia Hypothesis, now Gaia Theory, is still up for trial,” wrote Lovelock in the nineties. “A common criticism is of teleology. This accusation is unjust; neither purpose or foresight were ever claimed. Whether right or wrong, it is a testable theory and capable of making ‘risky’ predictions.”
(A ‘risky’ prediction is “a prediction made on the basis of a scientific hypothesis that has a real possibility of proving that hypothesis wrong. The influential philosopher of science Karl Popper held that scientific theories must be tested by means of such risky predictions.)
Over the last quarter of century, Gaia theory has gradually been accepted into the academic mainstream, where it is generally taught under the title of Earth Systems Science.
In 1974, at the age of 55, Lovelock was elected to Britain’s Royal Society of scientists in recognition of his work on cryopreservation, atmospheric physics, marine biology, gas chromatography and much more. He served as president of the Marine Biological Association, became an honorary fellow of Green Templeton College, Oxford, and continued his work as an independent scientist, author and inventor. In 1990 he was awarded a CBE — Commander of the Order of the British Empire.
It was only after the turn of the century that Lovelock’s career entered a chaotic phase that did considerable damage to his reputation, with his involvement in the catastrophic global warming movement. In 2006 he published a book which he would repudiate within a few years. Its thesis was that destruction of primary forest and consequent reduction in biodiversity is stretching Gaia’s capacity to absorb the additional greenhouse gases produced by the burning of fossil fuels. It was Lovelock’s apocalyptic projection of this hypothesis into the future that suggested the book’s sensationalist B-movie-style title, The Revenge of Gaia.
In this thesis, humanity’s destruction of tropical rainforest eliminates the regulatory negative feedbacks and switches them into positive mode, i.e., vicious cycles. Warming oceans would extend the thermocline layer of tropical waters into the Arctic, preventing oceanic nutrients from rising to the surface waters and eliminating the blooms of phytoplankton on which food chains depend. Most of the earth’s surface, he predicted, would be turned to desert. The Sahara would reach to Paris and Berlin. All food production in Europe would cease; billions would die — 80% of the human race, he predicted — and by the end of the 21st century human survival would depend on a few breeding pairs of humans who had managed to hang on in the Arctic, the only region where the climate would remain tolerable. The only way to avoid this apocalyptic scenario would be the exclusive adoption of nuclear power, radioactive waste being absolutely preferable to “that truly malign waste, carbon dioxide.”
“The earth is about to fall into a morbid fever that may last as long as 100,000 years,” he said in an interview with The Independent newspaper. “We have to keep in mind the awesome pace of change and realise how little time is left to act, and then each community and nation must find the best use of the resources they have to sustain civilisation for as long as they can.”
It’s an astonishing episode in the thought-history of the scientist — to go from conceiving of the Earth as a living, self-regulating organism to characterising atmospheric carbon, the foundation of all life on the planet, as “truly malign”; a pathogen triggering a “morbid fever” of the whole system. How could such a contradiction be resolved? Is his ‘Earth Goddess’ so fragile that the evolution of a creative life-form could destroy her capacity to sustain life at all?
If the Gaia hypothesis is valid, then humanity, like every other species on the planet, must be thought of as a cog in the “biocybernetic universal system tendency” — a child of Gaia. Of course humanity has an effect on the environment. But the same is true of all species; indeed that is the basis of the whole Gaia hypothesis, that Earth’s dynamic atmosphere is the product of its biosphere. The question then is at what point did we depart from our natural destiny to the extent of exhausting the mother’s tolerance for her problem child and invoking her ‘revenge’? Something about us, according to the catastrophists, puts us in opposition to the Gaia system — but what? How do we define it?
During Locklock’s 21st Century catastrophist digression, he pinpointed that original sin as humankind’s use of fire.
“Our giant mistake was combustion, learning to burn things. At first it was harmless, just for cooking. But we never stop at that level, we start doing it on a grand scale, like burning down whole forests because you get cooked meat much cheaper that way, it’s much less effort. That was our mistake, and we’ve been making it for a long time. We’re only just beginning to discover how serious a mistake it was.” (Pioneer Productions, 2007)
So it’s not just about fossil fuels; it’s about fire itself. Once again, a mythological context is evoked: the Promethean theft of fire from the gods of Mount Olympus. To argue that humanity’s accessing of energy from combustion is in itself wrong is to say that we rebelled against Gaia at the very beginning of our existence. Even our hominid precursors — Neanderthals, Australopithecines and Homo Erectus — used fire. Archeological evidence dates the earliest use of fire by human precursors at around 1 to 1.5 million years ago. Did it really all go wrong when Prometheus saved us poor naked humans with the gift of fire, the spark of all technology and civilisation?
