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Cosmic Rays and Global Warming

Overly Critical Guy writes "The former editor of New Scientist has written an article in the TimesOnline suggesting that cosmic rays may affect global climate. The author criticizes the UN's recent global warming report, noting several underreported trends it doesn't account for, such as increasing sea-ice in the Southern Ocean. He describes an experiment by Henrik Svensmark showing a relation between atmospheric cloudiness and atomic particles coming in from exploded stars. In the basement of the Danish National Space Center in 2005, Svensmark's team showed that electrons from cosmic rays caused cloud condensation. Svensmark's scenario apparently predicts several unexplained temperature trends from the warmer trend of the 20th century to the temporary drop in the 1970s, attributed to changes in the sun's magnetic field affecting the amount of cosmic rays entering the atmosphere."

548 comments

  1. cult of global warming by timmarhy · · Score: 4, Funny

    oh noes he discredited the cult of global warming! he MUST be in the pocket of big business.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    1. Re:cult of global warming by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 2, Informative

      While it is possible that he is wrong, it wouldn't be the first time one guy turned out to be right over the establishment, anyone remember a man a long time ago called Galileo Galilei.

    2. Re:cult of global warming by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      anyone remember a man a long time ago called Galileo Galilei.

      Indeed! The fact that men like Galileo exist is proof that every lone nutter with a theory is utterly correct!

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    3. Re:cult of global warming by Oracle+of+Bandwidth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And by this line of thought if this man turned out to be wrong, it would be a valid argument against gravity? All I'm saying is if his work has merit he won't be considered a crackpot for long, and it makes it worth at least looking at his claim.

    4. Re:cult of global warming by timmarhy · · Score: 2

      because you seem extra slow and posted the same thing below, i'll say it again. he was part of a team. not a lone nut. READ THE FUCKING ARTICLE.

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      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    5. Re:cult of global warming by Broken+scope · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I may have read it wrong, but I don't think his theory accounts for every bit of the temperature change.

      --
      You mad
    6. Re:cult of global warming by edwardpickman · · Score: 2, Informative

      He's pointing out another possible contributing factor. There are lots of them including volcanic activity. The one thing none of it adequately accounts for is the spike in CO2. No one is disputing the CO2 spike is manmade. All the other factors are within normal levels and would not account for an unpresidented spike in CO2. If he was working for corporate america he'd claim Spotted Owls were causing the CO2 and cutting down the forests would reduce the number of the little CO2 machines. No reputible sources are disputing global warming and that humans are the cause. The only issues are how bad it'll be and if it can be stopped. If you notice our flipflopping President quitely acknowledged global warming and that we are the cause. Amazing the press gave him a pass on this since he went from saying global warming wasn't proven to accepted science overnight with zero fanfare. If CO2 levels are any indication we are in for a rough ride. I hate to break it to the flat earthers but there is a well established correlation between CO2 levels and temperature. If CO2 levels are even close Florida may be the first state in the union to give fish the right to vote.

    7. Re:cult of global warming by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      Indeed! The fact that men like Galileo exist is proof that every lone nutter with a theory is utterly correct!

      That reminded me of two Robert A. Heinlein quotes (in the voice of Lazarus Long):

      "Democracy is based on the assumption that a million men are wiser than one man. How's that again? I missed something."

      "Autocracy is based on the assumption that one man is wiser than a million men. Let's play that over again, too. Who decides?"

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      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    8. Re: cult of global warming by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > oh noes he discredited the cult of global warming! he MUST be in the pocket of big business.

      I'm just glad to hear that all those $10K awards didn't go to waste.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    9. Re:cult of global warming by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      oh noes he discredited the cult of global warming! he MUST be in the pocket of big business.

      I'm sure he's at the bank cashing his Exxon check right now!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    10. Re:cult of global warming by letxa2000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      No reputible sources are disputing global warming and that humans are the cause.

      RTFA. From the article:

      After long delays in scraping together the funds for an experiment, Svensmark and his small team at the Danish National Space Center hit the jackpot in the summer of 2005. In a box of air in the basement, they were able to show that electrons set free by cosmic rays coming through the ceiling stitched together droplets of sulphuric acid and water. These are the building blocks for cloud condensation. But journal after journal declined to publish their report; the discovery finally appeared in the Proceedings of the Royal Society late last year.

      Those 5 sentences say soooo much that so many people would like to ignore. 1) That there is a very major factor involved in cloud formation that, if anything, the IPCC is paying less attention to. 2) That the "peer reviewed" journals are indeed rejecting valid research that contradicts the herd mentality of human-induced global warming. 3) Contrary to what some people would like to believe, not all real scientists agree with the IPCC version of global warming. 4) These three things combined really DO undermine a heck of a lot of what the IPCC and their ilk is campaigning behind.

    11. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The IPCC accounts for even less of the temperature change. And keep reporting that they're learning more; just look at the IPCC reports and see in each new report how little was known in the previous report when they mention "progress" and "significant progress" in learning more about climate.

    12. Re:cult of global warming by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      10 years ago they were saying that global warming proponents were right over the establishment.

    13. Re:cult of global warming by fyngyrz · · Score: 2, Funny

      I hereby revoke your tree-hugging license for use of facts without intention to mislead. Please report to your neighborhood global warming organization for immediate compositing.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    14. Re:cult of global warming by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      From what I read, man made smoke is only about 3% of the amount released by volcanos. So I don't think the spike in CO2 is entirely man made. I can remember my geography teacher blabbing about a spike in volcanism around the Pacific rim too.

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    15. Re:cult of global warming by gundersd · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There may be a correlation, but that doesn't mean that there's a cause-effect relationship between CO2 levels and temperature. I've seen it argued that due to things like the 800 year lag, it's unlikely, at least for the first 800 years of the cycle, that CO2 *causes* the temperature increase, and in fact in previous cycles it's probably been the other way around. One theory I read was that with increased temperature the oceans lose their ability to trap CO2 so it gets released into the atmosphere. (Note that the first link I gave above explains why high CO2 levels may still be a problem despite this). Anyway, all I wanted to say was that the relationship is no doubt many times more complex than Al Gore and some other alarmists would have you believe. P.S. I think it's worth pointing out that I'm not a supporter of big-oil or corporate interests or anything like that. I'm only interested in having the full story told. Regardless of the debate I'm still doing everything in my power to reduce my personal contribution to CO2 emissions because I'd rather not take any chances with this planet that we call home. I'd love for it to still be able to support a diversity of life for many years into the future.

    16. Re:cult of global warming by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Informative

      "....it makes it worth at least looking at his claim"

      It has been looked at, and will definitely be "looked at" again iff someone were to come up with a new idea.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    17. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at your graph of the "CO2 spike" and notice it does not begin at zero. Paste it to the top of a page of paper and add a line with the missing values ... 300...200..100..0. Use as many pages as you need. How big is that spike now?

    18. Re:cult of global warming by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 0, Troll

      Thirty years ago they were calling for an Ice Age.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    19. Re:cult of global warming by Nuroman · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should read more than "Rush Limbaugh and Haliburton's Guide to Global Warming". http://www.romansland.nl/globalwarming That's a lot of freakin' new volcanos since 1750.

    20. Re:cult of global warming by polar+red · · Score: 1

      May I point out that the global-warming theory was just as accepted outside the scientific community 10 years ago as was Galileo with his theory ?

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      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    21. Re:cult of global warming by mstone · · Score: 4, Informative

      ---- No reputible sources are disputing global warming and that humans are the cause.

      Uh, think again.

      There's a fairly solid consensus that global mean temperatures have gone up about 1.5C in the last hundred and fifty years. There's good proof that humans are putting a significant amount of CO2 into the atmosphere. There's still a lot of room for discussion of how much effect anthropogenic CO2 has on the global mean temperature, though.

      Most scientists say, "at least some," but it's hard to pin anyone down to specific numbers. First and foremost, we don't understand the atmosphere well enough to say we know what acounts for natural variation. We know very little about the cloud system, for instance, which has a significant effect on planetary temperature.

      If you want to make scientific statements about anthropogenic global warming, you need to be able to answer the following questions:

      1. What's the margin for error in the sample data, both for historical temperature levels and historical CO2 levels?
      2. What's the standard deviation of the historical temperature data?
      3. What's the exact coefficient of correlation between atmospheric CO2 and global mean temperature?

      All measurements have some error, and you can't make meaningful statements about numbers smaller than that error. For most scientific work, an error margin of 5% is considered acceptable. I don't happen to know the error for converting 500-year-old tree ring data to global mean temperature, for instance, but I'd be surprised to find it less than 5%. The same is true for extrapolating global CO2 levels from a microliter of prehistoric gas trapped in an ice core sample.

      By the same token, all real data populations have some amount of variation. It might be very small, or it might be very large. Statistically, about 2/3 of a sample falls within one standard deviation (aka: sigma) of the average. That means a variation of less than one sigma is 2/3 likely to be perfectly natural, and only 1/3 likely to be caused by external factors.

      And finally we have coefficient of correlation. A CoC of .95 means that when factor A goes up, factor B also goes up 95% of the time. Again, it's scientifically invalid to claim correlations greater than your CoC.

      So.. the scientifically valid way to discuss anthropogenic global warming is to say it's X% certain that anthropogenic CO2 accounts for Y degrees of variation in global mean temperature, plus or minus Z degrees of error.

      And let's face it, when you carve out a 5% error for basic measurement, figure a standard deviation of between .4C and .75C in the historical temperature data, then factor in a CoC of .8 or so (which is generous for real-world science), there isn't much room left for sweeping pronouncements. If you want to be 95% certain that Y degrees of variation are due to human-produced CO2, you have to set Y somewhere around .1C.

    22. Re:cult of global warming by Mr2cents · · Score: 1

      So they built a bubble chamber? Impressive. I still can't see how that could just invalidate the effect of greenhouse gasses. And a regional coldening could well be the result of changing sea currents, for example. I don't see how that would be a counter-indication of global warming either. Global temperatures are rising. Glaciers are melting. So basically, it smells like FUD to me.

      --
      "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    23. Re:cult of global warming by logicnazi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yah, and every day every physics department in the world recieves letters from nutters who think they've discovered the ultimate theory of everything in their basement.

      So sure is it logically possible this guy is right and the rest of the scientific establishment wrong? Sure, though there are some quite compelling reasons not to think cosmic rays explain climate change. It's also logically possible that Xenu really did bring 50 billion aliens to earth on DC-10s and kill them with hydrogen bombs. Do you think we should plan for the future based on mainstream science or the threat from the thetans?

      The question is how likely is this guy to be right. Now if you happen to be a climate scientists you should evaluate that based only on the merits of the idea, i.e., the evidence for it. If you don't read climate science papers and keep up with the subject it is just idiotic for you to evaluate the merits of his theory. Instead you have to compare the credibility of the vast vast majority of the scientific establishment and a few dissenters. There isn't much of a contest here.

      Let's put the issue a little bit more concretely. Suppose some guy comes up to you with a proposal to mine gold based on a new process for leaching it from rocks other companies are ignoring. He wants you to invest money in his company but when you consult experts in chemistry, mining and geology they all tell you he is a complete quack and his idea is completely bogus. Would you invest?

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    24. Re:cult of global warming by logicnazi · · Score: 1

      Or, could it be....maybe the research is actually crap and that's why they didn't accept it?

      Maybe there are valid reasons for not believing that cosmic rays provide a good explanation for the data (say like the ones that a search on realclimate.org will turn up)?

      I think it's safe to assume that you are actually not a climate science researcher. As such you don't actually have the ability to evaluate whether or not this guy's work is compelling or crap. In fact all you can do is decide who to believe in a he said she said. Except one side is the vast vast majority of scientists and the other side ia a handful of climate deniers.

