Quote from bigdavediode:
Once again, climatologists can only predict global average temperatures. If a stock index went in a straight line upwards for 150 years straight, give or take noise, you'd invest.
Yet you're unwilling to invest in this.
Quote from AAAintheBeltway:
Maybe because he understands the most basic stat concept, that correlation does not prove causation.
Quote from bigdavediode:
Firstly, petitions aren't evidence and those mostly aren't climatologists.
Secondly:
"The petition was so misleading that the National Academy issued a news release stating that:
The petition project was a deliberate attempt to mislead scientists and to rally them in an attempt to undermine support for the Kyoto Protocol. The petition was not based on a review of the science of global climate change, nor were its signers experts in the field of climate science."
Quote from magicdust:
So some pro-warming group with a political axe to grind issued a press release saying "nyah nyah, U R rong?"Of course they did, but that is not exactly evidence in their favour.
And I'm not sure how many of the signers were climatologists, but how many people shooting their mouth off for the pro-warming brigade are climatologists? Show me one and I'll show you another one who dissents.
I respect the views of these 9,000 bona fide scientists more than those of bureaucrats and politicians who have vested interests. Why don't you?
Quote from bigdavediode:
Okay, I'll show you NASA. Now you show me one.
Look, dentists and retired people aren't scientists as usually defined.
It doesn't matter if you are offended by politicians, read the IPCC report. Learn about the Keeling curve.
Then post. [/B]
Quote from magicdust:
Nice try. Mentioning the Keeling curve makes you sound so authoritative. But those 9,000 phDs weren't dentists. Neither are these guys:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o...tream_scientific_assessment_of_global_warming
You know better than them
In the end there are scientists pro and con. And you and I are not scientists. So why do we believe what we believe? Some like to go with the crowd, others fade it. There's a start.
And some get suspicious when vested interests push a certain line and demand money, while others line up to join them and get their snouts in the trough. Where do you fit in?
Quote from magicdust:
So why do we believe what we believe? Some like to go with the crowd, others fade it. There's a start.
And some get suspicious when vested interests push a certain line and demand money, while others line up to join them and get their snouts in the trough. Where do you fit in?
)Quote from wjk:
the Keeling curve (in case anyone wants to know)
http://earthguide.ucsd.edu/globalchange/keeling_curve/01.html
There is no reason to dispute the curve or it's results, as it is an obvservation tool. It measures CO2 levels at a given time, at a given point and altitude, and was designed well ahead of the raging debate. It has been used to measure CO2 since 1958. It has no political bias.
More interesting stuff
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/aggi/
Here is the first paragraph:
"Greenhouse gas changes since the industrial revolution are believed to be closely related to the change in climate that has been observed [IPCC2007]. However, climate projections have model uncertainties which overwhelm the uncertainties in greenhouse gas measurements. In this work we sought an index that was directly proportional to the forcing of climate but with relatively small uncertainty."
As I indicated in my discussions with bigdave, the issue is not the debate for me. The solutions are.