Prometheus is the son of Themis, identified with divine law. As well as giving humans divine fire, Prometheus taught them the arts of civilisation — writing, mathematics, agriculture, medicine and science. Prometheus thus stands for human creativity in all its aspects, and our ascent from primitive misery to a civilised condition. But if the theft of fire is our original sin, we are cursed from the beginning.
Lovelock does not condemn the use of fire for cooking, which increased human lifespan and cognitive development. He condemns its misuse by Homo Sapiens as a weapon, for fire-drive hunting, land-clearance, warfare, and and so on. So the problem is not the tool, but the uses to which it is put. It is a moral rather than a scientific distinction — more in line with Lovelock’s Quaker upbringing than his illustrious scientific career. Humans are an ‘unpleasant’ species, he says, which does ‘bad’ things. And the taming of fire is a paleo-historical version of The Fall of Man.
Remember, it’s not just modern man that’s damaging the planet. The first people to move to Australia, during one of the previous ice ages a long time ago, managed to destroy almost the whole ecosystem of that continent with just quite simple tools. Fire-drive hunting and tricks of that kind. So we’re a pretty unpleasant species in many respects and always have been. Modern man is just more efficient at doing bad things. (Pioneer Productions, 2007)
But Gaia does not make ethical judgments. Species are selected, according to Gaia theory, not only for their ability to adapt to the environment, but for their tendency to adapt the environment in ways that contribute to the homeostasis of the whole system. Since plants require carbon dioxide, it would seem rather obvious that a species such as homo sapiens, which produces carbon dioxide, contributes to the homeostatic tendency of the system and thus is of value to Gaia. The significance of this contribution is confirmed by the ‘global greening’ which is taking place, fed by higher levels of atmospheric carbon. For the originator of Gaia theory to overlook this potentially crucial contribution to planetary homeostasis is a major oversight.
If humanity is a problem for Gaia, it is clearly not because of our production of carbon dioxide, which is essential to the continuation of the system. In fact this is one of our redeeming features. In any case, if the ‘original sin’ of humans is that we produce CO2, then how are we different from bacteria and volcanoes and oceans and all the other sources of carbon dioxide, responsible for the presence of at least 97% of the life-giving gas in the atmosphere? We are part of the system, like anything else.
In any case, if Lovelock’s biocybernetic homeostatic system tendency can’t absorb a small variation in the amount of a trace gas in the atmosphere, it’s not much of a tendency, is it? This is what puzzled me. Gaia theory describes a dynamic system not a fragile homeostasis; a homeostatic tendency capable of absorbing turbulence. It is anathema to the naive linearity of politicised climate ‘science’ — and vice versa. It’s a matter of some wonder to me that Lovelock would have sold out his groundbreaking idea in this way.
Less than a year after this panic attack, he was already backing off from his apocalyptic pronouncements, saying that the climate would stabilise and that the Earth was in no danger. Nevertheless, in an article in Nature in 2007, he promoted a geo-engineering solution using ocean pumps to bring water up from beneath the thermocline to “fertilise algae in the surface waters and encourage them to bloom”, thus accelerating the transfer of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to the oceans, where it would eventually fall to the bottom in the form of ‘marine snow’.
Lovelock’s geo-engineering scheme attracted a lot of media attention and was roundly criticised in some quarters. “It doesn’t make sense,” objected Corinne la Quéré, a climate scientist at the University of East Anglia, in an article in The Times. “There is absolutely no evidence that climate engineering options work or even go in the right direction. I’m astonished that they published this. Before any geo-engineering is put to work a massive amount of research is needed – research which will take twenty to thirty years”. That didn’t stop a commercial company from designing the technology to realise Lovelock’s proposal for marine biological sequestration of CO2.
By 2012 Lovelock had come to his senses, and thoroughly repudiated his Revenge of Gaia aberration, saying he had made a mistake and been guilty of alarmism in that book, and dismissing Al Gore’s film An Inconvenient Truth in the same terms. He called anthropogenic global warming theory ‘green drivel’, and accused the alarmists of behaving like the priests of a new religion.
“It just so happens that the green religion is now taking over from the Christian religion,” he said in an interview with the Toronto Sun (“Green ‘drivel’ exposed”, 23 June 2012.) “I don’t think people have noticed that, but it’s got all the sort of terms that religions use… The greens use guilt. That just shows how religious greens are. You can’t win people round by saying they are guilty for putting [carbon dioxide] in the air.”
His repudiation of his 2006 work was explicit. In an MSNBC article Lovelock made it clear that “we don’t know what the climate is doing. We thought we knew twenty years ago. That led to some alarmist books – mine included – because it looked clear-cut, but it hasn’t happened. The climate is doing its usual tricks. There’s nothing much really happening yet. We were supposed to be halfway toward a frying world now. The world has not warmed up very much since the millennium. Twelve years is a reasonable time… [the temperature] has stayed almost constant, whereas it should have been rising — carbon dioxide is rising, no question about that.”