      So are you really suggesting that the claims made by the small handful of climate deniers are more credible than the scientific establishment? If not what is your evidence that my interpretation isn't the correct one?

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    25. Re:cult of global warming by sunwukong · · Score: 3, Informative

      RealClimate discussed these results back in October ...

    26. Re:cult of global warming by bogjobber · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If you don't read climate science papers and keep up with the subject it is just idiotic for you to evaluate the merits of his theory. Instead you have to compare the credibility of the vast vast majority of the scientific establishment and a few dissenters.

      Here's a thought: if someone presents a seemingly valid hypothesis and you aren't expert enough to assert if it is false or not, you either attempt to gain more knowledge or you reserve judgment. I know the appeal to authority thing is always in vogue, but that is not the rational reaction. Science is always wrecking accepted viewpoints. Very often those "few dissenters" prove the established majority wrong. You shouldn't dismiss arguments solely on the basis of current popularity. Climate change is still very much a science undergoing constant changes and revisions. It is very possible that many of our current theories are false. I'm not saying he's right or anything, but that is horrible, horrible argument you're making.

      You always, always, evaluate the merits of the theory. If you can't and are incapable of making that judgement, then you shouldn't.

    27. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. I'm with him.. RTFA

      oops, hope you not alone now?

    28. Re:cult of global warming by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Autocracy is based on the assumption that one man is wiser than a million men.

      No, autocracy is based on the idea that this one man can get rid of anyone who opposes him.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    29. Re:cult of global warming by digitig · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, Galileo is proof that a lone nutter with enough theories can fluke it occasionally. After all, most of Galileo's crank theories have been quietly forgotten, and what Galileo got into trouble with the authorities for wasn't so much for resurrecting the (then) long discredited heliocentric theory, but rather for suggesting that anybody who disagreed (up to and including the Pope) was a simpleton.

      So what we really need to learn from Galileo is that just because a theory is espoused by a lone nutter doesn't mean it's necessarily wrong.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    30. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "No reputible sources are disputing global warming and that humans are the cause. "

      No reputable sources are disputing the claim that edwardpickman is a dickhead.

      Last I heard, science did not depend on reputations. I can be a mad, axe-wielding child rapist with no mathematical skill whatsoever, but if I find a valid hole in Einstein, down goes Relativity.

      It's the TRUTH, stupid. Unless you'd prefer to vote on whether a theory should be aceptable or not?

    31. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I still can't see..." "I don't see how..."

      So, you're stupid. What can we say? RTFA until you get a clue.

    32. Re:cult of global warming by lm317t · · Score: 1

      Isn't the percentage of CO2 that man produces like 1/20th that of the earths? I searched the other day for hours trying to find out what the ratio was. Here is a page from the DOE:
      http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/1605/gg97rpt/chap1.htm l

      Sure man plays a part in this CO2 equation, and we need to change our ways, but it seems to me like the Chicken Littles have really tried to hide this "inconvenient fact" because it doesn't fit their agenda or might "confuse" the overzealous enviromentalist cheerleaders who need to be spoon fed their thoughts.

      --
      EOF
    33. Re:cult of global warming by tscoreninja · · Score: 5, Informative

      he MUST be in the pocket of big business. Actually he probably wants to promote the book he is going to publish. So he definitely is in it for the money. Also, he selectively quotes results, while omitting contrary findings. Just a few aspects from the artikel:

      While sea-ice has diminished in the Arctic since 1978, it has grown by 8% in the Southern Ocean.... Why is east Antarctica getting colder?" It makes no sense at all if carbon dioxide is driving global warming. Other sources present a completely different picture :

      'The greatest temperature rise on Earth over the past five decades has been found on the Antarctic peninsula, which stretches north from the continent towards South America,' said Dr John Turner. 'Temperatures have risen 5C on the peninsula.' That figure is 10 times the average global temperature rise for the same period. In addition, researchers reported last October that in just over a month, an entire Antarctic ice shelf, bigger than Gloucestershire, had disintegrated and disappeared, with its loss directly linked to man-made global warming. Also, why does not he mention the fact that the original Svensmark paper has been disproofed? His claim

      But more than 10 years have passed since Henrik Svensmark in Copenhagen first pointed out a much more powerful mechanism. He saw from compilations of weather satellite data that cloudiness varies according to how many atomic particles are coming in from exploded stars. More cosmic rays, more clouds. is simply wrong: See Damen and Laut, 2004, available at http://www.realclimate.org/damon&laut_2004.pdf

      An update with the correct data (from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Program,ISCCP) shows that the development of total global cloud cover since 1992 has been in clear contradiction to the hypothesis proposed by the authors So decide for yourself how unbiased the author is.
    34. Re:cult of global warming by syphax · · Score: 2, Informative


      Read the table. Look at the net flux of natural CO2 sources and sinks. Look at the manmade flux for comparision. Look here.

      There are some people out there who dispute the human impact on atmospheric CO2 trends, but this particular issue is a smoking gun. The data fits, and there is no plausible alternative hypothesis that explains the very striking trend in CO2 emissions (highest in 400k years, by a lot). If you want to pick apart global warming, spend your time on the climate sensitivity bit, not on the CO2 concentration part.

      --
      Simple Unexpected Concrete Credible Emotional Stories
    35. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In case there are any impressionable children watching, the above is nonsense. The discussion above implies one observation was drawn from "tree ring data", rather than many many observations from many different sources. I'm not a climate scientist, but I'm certain that as in epedemiology or econometrics, doing statitistics in the presence of noisy and uncertain processes is difficult and contentious; but keep in mind that among real scientists there is widespread agreement about the relationship between carbon emissions and global warming. The poster above is just faking / farting in the thread.

    36. Re:cult of global warming by Dilaudid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It has been looked at, and will definitely be "looked at" again iff someone were to come up with a new idea. It's been looked at by a climatology blog with a history of slagging off anyone who disagrees with them. I think he meant serious, peer reviewed investigation.

      From the blog:

      At RealClimate, we've often criticised press releases that we felt gave misleading impressions of the underlying work and lead to confused, and sometimes erroneous, headlines, but this example is by far the most blatant The most blatant press release - probably since the last ice age?

      It's as though Svensmark and co. want to enhance the field of solar-terrestrial research's bad reputation for agenda-driven science. In case the writers didn't know - environmentalists are also widely regarded as having a bad reputation for agenda-driven science, hence the title "the cult of global warming". They may be right, but blogs like this don't help.
    37. Re:cult of global warming by ccarson · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Here are some facts about global warming. Some of which you hear and don't hear from the main stream media:

      1.) The world appears to be getting warmer with many computer models showing an increase in global temperature.

      2.) Tying a trend to warmer temperatures based on older data from the early 1900's is suspect at best. Good, reliable, accurate scientific equipment that measures the temperature wasn't readily available until recently (late 1900's).

      3.) Apparently, the Earth magnetic field has decreased by 10% in the last 150 years (source: http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/earth_magnet ic_031212.html). I'm an electrical engineer and during my studies in particle physics, I learned that a particles velocity can be affected by magnetic fields. I believe it's possible that more of the Sun's radiation is penetrating the Earth's magnetosphere ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth's_magnetic_fiel d ) due to it being weaker. If more radiation hits the Earth, shouldn't that also increase the overall temperature of the Earth and can global warming be attributed to this?

      4.) Jupitor is experiencing the same climate change that Earth is. (source: http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/060504_red_j r.html [space.com])

      5.) Mars is experiencing the same climate change that Earth is. (source: http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/solarsystem/ mars_snow_011206-1.html and http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/new s/news.html?in_article_id=410901&in_page_id=1770)

      How can you explain the recent same climate changes on different planets? I doubt it's all those cars being driven there.

      6.) The United Nations found that there is more Methane produced from livestock, which raises global temperature greater than CO2 by a factor of approx. 20, than any human caused CO2 combined (source: http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2006/1000448/i ndex.html)

      Is it possible that the warmer temperatures that Earth is experiencing are caused by cyclical natural phenomena? What about glaciers in Greenland that have been shrinking for 100 years (source: http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/08/21/060821191 826.o0mynclv.html [breitbart.com])? Also, how do you explain huge ice ages on Earth? Were thse caused by huge carbon emissions or was it a small natural climate cycle that just happens? Were those climate changes, which are no doubt more extreme than what's going on now, caused by the combustion engine? I don't have answers and everyone seems to have an opinion including a Nobel laureate who says the answer is more pollution (source: http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/science/11/16/smog.wa rming.ap/index.html)

      One last thing. Lets say we all buy into the fact that we're causing the climate change through CO2. Regardless of what actions we (America) take, China will still produce more CO2 than anyone because they want to get rich. There's no stopping it folks.

    38. Re:cult of global warming by syphax · · Score: 1
      Your link also states:

      Natural processes--primarily, uptake by the ocean and photosynthesis--absorb substantially all of the naturally produced carbon dioxide and some of the anthropogenic carbon dioxide, leading to an annual net increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of 3.1 to 3.5 billion metric tons.
      .

      Again, there's plenty of uncertainty in global warming science, but this ain't it.

      --
      Simple Unexpected Concrete Credible Emotional Stories
    39. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....The question is how likely is this guy to be right........

      No, that is NOT the question. One of the statements in the article is that the ice in the north has diminished wile the ice in the south has increased. That is simple evidence that ought to be verifiable by any decent climatologist. If this evidence is true, then these smart guys who think greenhouse gases cause global warming, ought to be able to come up with an interpretation of this evidence.

      Historically, the establishment science has be wrong far more often than right. Historically, REPUTABLE scientists, believed the earth was flat and believed in spontaneous generation of life and other crap that was later shown by a single person to be just that, crap and wrong. There have been many, if not most widely held 'accepted' ideas that were eventually overthrown by the lone researcher who found some embarrassing evidence that refuted the then current ideas. The very idea that climate is cyclical makes sense simply from the known fact that most things in nature are that way. We have obvious cycles, such as days, seasons and years and not so obvious ones such as the sun's output and the slight wobble of the earth as it orbits. Some cycles may be centuries or millennia. So what is so strange then about the idea that climate is also cyclical? There is a fair amount of historical evidence that this is so.

      --
      All theory is gray
    40. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Indeed! The fact that men like Galileo exist is proof that every lone nutter with a theory is utterly correct!"

      I subscribe to the "Most Galileos are clowns" theory, which hypothesizes that for every present-day Galileo in the world who truly does have a revolutionary idea suppressed by the status quo, there are thousands of clowns who *think* they are like Galileo but wouldn't know the real scientific process if it dropped like a cannon ball on top of their head from the height of the Tower of Pisa.

      I call a related assertion the "Galinthropic Principle". It is founded on the idea that *every* so-called modern Galileo can't actually be one, because a universe probably can't exist in which every whacked-out idea proposed by all of them is simultaneously correct.

    41. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....No reputible sources are disputing global warming......

      At one time reputable sources believed in spontaneous generation of organisms, the phlogiston theory of heat and cold. All sorts of other things that someone who was considered to be a NUT at the time, later became accepted because the earlier ideas were eventually CRUSHED by the mounting evidence. Mounting evidence that climate, like many things in nature is cyclical, will eventually demolish the now briefly politically correct idea that humans are the cause of global warming. Global warming is of course there, but it is part of the normal cyclical nature of our planet. It seems that human arrogance has no boundaries, to think that we humans can influence the large scale climate of the entire planet! One hurricane, such as the devastating Kathrina, involves more energy than mankind has used in its entire history. The Krakatoa volcano released far more energy and dust into the atmosphere than all the nuclear weapons of mankind exploding there all at once ever could. We humans should not give ourselves such proud airs as if we had much say-so over this world we live in. We should however take care of how we treat this planet, since we did not make it and are not its owners. We should above all learn to live in peace and love with one another, rather than worry about global warming.

