The laws of physics are universal. They don't come in subsets. There aren't "laws of climate science" which dictate AGW, it's the full deck.
Quite a few physicists either do not accept AGW or argue that it's likely to amount to a small effect not worth a worry.
And they're wrong. We know this because we can see the effects already.
Feedbacks (cloud cover, snow cover), geochemistry, orbital mechanics, and solar physics also influence surface temperatures.
Orbital variations are very slow. Really slow. Thousands of years slow. Incremental. Forget them.
Solar physics we have no control over, but fortunately the Sun is very stable so there's no point in worrying about that.
Albedo feedback is positive and responding faster than was predicted. Negative cloud feedbacks have been posited (and in some cases no doubt prayed for) since the 70's but have turned out to be undetectable. Proponents still trot them out but nobody pays them serious attention.
Ummm...Paleontologists have some knowledge of climate cycles. Certainly paleobotanists contribute to the discussion.
If Gould was speaking as a palaeontologist then he'll have been referring to a distant glaciation which, in the normal run of things, would be coming. In the 70's it was assumed that we're in an interglacial, which, by the nature of things, are flanked by glaciations. Now we know this might not be the case.