The point is well made and still valid in 2023; the millennial temperature plateau turned into a decline — already a problem for the University of East Anglia’s ‘Climategate’ scientists as early as 2010, as they colluded to “hide the decline” — and current data confirms that global temperatures are now in an eight-year cooling trend. Whether this effect is a matter of cycles in the earth’s orbit and tilt and in the output of the sun, or homeostatic negative feedback mechanisms at work, the fact is that the climate alarmists have never made a single prediction that has been fulfilled.
Lovelock’s catastrophist episode was in direct contradiction not only to his own theory but well-established scientific fact: specifically the logarithmic dependence of temperature on atmospheric carbon concentration — i.e., that the progressive addition of CO2 to the atmosphere has less and less effect on temperature, and no effect at all beyond the point of ‘carbon saturation’ at around 1200 ppm. Therefore — and Lovelock must have known this — there can be no ‘tipping point’, no ‘runaway greenhouse effect’ due to atmospheric carbon dioxide. In other interviews post-2012 he admits to elementary mistakes or oversights, such as overlooking the cooling haze-effect of industrial pollution, as well as copious natural sources of atmospheric particulates which renders ‘clean-world’ models obsolete. It’s strange that climate models do not take this into account; after all, the cooling effect of volcanic eruptions (which atmospheric geo-engineering schemes seek to imitate) has been conclusively demonstrated by a series of volcanic eruptions in recent history: Mt. St Helens (1980), El Chichón (1982), and Mt. Pinatubo in 1991. I remember these ‘years without a summer’ very well, and so do the geo-engineers.
These are glaring critical lacunae on the part of this great scientist. There are many reasons to be horrified by the destruction of primary forest. But higher availability of carbon dioxide for photosynthesis leads to increased plant growth everywhere (NASA, CSIRO) in the kind of negative feedback loop which is central to his signature theory. So what happened? Was his mind overpowered by propaganda, like any member of the public? Or were there other reasons for him to turn his back on Gaia?
Lovelock was already in his eighties when he sold out his sophisticated vision of Earth’s mechanisms to the politically motivated purveyors of junk UN climate science. He was not senile — far from it. Even in interviews given in his centenary year, he is as articulate as ever, and there is absolutely nothing wrong with his powers of recall. Could there be something else behind his aberration? It’s a hard thought to entertain, given Lovelock’s attractively naïf persona and mischievous sense of humour. Perhaps that last quality holds the key, and Lovelock should ultimately be seen as a kind of trickster figure; but underneath the mischievous grin was there something more ruthless, to which he was prepared to sacrifice even his own scientific reputation?
Asked in 2019 to “spend a few minutes telling us how you view Gaia now — what is Gaia?”, the centenarian Lovelock gives a rather intriguing answer.
“You can’t sum up Gaia in a few words,” he says, “any more than I could sum up an answer to the question ‘Who am I?'”
It’s not a typical remark, and one gets the sense that at a hundred years of age it amuses him to invite a little speculation… for there is, actually, more to Lovelock than meets the eye. After his death in 2022, various newspaper articles were written in which his ‘decades-long’ involvement with British Military Intelligence was revealed, as confirmed by his private correspondence. These revelations were originally shared by the journalist Brian Appleyard, a WEF alumnus and fellow Commander of the British Empire. I think they served only to confirm what many already suspected. The Independent’s Year 2000 profile of the then 80-year-old scientist had touched on the same information in the rather coy formulation “a supporter of MI5”, which evokes a giggle from the great man. After all, how do you ‘support’ an intelligence agency? Intelligence agencies don’t require cheerleaders. But they have many uses for genuine talent, in this case a phenomenally ingenious inventor, who, Appleyard asserts, served as the real-world equivalent of Q in the James Bond films: technologist to the spook world.
Reviewing the outline of his career, it seems to fit pretty well. Mill Hill, Yale, NASA and JPL — and those billionaire-friendly research foci: cryogenics… airborne coronavirus transmission… and his environmentalism, grounded as it was, was undoubtedly of use in narrative-creation for a financial-corporate elite which saw the potential for control in apocalyptic visions of the consequences of human energy-use. As with Elon Musk, everything Lovelock worked on just happened to fit the globalist agenda as far as we know it (which is rather far) like a glove. As the elite worked to co-opt the nascent environmental movement in the wake of the Report from Iron Mountain, that electron capture detector was just the device they needed, able to detail the chemical pollution of all parts of the planet in microscopic detail, giving the movement extraordinary momentum. And — please don’t get me wrong — what his detector revealed about the ubiquity of pesticide residues and halogen compounds in every terrestrial region and biological niche is horrifying information which should have brought about changes in the way we farm. But in his climate alarmist period, Lovelock was not talking about these real problems, instead participating in the diversion of the movement into a war on carbon, a betrayal of the authentic environmental impulse.