      --
      All theory is gray
    42. Re:cult of global warming by lm317t · · Score: 1

      I read the whole thing, and I saw that the earth is not quite absorbing all man's CO2, but what you're missing is the point that this information is buried deep, not in the link, but in all the global warming propaganda out there. If you don't believe me try to find it from a source that is not anti-global warming. I believe it is masked because it doesn't fit the sensationalist agenda and difficult to explain to the average person. When some scientists bury facts like this it is damaging to all, and shows a lack of objectivity.

      I agree with you that something needs to be done to mans pollution footprint, I just believe that mans effect has been exaggerated because sensationalism and drama is a revenue generator and can be a source of political and social power. This is not abnormal and happens with many non-scientific issues as well, and it makes me sick.

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      EOF
    43. Re:cult of global warming by elrous0 · · Score: 2, Funny
      For those of you skeptical of the powerful effects of cosmic radiation, don't forget what happened to Dr. Reed Richards.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    44. Re:cult of global warming by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In my heart, I really hope this global warming stuff isn't due to human activity. As someone who drove a Dodge SuperBee back in the late 70's, I'd hate to think I contributed to such a global catastrophe. But from a practical standpoint, it makes some sense that more than a century of toxic emissions might cause some problems on the planet. Drive I-80 East past Gary, Ind and tell me you don't think human activity can mess up the environment. Do it without holding your nose for full effect.

      And those of you who like to throw Galileo's name around in support of your agenda, just remember, NOT EVERYONE IS CONVINCED.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    45. Re:cult of global warming by Byzboy · · Score: 1
      >Historically, the establishment science has be wrong far more often than right. Historically, REPUTABLE scientists, believed the earth was flat and believed in spontaneous generation of life and other crap that was later shown by a single person to be just that, crap and wrong. There have been many, if not most widely held 'accepted' ideas that were eventually overthrown by the lone researcher who found some embarrassing evidence that refuted the then current ideas.

      Bullshit

      If it was true that the scientific establishment was mostly wrong and often being overturned. Then how, HOW could science progress????? This idea of yours is so fanciful it's not even wrong. It is extremely rare for a lone individual to come up with some revolutionaty theory that contradicts the established science. That is why we make such a big deal about them when it occassionaly happens. As for the flat earth which reputable scientists? Science is a modern construct. Anyway who do you think came up with the notion of a spherical earth, the poets. Spontanoeus life, they were/are right. Or do you believe in ID and creationism. What you seem to miss and this is common to many people outside (but not exclusive) of the scientific community is that theories may change, be revised., amended, abandoned but information becomes more reliable.ie New theories gain favour not because they replace wrong theories but because they account for the data (both old and new) better than the original theory. Science never abandons reliable data and all theories must account for it. Those that account for it the best become the scientific dogma of the day. That's why Newton wasn't wrong, his theory on gravity isn't adequate to explain galaxy formation but its excellent for interplanetary predictions.

    46. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Indeed! The fact that men like Galileo exist is proof that every lone nutter with a theory is utterly correct!"

      by this logic Al Gore takes is the smartest man alive..... (yikes)

    47. Re:cult of global warming by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      Here's a thought: if someone presents a seemingly valid hypothesis and you aren't expert enough to assert if it is false or not, you either attempt to gain more knowledge or you reserve judgment. I know the appeal to authority thing is always in vogue, but that is not the rational reaction. Science is always wrecking accepted viewpoints. Very often those "few dissenters" prove the established majority wrong. You shouldn't dismiss arguments solely on the basis of current popularity. Climate change is still very much a science undergoing constant changes and revisions. It is very possible that many of our current theories are false. I'm not saying he's right or anything, but that is horrible, horrible argument you're making.

      You always, always, evaluate the merits of the theory. If you can't and are incapable of making that judgement, then you shouldn't.
      That's part of the problem with the scientific community today - they don't do that any more (if they ever did) - they merely say "this does not align with everyone else, so go take a hike".
      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    48. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watch the languange, arrogant prick.

    49. Re:cult of global warming by aussie_a · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Troll.

    50. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you miss the point that "Catholic Apologetics International" is a parody/satire site?

    51. Re:cult of global warming by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      Those 5 sentences say soooo much that so many people would like to ignore. That there is a very major factor involved in cloud formation that, if anything, the IPCC is paying less attention to. Those 5 sentences do not actually establish that cosmic rays are a "very major factor" involved in cloud formation, let alone climate change. Others have already referred you to disputes of that claim; I can dig up journal references too if you like.

      2) That the "peer reviewed" journals are indeed rejecting valid research that contradicts the herd mentality of human-induced global warming. It is actually possible for a paper to be rejected from a journal for legitimate reasons, you know. Pretty much every scientist has had a paper rejected at one point or another. We don't know what the drafts looked like, or what the rejection letters said. It could be, for instance, that the original version of the paper made speculative claims that were broader than what could be supported by the evidence. Or perhaps it was submitted to journals that specialize in different topics; sometimes you have to guess which topics the editors of a particular journal are most interested in, and resubmit to a different journal when you guess wrong.

      3) Contrary to what some people would like to believe, not all real scientists agree with the IPCC version of global warming. That's true, but that also doesn't imply that the IPCC version is wrong.

      4) These three things combined really DO undermine a heck of a lot of what the IPCC and their ilk is campaigning behind. By "a heck of a lot" you mean "very little", right? All that Svensmark et al. claimed in their paper was an effect studied in a laboratory. They did not provide evidence supporting the important of this mechanism in actual cloud formation in the atmosphere, nor did they provide evidence that this mechanism is is influencing climate change. (Or at least, they didn't in their paper. What they claimed in their press releases is a different matter.)
    52. Re:cult of global warming by ajs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, the linked article is fairly good for Real Climate. They do the usual dance of trying to demonstrate that anyone who doesn't want to throw all SUVs into the ocean can't be a real scientist (while villifying anyone who works on studying the Sun), but they do cover well the VAST gulf between this theory and a practical resolution to the warming trend of the last century. This work in no way ANSWERS any questions.

      It does shed some light on some areas of uncertainty, and that's a good thing. I quote Real Climate, "Svensmark's paper itself is indeed of some interest. Aerosol processes are among the most uncertain, and most studied, aspects of climate and these experiments might be useful in adding to that field." I'd agree, and I look forward to more work in that area... assuming that these researchers aren't denied funding on the basis of having become "too controvercial", which is the typical fate of anyone who brings the "consensus" into question....

    53. Re:cult of global warming by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      I read the whole thing, and I saw that the earth is not quite absorbing all man's CO2, but what you're missing is the point that this information is buried deep, not in the link, but in all the global warming propaganda out there. If you don't believe me try to find it from a source that is not anti-global warming. Don't be ridiculous. You can find it in any scientific discussion of the carbon cycle, even in undergraduate textbooks. It's not mentioned in the media because it's not that important to global warming. Anthropogenic CO2 is a minority of the total CO2 in the atmosphere, but that's not what is really relevant: the natural CO2 in the atmosphere sets the baseline for temperature (e.g. pre-industrial climate). But when you're talking about global warming, you are looking at what's responsible for the increase of temperature above that baseline. For that, you need to look at what is responsible for the increase of CO2 above the CO2 baseline. The vast majority of that increase is due to anthropogenic sources.
    54. Re:cult of global warming by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      REPUTABLE scientists, believed the earth was flat

      You're talking out your ass. Almost since the beginning of civilization, and well before science as we know it developed, knowledgeable people were aware that the earth was not flat. The ancient Greeks had calculated the diameter of the earth to a high degree of accuracy. It's highly unlikely that anybody who we would call a "scientist" has ever believed that the earth is flat. (Even the urban legend about Columbus arguing that the earth isn't flat is wrong. In fact, Columbus was wrong and had misinterpreted other peoples' calculations and assumed that the earth was about half of its actual size; the people who he was arguing with knew the actual diameter and correctly assumed that he could not sail with enough supplies to make it to China non-stop.)

    55. Re:cult of global warming by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      He'll never do the weather on the Weather Channel. Freak!

    56. Re:cult of global warming by digitrev · · Score: 1

      Another alternative is that they accept that man-made emissions are causing this recent climate change, but they're showing other evidence that the popular theories have yet to account for. If your theory can't account for the evidence, then you have to change your theory to fit the new evidence, as well as the old.

      I have two major problems with the IPCC at the moment. First off, (and someone please prove me wrong on this one [with links]), I have heard reports that the IPCC is tailoring the report to fit the summary. Secondly, their best theories still do not account for all the evidence, especially the evidence that would (to a person with no scientific background) prove them wrong.

      That isn't to say that they aren't right, they just aren't right enough yet. They have to be able to fully explain the things that seem to counter their evidence.

      Finally, I have every right to be sceptical of anyone and everyone who tries to tell me something. The onus is on you to fully convince me that you are correct.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    57. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      ......are more credible than the scientific establishment?......

      If it had never happened that the majority of people were WRONG about anything and the lone voice in the wilderness shown to be correct in the end, then that argument "the majority of (fill in the blank here) are correct, then such a hollow reasoning might be at least partially valid. Historically, the "establishment" has been wrong far more often than anyone making confident assertions in the field of science ought to be comfortable with. Stating that the majority is right about anything they believe because of the fact they ARE the majority is probably the stupidest asserting any human can make. Unfortunately that is how it is in science, politics and religion. Unfortunately, it seems that most here on /. are buying that dumb argument also.

      --
      All theory is gray
    58. Re:cult of global warming by Sven+Tuerpe · · Score: 1

      Suppose some guy comes up to you with a proposal to mine gold based on a new process for leaching it from rocks other companies are ignoring. He wants you to invest money in his company but when you consult experts in chemistry, mining and geology they all tell you he is a complete quack and his idea is completely bogus. Would you invest?

      I for one would. I would invest an amount that won't hurt too badly if lost. This way I could be right no matter what happens. If he fails, my decision was right to limit my investment and thus my loss. If he happens to succeed, however unlikely it may be, I get rich.

      --
      http://erichsieht.wordpress.com/category/english/
    59. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....There may be a correlation, but that doesn't mean that there's a cause-effect relationship......

      Indeed true! Funny you know, every time there is a house on fire, we find this big red truck and these people with plastic suits and big hats. They and their weird red truck must be the cause of why the house is burning. Most of the time there is a car crash, we find skid marks on the pavement nearby. Those skid marks must have caused the crash.

      --
      All theory is gray
    60. Re:cult of global warming by AJWM · · Score: 3, Funny

      *every* so-called modern Galileo can't actually be one, because a universe probably can't exist in which every whacked-out idea proposed by all of them is simultaneously correct.

      I don't know about that, have you looked at string theory lately?

      --
      -- Alastair
    61. Re:cult of global warming by AJWM · · Score: 1

      Let's put the issue a little bit more concretely. Suppose some guy comes up to you with a proposal to mine gold based on a new process for leaching it from rocks other companies are ignoring. He wants you to invest money in his company but when you consult experts in chemistry, mining and geology they all tell you he is a complete quack and his idea is completely bogus. Would you invest?

      That depends on whether or not those experts in mining, chemistry, etc have anything to lose if the guy is right.

      Your hypothetical is very similar to the situation that a number of would-be private space launch enterprises found themselves in in the late 1980s/early 1990s. They had schemes for cheap(er) launch that would seriously undercut NASA's then-monopoly on the space launch business. Would-be investors naturally wanted independant evaluations of the proposals, so of course they went to the experts -- NASA. Guess what NASA told them? "Nope, the idea is completely bogus."

