I like this one, it is real, not a scam
Hi,
Bad news for the anti global warming people. I just read an article about scientists reviewing the global warming argument and their conclusion is that although there is some error in the calculation it is not because there is no such thing as man made global warming, it is from a random process. This means the error is just a pickup of noise in the system, which happens to be pulling the numbers down a little at this point in history. Looking over the whole history though shows the general trend is as predicted by several climate models.
To put it another way, imagine we are measuring a voltage in a noisy environment where the average voltage changes slowly with time. We want to figure out what the general trend is of the main voltage generating mechanism and try to ignore the noise. The trouble is, the noise is fairly large relative to what we are measuring. But to state this problem another way, say we have a DC voltage that is increasing from 1v to 10v very slowly, and there is random noise of plus or minus 1v. We measure the voltage at several time points and get the following:
3.0v
4.1v
5.2v
6.0v
so we see it increasing and this agrees with our knowledge about the average voltage increasing.
But looking at the next couple samples we see:
5.9v
5.3v
Does this mean the statement about the average voltage was incorrect? Of course not, what we are seeing is more noise than we did before. Once we see more samples we see:
6.5
7.4
8.9
9.7
so it continues to increase just as we thought.
So the idea is that a temporary dip in the voltage does not discredit the original statement that the average voltage is increasing.
That's just what they determined about the problem of global warming. There is a slight natural trend that shows the prediction is a little high at this time, but the reason for that is the same as above: noise. Once that noise goes away, we'll see a steady rise again.
This is the point I always try to make. It's a question of prudence. The bottom line is that at some point in the near future, humans will have doubled the CO2 content in the atmosphere within about a 200 year time period. That is a very rapid change, and we dont really know the consequences of such a change.So i repeat the question here:
Which of you takes the jump, and which of you dont jump?
Which of you takes the jump, and which of you dont jump?
Agreed. A consensus of opinion on either side of the question is not proof. Your opinion is not proof either. Yes, there are incentives on both sides, not just one side.I don't care how many people say something is so. A consensus of opinion is not proof. And yes, there is a big incentive to promote man made global warming. There are carbon credits to buy and sell. Expensive equipment to manage carbon. Studies and grants to finance. And, what bureaucrats and politicians like the most, government regulation.
You are making hand waving arguments. You have no idea what doubling CO2 in the atmosphere migth do in the future. I dont either. I dont think anyone does. Hence, that's why I recommend prudence. Yes, CO2 concentration seems low, but unless you thoroughly understand all processes, you can't predict the consequences. If you dont know, then dont just stick your head in the sand and ignore it. Likewise, if you don't know, then dont overreact and do something harmful. Prudence implies a middle course of action.Let's talk about CO2 for a bit. Although it is one of the most potent gaseous heat insulators, the Earth's concentration of 300 ppm doesn't seem like much, does it? Considering the huge space between molecules of any gas at 1 atm, and the super low concentration of CO2, there is not much of a heat shield to halt escape back to space, is there? Thankfully, due to our thick atmosphere, some heat does get radiated back to earth so as to give us a warm planet. On Mars, the 1% pressure of Earth atmosphere is over 95% CO2, and it is not very warm there, is it? On Earth, the water vapor in the atmosphere has more of an effect because of its abundant quantity. Are they going to get rid of water vapor, too? They talk about of increased CO2 causing the temp to rise. What is causing what? How about the rising temp being caused by the cyclical increasing solar radiation, and the heated oceans releasing its CO2 that was trapped due to the colder temperature.
Basically, I agree not to rush and overeact and cause harm. However, there are simple precautions that can be taken. Developing new technology and doing simple cost-effective things that reduce carbon emission are prudent things to do, in my opinion. Those things could even have benefits that outweigh drawbacks.And finally, don't forget that we have had warmer periods way before the industrial revolution. So my advice is not to rush to expensive programs and methods until it is proven beyond a doubt what the cause and effect is. Otherwise it is akin to spending ourselves poor preparing for a possible alien invasion from space. After all, it possibly maybe could happen.
Ratch, I dont know why you name me in your response. I dont have a strong opinion about what science is saying about this subject. As I've said before, I dont have the training and I have not put the time into studying the issue well enough. I'm a highly skeptical person anyway, and even if I spent time on this, I'm not sure I would have a confident opinion. I think this is a hard question and the science is in the too-early stages for my liking. But, it is an important question and the answer does matter significantly to humans.