As a well-connected friend told me once, “You don’t even know you’re being recruited, the way they groom you.” Especially if you have been raised in almost total solitude by Quaker grandparents and have far more experience of, and interest in, the natural world than the human. I’m sure these agencies are very skilled in exploiting human naivety and innocence. But at some point you know, and Lovelock was more than comfortable with it. His relationship to the agency remains clouded. But he made no secret, at least as an old man, of his disdain for the common herd. In one of the centenary interviews he comments on Elon Musk’s desire to go and live on Mars, the solar system’s dead planet. The only explanation for such a stupid notion, he thinks, is that “he must hate people even more than I do.”
It’s meant as a joke, but there’s a flicker across his face, as a remark so incongruous with his lovable persona hangs in the air for a second… but the interviewer moves swiftly to the next question and that momentary embarrassment quickly evaporates. It’s not so much a critical lacuna as an ethical abyss over which some of his listeners must hover for a moment before hurrying to the next question.
Did Lovelock’s hatred of humanity make him susceptible to the eugenicist worldview for which catastrophic anthropogenic global warming theory serves as profasis? This charming and brilliant man had long been an admitted Malthusian, who accepted the premise that the Earth is over-populated and that Nature must rebalance herself by deselecting a species whose impacts can no longer be accommodated within the Earth’s homeostatic systems. The fact that in 2009 he became a patron of the organisation Population Matters (formerly the Optimum Population Trust) perhaps goes some way to answering this question.
Lovelock’s repudiation of his alarmist phase represented a return to science and sanity. Where a correlation appears to exist in the detailed climate reconstructions we now have, it is clear that temperature leads CO2 levels rather than following them. When it is warmer, more carbon dioxide, exhaled by the oceans, appears in the atmosphere, not the other way round. For long periods in the record there is no linkage at all. And of course, as in Gaia theory, the Earth creates negative feedback loops which operate to mitigate extremes. A fundamental such loop which any lay person can understand is that higher temperatures energise the water cycle; increased evaporation brings increased cloud cover, and the enhanced albedo effect cools the surface; however, UNIPCC climate models do not factor in cloud-cover variation, an omission which at a stroke renders them scientifically irrelevant. And yet the policy of the UN and its proliferating agencies and affiliated entities (including, now, the WEF) is based entirely on the flawed projections of these models.
Lovelock’s intervention in the global warming controversy had an effect, hyping up the apocalyptic imagery and setting a precedent for ham-fisted interference in interactive Earth systems with the hubristic geo-engineering schemes which Lovelock once again started touting as he approached his 100th birthday in 2019.
Of course he was right to highlight the destruction of primary forest and habitat. Of course that is injury and insult to Gaia. But the destruction of rainforest is wrong in itself. The values are all backwards here. We must defend the rich biodiversity of primary forest from rapacious corporations for its own sake, not on account of some ill-founded and irrational fears about how average global temperature might affect human affairs. In the end, it’s this: Gaia does not create forests to serve as ‘sinkholes’ for carbon dioxide; on the contrary, carbon dioxide exists to create the forests.
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While I favor environmentalism, I regard the AGW crusade to be a fraudulent effort to manipulate the public and to promote fake science for better ruling class control of society. Margaret Mead was president of AAAS in 1974 when she or her cohorts organized a kangaroo court AAAS Symposium to try Immanuel Velikovsky for his heretical but then somewhat popular view that Venus is a young planet that had a recent violent history in encounters with Earth and Mars. This meant that the heat of Venus was due to it being a young planet, instead of to its thick CO2 atmosphere causing greenhouse warming effect. Mead was associated with a couple scientists who had just developed the idea that Earth is warming due to the CO2 greenhouse warming effect just like on Venus, when the CO2 on Earth is pathetically minimal. So I think there was an ulterior motive for the symposium, to destroy Velikovsky's creditability. Another problem is that dating methods are extremely inaccurate and all sedimentary rock strata were very likely almost entirely formed just c. 5,000 years ago, which is why little erosion or bioturbation is found between rock strata and coal, diamonds, dinosaur bones etc date to only a few thousands or tens of thousands of years, instead of millions of years, by C14 dating. I have discussed this stuff somewhat at https://electricastrophysics.substack.com/archive and https://zzzzzzz.substack.com/p/cataclysmic-earth-history. I'm not a Creationist, but they do better science than the mainstream, although I don't consider theirs the best either over all.