      It took political pressure to force NASA out of using the Shuttle for commercial launches before that situation turned around.

      Sure, some of the ideas probably were bogus, but some weren't. If you want an objective evaluation of some new idea or scheme, be careful about asking the people whose rice bowls it threatens.

      --
      -- Alastair
    62. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Uh, think again.....

      Another thing to think about: Where was all that carbon before it became fossil fuel? If it is indeed true we are burning dinosaurs from long ago, then how did the carbon get into the plants which the dinos ate? Was all that carbon in the atmosphere, where plants could use photosynthesis to make food for the dinos and other life forms? If so, then the earth must have been a rather warm place. The fact is that there is a lot of evidence that our planet was a LOT warmer ages ago and life flourished in abundance. There is evidence that the oceans were never higher than they are today and we find tropical fossils in places now covered with miles of ice. Growing oranges in Alaska and bananas in Siberia might not be so terrible.

      Your thoughts on measurements, deviation and errors are correctly moderated informative. There is pretty good agreement on the FACT that there is some warming, but its cause is interpretation to suit an agenda.

      --
      All theory is gray
    63. Re:cult of global warming by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 2

      The experiment doesn't necessarily dispute that global temperatures are rising. It suggests, however, that the cause is not greenhouse gases, or at the least that cosmic rays play a part based on how many the sun's magnetic field are preventing from entering the atmosphere and forming clouds.

      Although, it should be noted that it's mentioned right in the article (and it's been mentioned in other articles) that global temperature records show that global temps haven't risen since late 1998.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    64. Re:cult of global warming by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You've got to be the 500th person to link to RealClimate. Is RealClimate the Jesus of global warming or something?

      All RealClimate did was claim that the cloud condensation "building blocks" weren't necessarily large enough and that further research was required. That's hard to do when nobody will publish your work and all the alarmist climatologists are getting the funding because they've latched onto the "greenhouse gases" trend where all the political donors are.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    65. Re:cult of global warming by AJWM · · Score: 1

      Historically, the establishment science has be wrong far more often than right.

      May not be quite true, but it certainly bring's Clarke's First Law to mind:
      "When a distinguished but elderly scientists states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong."

      And I forget who said it (some early 20th century physicist, I think), but the observation was made that new theories don't become accepted by convincing everyone, they become accepted because the older generation of scientists who don't accept it die off.

      Lots of cases in the history of science where there's an early theory X (typically proposed by a relative newbie to the field), which soon gets discredited and replaced by theory Y (proposed by distinguished expert), which ultimately hangs on in the face of mounting evidence and theory X (or slightly modified X') ultimately overturns it. Continental drift, certain theories on dinosaur physiology and locomotion, the snowball Earth theory, George Darwin's theory of the Moon's formation, etc.

      Not always by any means, but too often to ignore.

      --
      -- Alastair
    66. Re:cult of global warming by AJWM · · Score: 1

      No reputible sources are disputing global warming and that humans are the cause.

      Well, sure, if you define "reputable" as "supporting the truthiness of the anthropogenic global warming belief". That the cult of anthropogenic global warming immediately tries to trash the reputation of naysayers or even mere doubters has nothing to do with that, of course.

      The fact is that a number of climatologists, paleoclimatologists and scientists of similar disciplines dispute global warming, and a much larger number may allow as how it's possible that, yes, something seems to be warming up the planet, but will vehemently deny that there's anything like sufficient evidence to point to human causes.

      The fact remains that water vapor contributes far more to keeping the Earth warm than CO2 does, and that a fractional percentage point change in the Sun's output -- and the Sun is known to vary slightly -- will have more effect than what even the Anthropogenic Global Warming cultists are suggesting Man could do in several centuries.

      --
      -- Alastair
    67. Re:cult of global warming by narsiman · · Score: 1

      Dude. Does it feel warm living in those pockets?

    68. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some Inconvient truths.

      1. The video "An Inconvient Truth" was produced by rich and influential people.
      2. It is directed mainly at middle class and poor people who are just trying to make it through life.
      3. The video blames mankinds production of CO2 for global warming.
      4. The rich and influential are responsible for the non-release of technology that would greatly reduce CO2 production. {Electric car, Hybrid Car(Out of most peoples price range or impractical compact car only), others that cannot all be rumors.}

    69. Re:cult of global warming by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      So are you really suggesting that the claims made by the small handful of climate deniers are more credible than the scientific establishment? If not what is your evidence that my interpretation isn't the correct one?

      It's the pursuit of science to smash establishments and to disprove interpretations. The very moment people begin to discuss a consensus is the very moment another Einstein comes along with a theory that throws everybody's preconceived notions out of whack.

      I'm not really sure what's happened to this country when people are actually criticized for skeptical doubt, the cornerstone of a healthy scientific community.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    70. Re:cult of global warming by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      The USA has 4% of the World's population and produces 25% of CO2 emissions. China has 21% of World's population and produces 15% of the emissions. How can you blame China?

    71. Re:cult of global warming by sunwukong · · Score: 1

      Hmmm .... apparently a tin foil hat also impedes ones attention span.

      You really should continue reading after your blood pressure peaks -- you might find that period of thoughfulness calming.

    72. Re:cult of global warming by AJWM · · Score: 1

      And a regional coldening [sic] could well be the result of changing sea currents, for example. I don't see how that would be a counter-indication of global warming either.

      And a regional warming could well be the result of changing sea currents, for example. I don't see how that would be a counter-indication of global cooling either.

      Global temperatures are rising. Glaciers are melting. So basically, it smells like FUD to me.

      Global temperatures are dropping. Colorado is experiencing its longest continuous snowcover in history, it's freezing. So basically, it smells like FUD to me.

      WAR IS PEACE - FREEDOM IS SLAVERY - IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH

      I find your sig strangely ironic.

      --
      -- Alastair
    73. Re:cult of global warming by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      There is no website more guilty of agenda-driven science than RealClimate. Most of its articles are driven entirely by politics and a seeming vendetta against any scientist who dares challenge them on it (most science questions are simply moderated out of existence)

      Its the pot calling the kettle black.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    74. Re:cult of global warming by Hellpop · · Score: 0

      Well said.
              Since these people debating the issue are supposed to be scientists, what is wrong with keeping an open mind and questioning if something more that carbon dioxide is behind the climate change? Doesn't seem unreasonable to me. I really get worried when any group starts claiming they have "unquestionable" theories. To me science is about questioning everything. We have hardly exhausted everything we can look into on the subject.

      --
      "People are stupid; given proper motivation, almost anyone will believe almost anything."
    75. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....knowledgeable people were aware that the earth was not flat.......

      Perhaps my example of the flat earth was not the most appropriate to what I wanted to express. Scientists make certain observations and experiments. These measurements are repeatable and hard to argue with. It is hard to refute the measurements that the temperature of the planet is increasing a little, almost everywhere. It is the INTERPRETATION of these measurements which is the issue. The faulty idea is that correlation is equivalent to causation. This error is a big factor for many saying that the C02 level increase is the reason for this factual increase in measured temperatures. There are often skid marks on the pavement near car accidents. This doesn't mean that skid marks cause accidents. Another example: we can measure the red shift of distant starlight. This is a fact. We cannot prove the interpretation of this red shift as being due to the doppler effect and then come to the conclusion from that interpretation that the galaxies are moving away from us and each other at a significant fraction of the speed of light. This interpretation of the cause of the red shift leads to all sorts of difficulties in view of other observations and forces cosmologists to come up with fictional, never observed constructs, such as dark matter and energy.

      --
      All theory is gray
    76. Re:cult of global warming by benzapp · · Score: 1

      You are correct. Before the evolution of plants, the earth's atmosphere contained much more CO2, and no oxygen. Plants evolved to utilized CO2 for photosynthesis, and oxygen was a biproduct. In time, animals that extracted oxygen from the water were able to utilize the oxygen that was in the air. We are some of those animals.

      You seem to be advocating a return to an earth that hasn't existed for hundreds of millions of years, long before the first fish ever crawled out of the ocean.

      That doesn't seem like a reasonable argument under any circumstances.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    77. Re:cult of global warming by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      This error is a big factor for many saying that the C02 level increase is the reason for this factual increase in measured temperatures.

      Yeah, it must not be the huge increase in the proportion of CO2 in the atmosphere over the past century. Some mysterious factor must be erasing the otherwise well-known heat transfer characteristics of that gas. Some other unknown mysterious factor must be causing the rising temperatures instead. After all, causation is hardly ever associated with correlation.

    78. Re:cult of global warming by CorSci81 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You make a good point that correlation != causation, which is a point drilled into just about every student of climatology at some point (at least this was true for me). However, in this case the belief of global warming has far less to do with statistics than with predictive modeling. To first order, the appealing logic behind global warming goes something like this:

      Fact 1: CO2 is a good absorber of IR radiation
      Fact 2: We have been increasing concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere
      Fact 3: Historical records compiled from ice cores, tree rings, and coral samples from all over the world indicate a correlation between CO2 and temperature
      Deductive hypothesis: To first order, increasing CO2 will increase temperature
      Caveat: Climate is complicated and non-linear with lots of feedbacks, best to create some computer models to study it

      Now fast forward many years and several iterations of climate models and research into feedbacks and sensitivity and still our simulations predict that average global temperature is increasing. However, this isn't really the most notable result of the models. The alarming result is that in most of the models weather patterns themselves become increasingly erratic with changes to precipitation distribution and extreme swings in local weather.

      Climate science is a good deal more complicated than "I observe X and Y to be correlated, therefore if I increase X I also increase Y." Every good scientist is aware of this logical fallacy, but we're also aware it makes a good starting point for investigation, with the catch that you need to be careful to thoroughly test for causality.
    79. Re:cult of global warming by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Do you miss the point that "Catholic Apologetics International" is a parody/satire site?


      While I admit that it may be an unintentional parody of itself, the link I offered above is serious. If Mr.Sungenis is having a joke, it's a)not very funny and b) being taken seriously by people.

      From Wikipedia (with the same link):

      "Catholic Apologetics International is an American Traditionalist Catholic apostolate founded by Robert Sungenis in 1993." No mention of parody, satire or humor. If you've got some evidence to the contrary, I'd ask you to hop over to Wikipedia and enlighten the rest of us.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    80. Re:cult of global warming by syphax · · Score: 1


      You know what? I sort of agree with you. Ocean acidification doesn't get half the play it should. Sure, you can call it ocean-less-alkalinization if you want to be less inflammatory, but the fact is the extra CO2 is changing surface ocean chemistry: CO2 + H20 -> H2CO3 -> HCO3- + H+

      This troubles me.

      --
      Simple Unexpected Concrete Credible Emotional Stories
    81. Re:cult of global warming by jo42 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but did he account for the effect of all the cow farts on a global scale into his model?

    82. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Those are nifty numbers but what with the trend to send manufacturing to China I'm not believing them. Where did you get them?

      Having seen rivers of bubbling black sludge in southern China where there is a large concentration of manufacturing, I tend to mis believe any numeric references without citation.

    83. Re:cult of global warming by kuactet · · Score: 1

      Very often those "few dissenters" prove the established majority wrong. I kind of hate it when people say that sort of thing, because it's flat-out wrong. It's the same as saying, "Air travel is unsafe because I recently heard about a plane crash." You're completely ignoring all of the wackos who end up not proving the established majority wrong. Like, for example, modern day faith healers, practitioners of homeopathy, inventors of the prepetual motion machine, spiritualists, etc. The only reason you never hear about them is because bad ideas are usually forgotten. Point is, statistically, if you disagree with the scientific majority, you are wrong.
    84. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sigh...

