PodParley PodParley
The Art of Storm

PODCAST · arts

The Art of Storm

Twenty-five centuries ago, a Chinese military strategist named Sun Tzu wrote that the general who wins first makes many calculations before the battle is fought. The general who loses makes only a few. Sun Tzu was writing about war. He was also, without knowing it, writing about every catastrophic storm that has ever made landfall on an inhabited coast.Art of Storm is a narrative history podcast that examines the decisions, systems, and failures that determine who survives a disaster and who does not — and why the same patterns appear, storm after storm, generation after generation, across every city that has ever been built on vulnerable ground.Each season follows a single catastrophe from its origins to its consequences, tracing the full arc of human decision-making that precedes the storm, shapes the response, and defines what gets rebuilt — and what gets forgotten. The stories are told through the people who lived them: the meteorologists and engineers, the familie

  1. 1

    The Art of Storm: Galveston 1900 - Isaac Cline and his Absurd Delusion

    The Art of Storm: Galveston, 1900 - Isaac Cline and his Absurd DelusionEpisode Overview: In this episode, we investigate the "shiver in the isobars" that became the deadliest natural disaster in American history. We move beyond a simple historical retelling to perform a deep-dive decision analysis of Dr. Isaac Monroe Cline—the man who was the meteorological authority on the Texas Gulf Coast and the primary architect of Galveston's false sense of security.How does a highly trained scientist, who understood that weather "affected bodies," conclude that a catastrophic hurricane in Galveston was an "absurd delusion"?. We apply the Modern Discernment Model to Cline’s infamous 1891 article to understand how a single flawed act of professional commitment can close a system to the truth until it is too late.Key Discussion Points:The "Absurd Delusion" Thesis: On July 16, 1891, Isaac Cline published a categorical argument in the Galveston Daily News stating that the Texas coast was "exempt from West Indies hurricanes". He dismissed the idea of serious damage as an "absurd delusion" born of "imagination and not from reasoning".The Failure of Sample Size: Cline's argument rested on a "Record of Twenty Years". We analyze why this 20-year window was not a valid scientific sample but an "alibi" that ignored centuries-long Atlantic hurricane cycles and the recent destruction of Indianola just down the coast.Institutional Silence: We examine the role of Willis Moore and the U.S. Weather Bureau in systematically suppressing superior hurricane forecasting data from the Belen Observatory in Havana, Cuba.The Unfortified Position: How Cline’s professional authority helped prevent the construction of a seawall that could have saved thousands of lives. We discuss the "arithmetic" of a city built on a barrier island averaging only four feet of elevation.A Case Study in Discernment: Using the "Storm Council" perspective, we review the concepts of Commitment, Disposition, and Calibration. We ask: What happens when a leader's professional identity becomes inseparable from a flawed thesis?.About the Art of Storm:Art of Storm: Galveston, 1900 overlays Sun Tzu’s The Art of War over the 1900 Hurricane to examine how complex systems fail under pressure. This series is produced by Onda Nexus Group, specializing in disaster intelligence and applied decision-making frameworks.Connect with Us:Website: MODERN DISCERNMENTRead the Book: Art of Storm: Galveston, 1900 by Robert Pudlock.Case Study: "The Record of Twenty Years: Isaac Cline and What Discernment Required"."Failure doesn't require a general who is simply indifferent. It requires only that he didn't prepare.".

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Twenty-five centuries ago, a Chinese military strategist named Sun Tzu wrote that the general who wins first makes many calculations before the battle is fought. The general who loses makes only a few. Sun Tzu was writing about war. He was also, without knowing it, writing about every catastrophic storm that has ever made landfall on an inhabited coast.Art of Storm is a narrative history podcast that examines the decisions, systems, and failures that determine who survives a disaster and who does not — and why the same patterns appear, storm after storm, generation after generation, across every city that has ever been built on vulnerable ground.Each season follows a single catastrophe from its origins to its consequences, tracing the full arc of human decision-making that precedes the storm, shapes the response, and defines what gets rebuilt — and what gets forgotten. The stories are told through the people who lived them: the meteorologists and engineers, the familie

HOSTED BY

Robert Pudlock

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!