Thinking Skills: Critical Thinking and Problem Solving

(singke) #1

4.1 Inference 127


Commentary
We’ll consider the inferences in turn. The first
one, A, as well as being a bit vague, has little
support from the text. If we take ‘any
millennium now’ to mean in the next one or
two – which is its natural meaning – then A
would mean sticking with the standard view,
despite the most recent findings casting doubt
upon it. The standard view is that the present
warm phase should be reaching its time limit;
but according to the last three warm phases the
limit has already been passed. The latest ice core
also suggests that some interglacials could last
as long as 30,000 years. Evidence that the
Earth’s present alignment with the Sun’s rays
resembles that of the last long interglacial,
pours even more cold water on A. (Interestingly,
even without the most recent evidence, the
grounds for A would still be weak: half-a-
million years is a blink of an eye in geological
terms, and the sample of just three warm
phases is too small to call a reliable trend.)
B might seem consistent with what has just
been said about A. If we are not near the start of
a new ice age, the standard view must be
wrong. But there is a lot of difference between
saying that an inference is unsafe, and
declaring it false. B is a much stronger claim
than can be supported by the data in Doc 1. We
might be near the end of a warm phase: one
that is longer than the last three and shorter
than the one before that. There is little or no
positive evidence for such a claim; but nor is
there proof that it is false. Remember the
significance of strong and weak claims (see
Chapter 2.2). A strong claim requires much
more to justify it than a more moderate claim.
Had B asserted that the standard view is now
less plausible than it was, instead of plainly
false, that would have been defensible.
C suffers from the same fault as B: it, also, is
too strong. A single example of a 30,000-year

coming to the end of the present warm
phase, which has already lasted just over
10,000 years. Indeed, data from Antarctic
ice cores* indicated that the previous
three interglacials have lasted between
6000 and 9000 years which, if repeated,
would have seen parts of Europe, Asia and
North America covered in ice since before
the rise of the Roman Empire. The most
recent Antarctic ice cores have revealed
that the warm phase before that lasted for
30,000 years. It is known, too, that the
Earth’s alignment relative to the Sun during
that long interglacial was similar to its
alignment at the present time.
* An ice core is a sample obtained by drilling
down into the ice cap. The state of the ice at
different levels provides a climatic record that
can extend over hundreds of thousands of
years.

From the information in Doc 1, which of the
following can reliably be concluded?

A Another ice age is due any millennium
now.
B The standard view is wrong.
C The present warm phase is set to last
another 20,000 years.
D According to the recent geological
record, ice-age conditions are the norm,
and it is Earth’s present climate which
is unusual.
E Global warming is delaying the start of
the next ice age.
Give a brief reason for each response.

Activity

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