      Since you obviously know some basic statistics it's depressing that you get such basic points wrong.

      I don't happen to know the error for converting 500-year-old tree ring data to global mean temperature, for instance, but I'd be surprised to find it less than 5%.

      The same is true for extrapolating global CO2 levels from a microliter of prehistoric gas trapped in an ice core sample.

      You mention this like they just take one core of each and try to infer the global historical temperature -- obviously the use many different samples of each from different places and test them for reliability with each other. Nevermind that you pick some error number of out thin are based on what would surprise you on a subject you don't know anything about and base your whole critique on that.

      HOWEVER more importantly you also mention this like it's even more damning that both sources must plausibly have such high error rates -- which would be very incorrect. The error from these two methods, whatever it is, is *greatly reduced* when we can take two different proxies that are generated via totally different methods and use them together. In other words, while they both have error, the portion of the data which is the result of error in each source should be totally different, while the portion of the data which is non-error should be the same, and by using more and more different sources we can infer more precisely what the real results are.

      And that's EXACTLY what these doddering climate scientists do. Look at these graphs: notice all of the data source vary wildly. Error! But they do correlate with each well -- they tend to move together in the same direction at the same times. This is STRONG evidence, because they use many different sources each with their own error rates but which overall correlate with each other, which would be enormously unlikely if they were totally inaccurate.

    85. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....much more CO2, and no oxygen.......

      There is no evidence that the earth's atmosphere was ever devoid or even much lower in oxygen than now. Oxygen is the most abundant element in the crust of the planet, even now. Conjecturing that NONE of this was present in the atmosphere at any time is a big leap of faith. Even if your supposition about the past were correct, that doesn't mean that all the oxygen presently in the atmosphere would disappear if we burned all the fossil fuels and released its carbon back into the air. Even burning every gram of fossil fuel we know about, would not be enough to convert all the oxygen NOW in the air to CO2. Thus your supposed conditions of the past would not recur.

      --
      All theory is gray
    86. Re:cult of global warming by letxa2000 · · Score: 1

      It is actually possible for a paper to be rejected from a journal for legitimate reasons, you know.

      Ok. Have you read the paper? Have you found anything in the paper that would suggest it was not up to snuff? And I'm not talking about a press release that is probably meant to stimulate funding in a very funding-unfriendly environment. What exactly was wrong with their paper that made it not worthy of publishing?

      Me: 3) Contrary to what some people would like to believe, not all real scientists agree with the IPCC version of global warming.

      You: That's true, but that also doesn't imply that the IPCC version is wrong.

      No, but it does mean that those that state that the entire scientific community agrees with the IPCC and the concept of human-induced global warming are either wrong or intentionally lying. Some people--especially on sites like this--would have you believe that only oil company stooges don't accept these two things and that all legitimate science supports it. Papers like this definitely throw those claims into serious doubt.

      As much as we know about the climate, I bet there's far more that we don't know.

    87. Re:cult of global warming by shmlco · · Score: 1

      Those are all just subsets of the "exceptional exception rule", based on the idea that if ANYONE else succeeded against all odds despite doing something stupid, then they can too. "Well, Einstein dropped out of school..."

      And, as you pointed out, at the same time subtly linking themselves with their famous example.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    88. Re:cult of global warming by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Yeah, I remember old Galileo (or old Leo, as we used to call him - I'm a pretty old dude, myself!). He was a scientist, and those neochristianists at that time didn't believe in science either. Now how about that?

      Best sites for truth hackers:

      66.119.35.103

      164.109.56.45

      209.27.54.67

    89. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....best to create some computer models ......

      The problem with all models, computer and otherwise is that those that build them make certain assumptions and simplifications. If those assumptions are wrong, then the models are useless. The word assumption is scientific jargon for faith or belief. There are other components of the air that are far better greenhouse contributors. Water vapor and methane are only two that come to mind right now. Then there are the particulates, both manmade and natural. How are the known and largely unknown solar cycles figured in? How are these represented and accounted for? You are right, climate science is very complicated and many assumptions are made about factors we simply just don't know. We are asked to make far reaching, expensive, political and economic decisions based on skimpy or totally non-existent knowledge and data. There are some with an agenda who want to impose draconian controls on the mobility and freedom of technologically advanced nations. All these have one thing in common: Control of an elite few over the (in their view) unwashed masses. In earlier eras of history, the ruling elites have used religion as a control mechanism. Now they try to use the modern religion of so called science to do the same sort of thing.

      --
      All theory is gray
    90. Re:cult of global warming by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      Ok. Have you read the paper? I've skimmed it.

      Have you found anything in the paper that would suggest it was not up to snuff? As I said, we have not seen any drafts that they submitted to other journals. After receiving several rejections, they may well have revised it upon submitting to the journal that eventually accepted it. (e.g., removing overbroad conclusions) As I also said, even "up to snuff" papers get rejected from journals when the journal itself is not the most appropriate venue for the paper.

      What exactly was wrong with their paper that made it not worthy of publishing? I never said that the paper, as published, was not worthy of publishing. I merely said that different journals have different standards, and that the submitted drafts may differ substantially from what was finally published. Conspiracy theories about persecuted scientists are easy to come by, but as I also said, it is not at all uncommon for practicing scientists to accumulate some rejections for a wide variety of reasons.

      No, but it does mean that those that state that the entire scientific community agrees with the IPCC and the concept of human-induced global warming are either wrong or intentionally lying. Few people make statements about "every single member" of the scientific community. If someone says that "the climatology community" supports AGW, that can be reasonably be interpreted to refer to the vast majority of the community, and not every last single member.

      Some people--especially on sites like this--would have you believe that only oil company stooges don't accept these two things and that all legitimate science supports it. While not everyone agrees with the IPCC on every issue, there is virtually zero published literature supporting the idea that global warming is not largely anthropogenic in nature. Not even the study being discussed here supports that idea.
    91. Re:cult of global warming by skintigh2 · · Score: 1

      What exactly is sea ice? Are we talking about iceburgs that broke away from melting glaciers?

      Anyway, I can't believe anyone still falls for the "we can ignore a world's worth of evidence because of this tiny anecdote" arguement. It's like going to the doctor with a 103 degree fever and the doc says "I just took the temperature of your pinky toe and you have no fever, in fact you are below normal, and furthermore sickness doesn't exist and if it did it would be good for you."

    92. Re:cult of global warming by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      All RealClimate did was claim that the cloud condensation "building blocks" weren't necessarily large enough and that further research was required. They pointed out about five or six major gaps in the chain of reasoning necessary to conclude that cosmic rays are responsible for global warming, as well as reasons to believe that they are not.

      That's hard to do when nobody will publish your work Well, except for the ones who publish your work (link).
    93. Re:cult of global warming by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      First off, (and someone please prove me wrong on this one [with links]), I have heard reports that the IPCC is tailoring the report to fit the summary. They are editing the use of language to be consistent with the summary. Things like, they have a specific definition of what "likely" and "very likely" means, and they're making sure that all of the chapters use the same definition (they were written by different people). They are not actually editing the scientific content. More here.

      Secondly, their best theories still do not account for all the evidence, especially the evidence that would (to a person with no scientific background) prove them wrong. I don't know what you are referring to. Their theories are not perfect — no theory is — but I would like to know what evidence you think they are ignoring which disproves the major conclusions from the IPCC report.
    94. Re:cult of global warming by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Hi troll,

      I really don't know what you mean by "evidence". This isn't a court. This is a scientific theory, for which all signs point to the very scenario I discussed. I don't really understand why you would think oxygen in the earth's crust has anything to do with oxygen in the air (hint, free form oxygen is NOT in the earth's crust). I mean, CO2, is well, mostly oxygen too but that doesn't mean any mammal can breathe it.

      I am not the one suggesting all the oxygen will disappear, you are the one suggesting some previous state of the atmosphere is desirable. If you believe there is no proof of any previous state of the atmosphere, I really don't know why you'd make that claim.

      Kind of a weak troll, but whatever.

      btw, the wikipedia article summarizes the most commonly accepted theory regarding the three stages of earth's atmosphere.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth's_atmosphere

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    95. Re:cult of global warming by aminorex · · Score: 1

      You are assuming what you wish to show. The value of peer review is that it guards against the publication of false and poor-quality research. Doesn't the number of rejections indicate that (1) the authors needed to revise their publication in order to achieve a reasonable standard of quality, and/or that (2) the authors needed to shotgun the journals until they found one with low enough standards to publish their work? Each of these is at least as feasible an explanation, and is certainly far less conspiratorial in character. You and I don't have the knowledge necessary to determine which if any of these explanations is the most nearly correct, and even if we did, reasonable people might disagree in the interpretation of that information. The global average temperature and global atmospheric CO2 levels, meanwhile, continue to increase regardless of such wranglings.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    96. Re:cult of global warming by aminorex · · Score: 1

      That's why these controversies are a damaging waste of time. The simple and obvious way to eliminate the danger of anthropogenic CO2 is to balance the atmospheric CO2 budget via sequestration. This will eliminate the compelling motivation of the wealthy and powerful to commit a global genocide in order to provide a more edenic environment to their progeny.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    97. Re:cult of global warming by CorSci81 · · Score: 1

      Therein is the beauty of ensemble forecasting. Generally these predictions are made from ensembles of models ranging from simple 1-D radiative transfer models all the way up to complex fully 3-D GCMs used for long-term weather forecasting. Each of these models makes varying assumptions about things like clouds and particulates (if they're included at all). Some models include the 11-year sunspot cycle, some don't. The point is that if all of the models, given their varied complexities and treatments of feedbacks, point to a warmer Earth with increased CO2 thats strong evidence for a positive feedback between CO2 and temperature. I'll concede few of the models agree on concrete predictions (i.e. Europe will get warmer and wetter, the American west becomes even drier, etc.), but the global average temperature does go up. So, irrespective of what the sun is or isn't doing, we have good evidence we're a contributing factor to warming.

      As far as what to do about it, that's a political argument, but in general scientists would argue to err on the side of caution and mitigate our impact until it is fully understood. The cost of reducing our CO2 output is a drop in the bucket given the short-term irreversibility of what we're doing and the potential future cost if the dire predictions do come true. Think of it as home insurance: sure it sucks to write out the check every month and feels like a waste of money, unless your house burns down in which case you're glad to have it.

    98. Re:cult of global warming by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1
      Again, are RealClimate the Jesus of global warming?

      Well, except for the ones who publish your work (link).

      The one. After multiple rejections. Because it didn't fit the partyline of greenhouse gases (where all the political donors are).
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    99. Re:cult of global warming by verySmartApe · · Score: 1

      Regarding #2: I would hardly say that getting published in J Roy Soc is tantamount to being shut out of the science journals. J Roy Soc is an important family of journals. Maybe they failed to publish in Nature or something, but so do 95% of the people who try. There's no evidence of discrimination here.

      Regarding #3: No reasonable person would say that there aren't scientists who disagree with the developing consensushttp://www.ipcc.ch/SPM2feb07.pdf on climate change. But an unreasonable person (like you) would claim that there isn't a scientific consensus on climate change.

      Regarding #4: crap.

    100. Re:cult of global warming by verySmartApe · · Score: 1

      How can you say "no one will publish your work"? They were published in J Roy Soc, a respected journal. It's not like there was a conspiracy against them or something.