My basic comments in this thread are about prudence. That is, taking a middle ground position to keep studying and doing basic things to prepare.
Agreed. A consensus of opinion on either side of the question is not proof. Your opinion is not proof either. Yes, there are incentives on both sides, not just one side.
You are making hand waving arguments. You have no idea what doubling CO2 in the atmosphere migth do in the future. I dont either. I dont think anyone does. Hence, that's why I recommend prudence. Yes, CO2 concentration seems low, but unless you thoroughly understand all processes, you can't predict the consequences. If you dont know, then dont just stick your head in the sand and ignore it. Likewise, if you don't know, then dont overreact and do something harmful. Prudence implies a middle course of action.
Basically, I agree not to rush and overeact and cause harm. However, there are simple precautions that can be taken. Developing new technology and doing simple cost-effective things that reduce carbon emission are prudent things to do, in my opinion. Those things could even have benefits that outweigh drawbacks.
Ratch:
Again you bring up money when it has already been established (by Steve) that there are money issues on both sides, so that should level the argument to a draw (no win either side).
You also seem to bring up a comparative argument that is not commensurate with the one of global warming. We cant do anything about an alien attack if there was to be one, but if there was to be bad global warming we think we can do something about that.
From your post it does seem like you are hinting at one valid point though, and that is the comparison of the percent of global warming made by man vs the percent of global warming made by nature that we dont have any control over. If it turns out that man made GW is only 10 percent more than natural GW then we only speed up the process by a somewhat small factor. So humanity dies off 10 percent sooner and so we shouldnt worry about it as much as we are now. I think that is valid, except we dont know what the ratio is, i dont think.
Seriously you must believe there is at least some global warming made by man, even if a small percent of natural GW.
Rarely two choices, but that's all we have for the global warming problem. Either we accept that it is valid or we dont.
What if there are money issues? That only establishes why there is a contention, not whether one party or the other is right or wrong.
Ratch
Thats why I said you only have two choices when you don't know what you are doing and so far the vast majority of scientific analysis has shown that we do not know what we are doing yet.
Scientifically we know that CO2 rise follows temperature change not leads it yet its continually ignored. We know that water vapor has a huge part in temperature regulation yet assume that one of theleeser greenhouse gasss changing its influence by a percent or so is beyond the water vapors ability to adjust for yet it's already known that water vapor can easily make huge adjustments on its own when other factors occasionally affect the overall regulating balance globally.
We know that the suns solar output varies a bit over short and long cycles have measured it and found that it is slightly higher than the levels it was a few decades ago yet ignore that because it does not fit any political/financial agenda.
We know that everyone behind the human influence theory points out every possible worst what if scenario yet so far given the track record and time lines of every prediction so far none of it has happened or even came remotely close having started yet every measurable gain that says things have improved some place gets totally ignored.
What we know. Statistically half the people say the climate warmed up a fraction of a degree. We also know that in complex systems statistics and those who use them can easily be wrong or lie.
We know horrific doomsday scenarios were said to be guaranteed to have happened by this time yet zero have came anywhere close to have occurred and most turn out to have went the opposite way but the vast majority still ignore that fact.
We know from past human history that any degree of slight global cooling drastically makes our lives worse in countless ways and that every indication that when things went above the average temperature for any period of time everything in our human culture greatly improved yet we seem terrified that if things get warmer again bad stuff will happen this time.
Lastly anyone who argues against any of this online typically gets immediately called out on where are your sources as if they are writing a graduation thesis, term paper or official formal report and what not when every single person full well knows that they too can find any of the said info themselves if they got off their lazy butts and did a online search and any degree of unbiased reading on any part or fine detail of any of the topics related to the discussion.
Personally given present verified data past historical data and examples plus personal opinions based on how many times the politicians and doomsday sayers have came up wrong I for one say bring the heat and np I am not showing you my references as to why I say it!
There is more than one question implied here. There are probably many, but there are two key questions in my mind. I think both questions are hard. Perhaps you can claim that one question is not hard, but I don't think you can claim that both questions are are not hard to answer.... I don't think this is a hard question ...
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