2005 Was the Hottest Year on Record
Gulthek writes "As predicted, 2005 was the hottest year since accurate temperature recording began in the late 1800s.
This news is all the more interesting because 2005 was not an "El Niño" year like 1998, the previous record holder."
See the "Record Fallacy" at:
numberwatch get with the maths, people...
The question is not the present economics, which undoubtedly offer big initial costs to make any dent in global climate, nor about the potential present gains from climate change (e.g. longer growing season in temperate latitudes). The question is what happens in a century or two. The scientific community now speaks basically in unison saying it looks pretty grim. People can point to the various uncertainties in models all they like, but the driving mechanisms are rock-solid. It is a huge mistake to continue to pump carbon into the atmosphere, period. By whatever metric, this is not a "good" for humanity. If this massive forcing is stopped, the earth could well move itself into another mode, but the cost of dealing merely with rising sea level will be staggering.
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=192
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=180
You are forgetting that at some point, theories start having practical consequences. You seem to want to argue that science is just one big theoretical head game that has no bearing on real life existence. While your specious argument is true---that there is no such thing as absolute truth---you ignores the simple fact that we can apply usually apply well-examined and tested theories to reality and can use them to explain and predict phenomena around us.
---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.
I just wish there would be more science in the discussion rather than "Global Warming is happening, we need to act NOW!!!"
There is pleanty of science it is just being ignored and replaced by annecdotes and references to other times in the earths past the weather has changed.
The fact is that greenhouse gasses causes a greenhouse effect, the question is, how significant is that effect?
The fact is that the Earths average temperature is rising, the question is why?