    101. Re:cult of global warming by pseudorand · · Score: 1
      Actually it's more complicated than that. The global warming is, in fact, caused by cosmic rays. Due to ozone depletion, not carbon emissions, there is a greater effect on the south pole. This does cause warmer tempratures, which melts ice, but it also causes more evaporation and precipitation which deposits more wet/heavy ice on the southern ice cap. Because of its density, the depth measurements provide an inaccurate picture and there is actually a net increase in ice. Unfortunatly the warmer summer tempratures leave the deeper antarctic ice unstable and eventually the weight of the new ice that forms in the winter on top of the base of less dense ice, weakend by summer melting, will cause the entire southern ice cap to slide into the ocean in one fell swoop. This will cause three things to happen.
      1. a tremendous title wave will wipe out most human life on the southern, western, and eastern coasts of the southern hemisphere;
      2. water near the surface of the ocean will drop in salinity and temprature, killing off most of the coral reefs and the algae that takes most of the carbon out of the atmosphere;
      3. Changing ocean currents will plunge most of the northern hemisphere into ice-age like conditions.
      The northern hemisphere will get colder because the white snow and ice will reflect most sunlight, but the southern hemisphere will get warmer, due to the lack of ice, greenhouse gasses, and cosmic rays. As both air and water move towards temprature equilibriam, the earth will experience the most severe weather in human history (though not so bad when compared to all of earth's history). Needless to say, human economies and means of survival will be devistated. It will eventually work its way to an equilibiriam again, possibly in time for our great-great-great grand children (the 1 in 100,000 of us who have surviving descedents) to reinvent agriculture.
    102. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....complex fully 3-D GCMs used for long-term weather forecasting.......

      If and when the scientists that pretend to know something about the weather and climate can ACCURATELY predict the weather even for two weeks in advance, then I might put some credence in their fancy computers and other expensive tools where which they try to augur the climate for the next 10, 20, or even a 100 years from now. Weather forecasting even only 5 to 10 days in advance has actually gotten worse here on the West Coast from what it used to be 50-60 years ago. Back then they did not have computers and satellites, but they did have weather ships out in the Pacific. Somebody on such a ship stuck their head outside and their finger in the air. Then they'd radio the mainland and tell their friends which way the wind was blowing and that raindrops were falling on their heads. Some of them got really hi-tech and launched a weather balloon. From that hard observation their friends on the mainland would tell the rest of us that we'd soon get wet also. Invariable they were just as, if not more correct than their successors are today.

      (....Each of these models makes varying assumptions ....)

      Assumptions = faith or belief, not solid KNOWN measured data. If even one of these many varying inputs is fiction based on wishful thinking or an agenda, anything other than accurately measured data, then the most complex model is wrong. Such modeling runs are not worth the electricity it took to run the computer. Belief is fine for religions, but not science. Science to me is what we know for sure, measured, cut and dried hard data not some maybe, maybe not assumptions. Anytime I read a so called scientific article where faith words or phrases are used, I often stop reading right there. I don't want to know what these guys BELIEVE, I want to learn what they KNOW, have actually measured and observed. It is actually quite rare these days to read a scientific paper that does NOT spout stuff about what some or most so called scientists believe or assume about their data.

      I am not at all impressed by those who claim to know the future which includes tomorrows weather. I also remember reading about a coming ice age back when I was a boy.

      --
      All theory is gray
    103. Re:cult of global warming by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      You repeatedly make the assumption that scientists are making stuff up. Why don't *you* prove your claims, with specificity. Hard numbers please, not these sweeping generalizations. Otherwise, we can only assume that you're the one making stuff up.

      While your at it, please bother to learn the difference between weather and climate. They are completely different concepts, and by confusing the two you lose all credibility.

    104. Re:cult of global warming by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      That's a nice conspiracy theory, but the fact is, you don't know why it was rejected.

    105. Re:cult of global warming by susano_otter · · Score: 1

      Bonus irony: Galileo was persecuted by his fellow scientists, not by the Church.

      The Church was mostly uninterested in Galileo's heliocentric theories, but was corrupt enough to take the side of unscrupulous scientists who would rather silence new research than admit they might have been wrong (being wrong meant losing their prestigious and lucrative positions as court scientists for the European powers).

      So, the Church obligingly slapped Galileo on the wrist and sentenced him to house arrest... where he continued to do good new science just as before.

      Suddenly the idea of global warming advocates shouting down the opposition in order to safeguard their government research grants makes a lot more sense, doesn't it?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    106. Re:cult of global warming by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 1

      Guess I pissed off the KoolAid drinkers.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    107. Re:cult of global warming by CorSci81 · · Score: 1

      Assumptions in climate models aren't "I think snow is reflective, I'll assign it arbitrary albedo x". Rather, assumptions in models consist of "We don't have the resolution to compute convective cells down to the atomic level (or even 1m resolution), so we'll approximate updrafts and cloud formation and precipitation with these simplified physics schemes that we justify based on series of observations A, theory B, and high resolution model of convections C (based on theory B)". A lot of careful analysis goes into every simplifying assumption. And just remember, not all assumptions are bad; after all, Newtonian physics is simply based on the assumption you're moving drastically slower than the speed of light.

      And to address your problem with short-term forecasting, there's a world of difference between predicting if it will rain two weeks from now vs. long-term trends. Day to day weather is highly chaotic, but the long-term trends are usually quite predictable. No GCM on Earth will give you accurate weather a month from now, but it can tell you what it's likely to be. Especially given that modern GCMs often spontaneously create natural observed oscillations of Earth's climate out to multi-decadal scale gives us some confidence they're a useful endeavor for looking at climate.

    108. Re:cult of global warming by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      How is it flamebait to say in a comment what others have said in moderation?

    109. Re:cult of global warming by smilerz · · Score: 1

      scientific establishment is an irrelevant phrase. Science isn't determined by committee or popularity - its based in fact. Hypothesis, testing and experimentation. Concensus can be overruled by a single person with the truth on his side.

      --
      My Blog
    110. Re:cult of global warming by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "This work in no way ANSWERS any questions."

      It's good to double check your sources and after doing so I have to admit you are absolutely correct.

      "Actually, the linked article is fairly good for Real Climate.

      After a second reading I find it below par, here is the evidentary link, they normaly don't forget stuff like that.

      "while villifying anyone who works on studying the Sun"

      On the contrary, (and coincidentally), from the above link...
      "The fact that there is little recent trend in the GCR and solar activity does not mean that solar activity is unimportant for earth's climate. There are a large number of recent peer-reviewed scientific publications demonstrating how solar activity can affect our climate (Benestad, 2002), such as how..."

      "assuming that these [cosmic ray] researchers aren't denied funding..."

      I'm not sure what "reasearchers" you are talking about but here is a list of "reputable" articles/papers on the subject of '"cosmic rays" and climate'. I say "reputable" since it comes for RC"s "google coop search", the list of sites in their search includes (Science, Nature, NASA, NOAA, AGU, ect), it even includes their "other opinions" list. If you don't wan't to be "censored" then there is always google wher I am sure TFA's linking of cosimc rays to climate change will find plenty of support (none of it scientific but it is well funded).

      "...on the basis of having become "too controvercial", which is the typical fate of anyone who brings the "consensus" into question."

      Politically contraversial is entirely different to scientifically contraversial (re: Darwin). Also a political consensus is entirely different to scientific consensus (re: Dogma vs Established theory), a scientists job is to attack established theory via consensus, the relationship between dogma and a politicians job is fairly self-eveident. The very act of submitting or performing peer-review is by definition a consensus of informed opinion using a formal methodology.

      Just out of interest where is the "RC != science" FUD coming from - WSJ editorial page? I only ask because your "skeptcisim" seems reasonably coherent?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    111. Re:cult of global warming by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      So youz an aussie, a. She'll be right mate? No wukers?

      ---Fucking yobbo, try wearing a hat, it prevents the brain boiling and the neck from turning red.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    112. Re:cult of global warming by cbacba · · Score: 1

      sorry but mr. G wasn't alone, nor the originator. He did observe things and report them. The cosmologies of the time were earth centered and sun centered universes. Both date back far before mr. G. Unfortunately, the earth centered version was supported by mr. A, perhaps the most famous philospher of all time while the sun centered version was supported by mr. uhh - well he's not quite famous enough for me to remember him and it isn't worth looking up at the moment (so maybe you get the point). The theories were a bit competitive for a while but the fact that parallax of stars was a null experiment - nobobdy back then could detect one whit of parallax and this negative result pretty much put the kabosh on the sun centered universe.

      mr. G's observations started the ball rolling again on the sun centered universe from a scientific standpoint. As it turns out though, the catholic church had bitten on mr. A's theories lock stock and barrel and it seems there was this religious cult of sun worshippers pushing the sun centered universe for their own religious idiology. Consequently, poor mr. G had a whole lotta problems in the peer review process of the time. I think they even made him recant publicly.

      The thing about science is - it's an attempt at the best description of reality. It's not about opinions or concensus. What's more, it tends to cycle somewhat. Old theories seldom die, they merely get recycled in modified form. Note the flat earth was not really a theory - only an urban legend as the egyptians and greeks already had estimated the size of the earth during their heyday. In Job (book of the Bible) the jews mention the earth as an orb hung on nothing - in amongst all the moaning being done by that guy. The informationseems to have made down to the general immigrant population there in egypt.

      As for global warming, one sees the evidence quite well down here at 27deg n lat. for the cosmic ray / magnetic field connections. We're at a sunspot minimum and the number of cloudy rainy days this year have exceeded clear days by a significant amount. During sunspot maximas, we often have the worst droughts, historically speaking.

      Another example is that while there is a nominal sunspot cycle of 11 years, sunspots have been observed for several hundred years now. There was a period of about 1750 to around 1800 where none were observed on the face of the sun (that's over 4 nominal cycles worth). That's about the time that the Thames river froze over in a significant fashion.

      As I recall from reading/hearing about the research is that there is a better short term correlation between solar sunspot activity and temperature than there is between co2 levels and temperature. Also, cosmic rays - which are usually high energy protons (charged particles)are correlated with sunspot cycles. Many or are probably produced by the sun but since they are charged, they change directions in magnetic fields so where they come from tends to remain an unknown.

      In any case, cosmic rays and gamma rays impacting the earth provide a substantial but unseen effect in the atmosphere. Note that there are some large area arrays of uv optical sensors deployed to observe incoming high energy hits but it's nothing you're going to see by looking up at the sky. Not only do they provide ionization trails for cloud formation - I suspect they provide those precursor trails for lightning strikes and are responsible for when and what pattern a lightning bolt actually takes when discharging the built up charges.

    113. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....And to address your problem with short-term forecasting, there's a world of difference between predicting if it will rain two weeks from now vs. long-term trends........

      You may be right that there are differences between long term, say 100 years or more and short term, days, weeks or a few years weather modeling. Even so, the physical things you are modeling and the laws they follow are consistent. The only real difference is the element of time. I am not a climatologist, but it seems that the worth of the present models could be checked out. Here is a project I would attempt if I were going to get a PhD in weather and/or climate science. First I'd gather all known weather records I could dig up, world wide, say from maybe 1850 to 2006. Special note would be taken of major volcanic activity and other upheaval type of activity. I'd then input the data for about half of that period into all the modern climate models I could get my hands on. I'd see what sort of climate predictions these data produce for the second half. Then I'd compare these predictions of the models with the actual climate data for the last half and see how well they agree, if at all. The closer the predictions of each model match the actual data, the better that model is that made those predictions. Then I'd use the best agreeing model(s) to make predictions for future climate, including global warning. If all presently used models are widely divergent and none of their predictions match the actual historical data, then all models are obviously faulty and must be re-worked, before they could be used for predicting climate changes. I wonder if anybody has ever done anything to check our present models predictive ability with past known data. If done right, it should make a good thesis.

      --
      All theory is gray
    114. Re:cult of global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I normally don't post about spelling but can't anyone spell 'controversial' correctly? Half this thread seems to have it misspelled in a gazillion ways. It doesn't reflect well on the authors of said posts.

    115. Re:cult of global warming by mstone · · Score: 1

      Wow.. you challenge my statements about error with a link to a page that says:

      It should also be noted that many reconstructions of past climate report substantial error bars, which are not represented on this figure.

      Note the words 'substantial' and 'not represented'.

      ... Nice shootin', Tex.

      I never said that error alone refutes global warming. All I said is that it's one factor to consider when trying to establish a confidence interval.

      The important fact isn't the existence of error itself, but the size of the error relative to the variation you're trying to explain. If the error is less than 1% of the total variation, yeah, you can ignore it. But in this case we're talking about an observed variation in global temperature of 1.5C. One perceent of that would be .015C.

      Do you honestly want to sit there and tell me that our estimates of global mean temperature for the past umpty-thousand years are accurate to roughly a hundredth of a degree?

      I don't think so.

      If you want to bring STRONG evidence into this discussion, go find the actual margin for error in the sample data. It's that simple. Go find a composite error for all those many different sources, plunk it down, and show that it's statistically insignificant with respect to the observed variation.

      I'm not denying the existence of a warming trend. What I'm trying to do is state that trend in scientifically valid terms so people can disuss it rationally. The way to do that is to say, "we have observed a change of 1.5C in a sample whose standard deviation is .4-.7C, and whose margin for error is, say, .1C"

      Given those figures, we can say there's an 80% chance that .7-.9C of that change is not due to normal variation if we take sigma to be .7C, and a 95% chance that .2-.4C of the change is not due to normal variation if we take sigma to be .4C

      Scale those figures down for a CoC of .8, and we can legitimately say, "there's about a 75% chance that anthropogenic CO2 has raised global temperatures by half a degree C over the past 150 years."

      That figure is worth taking seriously. It's just not strong enough to support the sky-is-falling rhetoric of alarmists who want to dismantle the global industrial economy.

    116. Re:cult of global warming by CorSci81 · · Score: 1

      What you are referring to has been done and is still a very large work in progress, it's called the NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis Project. There is a problem with divergence of these models over time as far as the specific weather predictions for a given day (hence they are averaged in ensemble and reinitialized when they begin to diverge from actual data) due to the problem of incomplete coverage. Because climate is a non-linear system, if your initial conditions don't exactly match (which they never can) your model will eventually diverge (i.e. the "butterfly effect"). But given that, the models still get the general trends correct even if they can't predict it will rain 2" on Tuesday Feb. 14 2010 in Seattle.

    117. Re:cult of global warming by arminw · · Score: 1

      .... But given that, the models still get the general trends correct even if they can't predict it will rain 2" on Tuesday Feb. 14 2010 in Seattle....

      I agree of course that the models might not be able to predict such detail. However, if the models are any good, the predictions they make from earlier data ought to match the general predicted trends to what was actually observed later. Initial conditions have nothing to do with this. The aim is to simply test how well the predictions of the models working with earlier data match up with real observations. If there is a good match for historical data, then there is a high probability that predictions these models make for the future are also correct. Present, dire global warming predictions are based on these models that AKAIK have never been tested with historical data and compared to what was actually observed. From what I could glean from the links you gave, the goal of the reanalysis project isn't quite what I described in my post.

      --
      All theory is gray
    118. Re:cult of global warming by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Forgive my spelling, I cut and paste all my words from other posts.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    119. Re:cult of global warming by Dabido · · Score: 1

      Well Galileo was repeating the 'Copernicus' model of the Solar system, so he wasn't 'one guy', and he was arrested because his writings basically said anyone who thought the earth was flat was an imbecile, and he'd used the words straight out of the Popes mouth and stuck them into the mouth of the 'imbecile' in his writing ... thus insulting the Pope [committing blasphemy in the eyes of the Church of the day]. Otherwise, he would probably could have still held his view without persecution.

      After saying that, I do agree what you say about the 'one person' being right versus 'the establishment'. [The myth of what happened to Galileo fits, but the reality of it doesn't].

      --
      Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)
  2. Incorrect. by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 0

    Enthusiasm for the global-warming scare
    God, you would think that someone commenting on something as serious as this would know that climate change not global warming is the outcome of CO2 levels rising (I.E. this bbc article on Europe cooling rather than warming.)

    Yet Another Non-Scientist dismissing man made climate change. Yawn.At least Michael Chrichton's didn't try "cosmic rays".
    --
    There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    1. Re:Incorrect. by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 2

      "Global warming" is the net effect on the planet's surface, taken as a whole. "Climate change" describes the local effects of global warming.

    2. Re:Incorrect. by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      you didn't even read the article did you you moron. then again it's what i'd expect from someone with a blog called whineymacfanboy.

      infact it doesn't even look like you read past the past line of the submitters description, since it clearly starts he in conjunction of a TEAM of scientists have shown that cosmic radiation creates cloud cover. so he is qualified to be commenting, and he is not a lone nut.

      co2 alone is not sufficent to raise the greenhouse effect by any appreciable amount. this is a fact global warming nuts tend not to like have outed but it's true if you only stop taking spoon feedings.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    3. Re:Incorrect. by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 0, Redundant
      "Climate change" describes the local effects of global warming.

      It's perfcetly obvious that Nigel Calder doesn't understand that - he gives examples of local cooling as evidence that those in the man-made climate change camp are wrong.

      From the linked article:

      Enthusiasm for the global-warming scare also ensures that heatwaves make headlines, while contrary symptoms, such as this winter's billion-dollar loss of Californian crops to unusual frost, are relegated to the business pages. The early arrival of migrant birds in spring provides colourful evidence for a recent warming of the northern lands. But did anyone tell you that in east Antarctica the Adélie penguins and Cape petrels are turning up at their spring nesting sites around nine days later than they did 50 years ago? While sea-ice has diminished in the Arctic since 1978, it has grown by 8% in the Southern Ocean.
      If he had the slightest clue, he would not be spouting this thoroughly debunked argument.
      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    4. Re:Incorrect. by halltk1983 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm all for exploring all avenues. We don't know enough, by far to know even what we know or don't know yet. We're making theories without any idea what all forces play in the big scale. If this man figures out just ONE more variable, then his work was worth the time and effort.

      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
    5. Re:Incorrect. by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      you don't do anything to support your argument in that quote.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    6. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1, Troll

      LOL Well, You're obviously a non-scientist yourself, as your willingness to resort to authority argument clearly demonstrates.

      --
      Your ad could be here!
    7. Re:Incorrect. by igny · · Score: 1

      The cosmic ray theory is just a natural attempt to get some money from Exxon. Just wait and we will hear theories that dinosaurs have caused current global warming.

      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    8. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 2, Funny

      Apparently he doesn't need to. At least he thinks so, as long as the consensus is with him. Who are you to criticize him? are you some of those deniers who insist on old fashionable things as reproducible results?

      --
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    9. Re:Incorrect. by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      LOL Well, You're obviously a non-scientist yourself, as your willingness to resort to authority argument clearly demonstrates.

      Fair enough.

      However, before my appeal to Authority, I did quite clearly state that his arguments dismissing global 'warming" (due to localised cooling) were false.

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    10. Re:Incorrect. by Prune · · Score: 1

      Such an ignorant post you have made. By the same token, when I ask you if the Earth is round and you answer yes, you are resorting to authority as well, unless you have gone up in space and seen it to be the case with your own eyes.

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
    11. Re:Incorrect. by jmv · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just wait and we will hear theories that dinosaurs have caused current global warming.

      Considering that the main cause is CO2 from fossil fuel, this statement is actually not too far off :-)

    12. Re:Incorrect. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      No. The idea is that there ought to be no need at this point to go over some very basic aspects of global climate change. The concept that global warming does not mean that all places everywhere will show at all times the same small increases in temperatures is one of them. It isn't everybody's responsibility to spoon feed you every single thing about everything.

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    13. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1

      As a matter of fact, if you asked me formally if the earth is round, I would have a lot of experiments to suggest you, that would prove my statement that earth is round. That's why reproducible results are the cornerstone for science. And as a historical side note, the knowledge of the roundness of earth precedes space travel by some centuries ;-)

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    14. Re:Incorrect. by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you don't do anything to support your argument in that quote.

      Let me break it down for you.

      Calder offers local cooling as an example of how anthropogenic climate change scientists are wrong.

      However, anthropogenic climate change scientists predict local cooling in their models.

      Therefore, one of Calder's 'proofs' that anthropogenic climate change scientists are incorrect is faulty.

      Please note that I am not commenting on Cosmic Ray/Cloud formation experiment, until it is indepentantly reproduced (CERN is currently doing this).

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    15. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1

      Of course, that is the case. But it obviously depends on the definition of what is a locally restricted effect. You know, "south oceans" is a rather large body of water....

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    16. Re:Incorrect. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Wow. If you want to talk debate theory, you ought to know that there are specific instances when an appeal to authority is the proper way to proceed (or are you also arguing with cops who give you a ticket that they shouldn't argue from authority?), such as when legitimate experts on a specialized subject are quoted in the debate (see the last section in the entry http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_authority). It's nice to see though that the arguments against global warming are getting this weak. It means that we finally might see some action on it.

      --
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    17. Re:Incorrect. by j_w_d · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Apparently he doesn't need to. At least he thinks so, as long as the consensus is with him.

      Since science doesn't operate by consensus, any "consensus" is irrelevant. Brutal facts are simple. There is labortory evidence that the excess CO2 we have been putting into the atmosphere "ought" to affect the climate. The empirical data doesn't support this. The hockey stick curve is an artifact of data analysis and dependent upon data sets that are not correlated with temperature anyway. There is a clear chemical signature but the predicted climatic signal is largely missing. Between 1950 and 2000 the empirical data indicates that the amount of light reaching the ground decreased immensely; more than enough to explain the missing CO2 signal. Now the Danes have shown an alternative source of climatic effects in the incidence of cosmic rays, mediated by solar weather.

      The short conclusion is, we have NO CLUE how the climate really works, nor do we know the full list of inputs that drive it nor their relative importance. Nor is there any convincing -i.e. not overly simplified- model of how our own inputs affect climate. It may well be that CO2 warming is all that is keeping us from a particulate driven cooling and ice age.

      --
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    18. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1

      Personally I think that is very likely that human activities have some impact on recent climate changes. But I think that we would never be able to come to a sound body of theory if we keep on mixing politics with science. We need to give space to dissenting voice, and if we are worried with spin coming from interest groups, we should rely on better review methods instead of trying to silence every dissenting voice.

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    19. Re:Incorrect. by pionzypher · · Score: 1

      +1 insightful. Don't have any mod points, but I wish I did.

      One of the arguments he uses is that east antarctica is colder. Erm, but look at the ice shelfs on the western peninsula. Localized cooling doesn't indicate squat. It's great that the penguins return x days later. I'm sure that the bears up north are happy for them.

      I'm still up in the air as to the extent of our contribution to climate change... but politicians like yes or no answers. I'd rather see us err on the side of caution on an issue like this.

      --
      I'll believe in corporations having personhood when Texas executes one... - advocate_one
    20. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1

      Arguing with a cop over a ticket is a really bad analogy for scientific discussion. And, no Appeal to authority doesn't have a place on science. Go read some good book on the scientific method, as it's blatantly obvious (*1) that you have forgotten some things you should have learned on university (*2).
      It's nice to see that the global warming religion has to rely on zealots that have no idea about the theory they defend so eagerly.(*3)
      *1 (did you enjoy my use of rhetorical qualifiers on this phrase to give reader an idea that you are so wrong that we can't even discuss?)
      *2 (I hope you also liked this not so subtle ad-hominen attack)
      *3 (I liked your style, and decided to imitate it. The funny thing is that I think that man-made-global-warming hypothesis is quite likely, but just because I want to see science devoid of political overtones I am attacked (by the way, in an overly inept and gross manner). The only thing that really annoys me, is exactly seeing that there's a condemnation of any competing theory that, even if slightly, happens to change the built consensus.

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    21. Re:Incorrect. by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      "Please note that I am not commenting on Cosmic Ray/Cloud formation experiment" - right thats why you called the guy leading the research team a lone nut in an attempt to discredit his theory. more like your trying to back out of a hole you dug for yourself. oh and btw, you still don't prove your point in the above post in anyway. show me somthing better then a couple of anecdotal examples. i guess trying to reason with a self confessed fanboy type is pointless, your doomed like a life of stupidity.

      --
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    22. Re:Incorrect. by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      right thats why you called the guy leading the research team a lone nut in an attempt to discredit his theory.

      Incorrect. Svensmark led the research. Calder is a reporter. Svensmark hasn't called other climate change research into question, Calder has.

      You've been telling me to rtfa, but you clearly haven't read it yourself. Unbelievable (well, not really on /.)

      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    23. Re:Incorrect. by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      I would have a lot of experiments to suggest you, that would prove my statement that earth is round.

      Yeah? I'll see your "round" and raise you an "oblate spheroid." Your move.

      Just one more area where the "common knowledge" is at best an approximation, but more fairly, simply wrong. There's a hint there, for those smart enough to take it.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    24. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1

      touché! Next time I meet you I'll refuse your gambit. LOL.

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    25. Re:Incorrect. by $uperjay · · Score: 1

      With this Black Tyrano, I can finally exterminate those pesky apes!

    26. Re:Incorrect. by polar+red · · Score: 1

      nor do we know the full list of inputs that drive it nor their relative importance. We are putting energy(actually, releasing stored energy) into the atmosphere at an incredible rate; I wonder how this could have NO effect on the planet.

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    27. Re:Incorrect. by polar+red · · Score: 1

      I'd rather see us err on the side of caution on an issue like this. no, we must consume,consume,consume!

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    28. Re:Incorrect. by mstone · · Score: 1

      The trouble with appeal to authority is not that the experts could be wrong. The real trouble is that a person who needs to cite an authority probably doesn't know if they're citing it correctly.

      If you really understand something, you can cite the data directly. I don't have to cite Galileo to discuss gravity, for instance. I know how to measure the speed of a falling object and work out the force necessary to generate that speed over that distance and time. Having to cite Galileo (or Newton) means that I probably don't know how to do the measurements myself, and can be thrown by something like the 'experiment' in the movie Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead:

      R (or G): "You'd think that this (holds up a bowling ball) would fall faster than this (flourishes a feather)."

      [Drops both. The ball thumps to the foor almost immediately, and the feather wafts slowly down]

      R (or G): "... and you'd be absolutely right."

    29. Re:Incorrect. by lahi · · Score: 1

      As you didn't say the Earth was spherical, just that it was "round", the correct way to get back at you would be to pull out some fractals and talk about jagged structures on the surface. Still, as an overall average, it should be considered correct to say that the Earth is round.

      You shouldn't surrender so easily.

      -Lasse

    30. Re:Incorrect. by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > when I ask you if the Earth is round and you answer yes, you are resorting to authority as well, unless you have gone up in space and seen it to be the case with your own eyes.

      Obviously Eratosthenes didn't know jack.

      And apparently the top of a ship's mast appearing first from a distance doesn't mean anything either...

      HINT: Why don't you go back to school and learn some logic and mathematics.

    31. Re:Incorrect. by jlehtira · · Score: 1

      Let me point out that while cosmic rays might have a *small* part to play in cloud formation, the biggest player in cloud formation is the air humidity. Clouds form when relative humidity hits 100% and it cannot happen when humidity is low.

    32. Re:Incorrect. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you actually understand anything that you fucking read? Calder is the damn author of that piss poor piece of shit article. What does a comment about a media bitch have to do with the progress of science and required reproduction of an experiment?

    33. Re:Incorrect. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Between 1950 and 2000 the empirical data indicates that the amount of light reaching the ground decreased immensely;

      What? "immensely" I haven't noticed that midday has become twilight, have you? I was born in 1959 and let me tell you sonny there's no goddamn difference in the "amount of light reaching the ground" since I were a nipper - I still get sunburnt in summer.

      What are you smoking?

      Empirical means "measured". If you want to start arguing this sort of thing I think you better start coming up with some real "empirical data" aka measured, recorded evidence before I start believing you.

      Or are you just making stuff up? You wanna say things like this - put up or keep quiet.

    34. Re:Incorrect. by phlinn · · Score: 1

      The real problem with Appeal to authority is that Ad Hominem is a natural counter argument to it. The wikipedia article lists several conditions for a valid appeal to authority, and undercutting any of those conditions would be both valid and an ad hominem attack on that source. For instance, "The authority must have competence in an area, not just glamour, prestige, rank or popularity." leads directly to accusations incompetence. Said ad hominems then get directly challenged as such, and are ignored despite being directly relevant to the actual argument given. I've seen lots of variations on that theme on Slashdot at one time or another. I'd much rather see both drop out of usage, but they're too easy as shortcuts.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    35. Re:Incorrect. by Ambitwistor · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The brutal fact is that most of your post is nonsense.

      There is labortory evidence that the excess CO2 we have been putting into the atmosphere "ought" to affect the climate. The empirical data doesn't support this. Other than, um, the global warming we've observed. Are you really claiming that global warming hasn't happened at all?

      The hockey stick curve is an artifact of data analysis and dependent upon data sets that are not correlated with temperature anyway. 1. Whether Mann's study is flawed is quite open to debate.
      2. Mann's study (the one whose data analysis has been contested) is not the only reconstruction which leads to a hockey stick curve. In fact, reconstructions do, to one extent or another, and many of them use quite different methods of analysis.
      3. Paleoproxies are indeed correlated with temperature, and there is a large literature on this subject.
      4. You don't need a "hockey stick" reconstruction at all to see that there has been global warming; you can look at the instrumental record.

      Between 1950 and 2000 the empirical data indicates that the amount of light reaching the ground decreased immensely; more than enough to explain the missing CO2 signal. The empirical data indicates no such thing. There have been solar variations, but they are quite small. Stott et al. and Foukal et al. are the usual references. Similarly, the Earth's albedo (determining how much light gets reflected back into space instead of reaching the ground) has not changed to an extent that can account for global warming. I am also puzzled as to how a decrease in light reaching the ground can lead to a warming trend.

      Now the Danes have shown an alternative source of climatic effects in the incidence of cosmic rays, mediated by solar weather. They haven't shown any such thing. They've demonstrated an influence of cosmic rays on condensation in a laboratory. They have not given observational evidence that this effect is correlated with actual cloud formation in the atmosphere, and they have not demonstrated that this effect drives climate change.

      The short conclusion is, we have NO CLUE how the climate really works, nor do we know the full list of inputs that drive it nor their relative importance. You are confusing your personal ignorance with that of the scientific community. The existence and relative importance of different drivers of climate have been studied for over a century. While there are uncertainties, they are not on the level of "whoops, insolation effects are really 5x bigger than we thought they were" or whatever. Further, if you want to propose hitherto-unknown non-anthropogenic driver of global warming, you have to also propose an even larger unknown source of cooling to explain why the known large amounts of anthropogenic CO2 haven't been warming the Earth even more than your proposed natural warming driver. It is not credible.

      It may well be that CO2 warming is all that is keeping us from a particulate driven cooling and ice age. That's possible, but it still doesn't mean that we want global warming, either. If CO2 is staving off an ice age, then what we want is not necessarily "business as usual", but probably reduced CO2 emissions which warm us, but not too much.
    36. Re:Incorrect. by Prune · · Score: 1

      And apparently the top of a ship's mast appearing first from a distance doesn't mean anything either...

      By itself that is not proof that the Earth is round, since it could be an optical illusion or [insert whatever here]. Likewise for Eratosthenes.

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
    37. Re:Incorrect. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a matter of fact, if you asked me formally if the earth is round, I would have a lot of experiments to suggest you, that would prove my statement that earth is round. That's why reproducible results are the cornerstone for science.


      You criticise Fanboy's lack of understanding of scientific method, then you propose that experiments can prove a hypothesis? You sir are a massive hypocrite. Pot...kettle.
    38. Re:Incorrect. by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1

      OK Coward Idiot. Demonstrate, not prove.

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    39. Re:Incorrect. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      For someone who wants to remove politics and authority from science, you spend precious little time discussing the actual science. Come again once you're done reveling in your own greatness.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  3. USE=brain by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 5, Informative

    Before you people start screaming, "what do they expect us to do about cosmic rays??//?/?" Think. This isn't about "debunking" global warming, nor is it about fearmongering about it. It's about building more accurate climate models.

    Move along.

    1. Re:USE=brain by EraserMouseMan · · Score: 1, Insightful

      We like the climate model we have, thank you. Besides we're not going for accuracy. We want whatever model will shut down those wealthy big-oil pigs.

    2. Re:USE=brain by mcrbids · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "The important thing is not to stop questioning."

      -Albert Einstein

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    3. Re:USE=brain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We want whatever model will shut down those wealthy big-oil pigs

      Fuckwit.

    4. Re:USE=brain by evilviper · · Score: 2, Funny

      "The important thing is not to stop questioning."

      Umm... What?
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    5. Re:USE=brain by zCyl · · Score: 1

      "The important thing is not to stop questioning."

      Umm... What?

      Stop that...
    6. Re:USE=brain by evilviper · · Score: 2, Funny

      "The important thing is not to stop questioning."

      Umm... What?

      Stop that...

      Why?
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    7. Re:USE=brain by JohnPM · · Score: 1

      I presume you were attempting irony?

      Either way you're a moron.

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    8. Re:USE=brain by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it's also about something more important than that. It's about not knowing that cosmic rays come from outside the solar system. The scientist who came up with this is a real genius.

    9. Re:USE=brain by Logi · · Score: 1

      I presume you were attempting irony?
      This may also have been coppery gone horribly wrong.
      --
      Logi - I can do anything, but not everything.
    10. Re:USE=brain by tsalaroth · · Score: 1

      Whenever I try that USE flag, emerge complains. Is there another USE flag I can use?

    11. Re:USE=brain by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Before you people start screaming, "what do they expect us to do about cosmic rays??//?/?" Think. This isn't about "debunking" global warming, nor is it about fearmongering about it. It's about building more accurate climate models.

      Forcefields.

      O.k. We need selective forcefields because we really want that light from our sun. We might have to play a bit to turn the stars back on at night after our plantery shield is up.

  4. Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Reverse+Gear · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have had some classes on this theory at university.

    This being a somewhat new theory everything is still quite uncertain how much effect this has on the heating of the earth.

    I think the estimates we saw in class a year ago was that this could explain from 10% to maybe 30% of the heating that has happened in the last 30 years.

    We don't have measurements of the amount of cosmic radiation from more than something like 30 years so it is hard to go further back to check this theory.
    We have CO2 measurements from somewhat longer, but not that much longer, but we have trapped air in the ice cores which give us information almost 100K years back which gives the evidence of CO2 and methane quite strong support.
    Cosmic radiation does is not "trapped" anywhere in the geologic layers to my knowledge.

    I am no saying Svensmarks theory is wrong, it most likely has an effect, but how big this effect is is very hard to say by now.
    Anyhow I think the critique of the UN-report is justified, if this theory is not part of the report. Not taking this theory into account and then saying there is a 90% certainty that humans have caused global warming is not scientific.

    1. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      Cosmic radiation does is not "trapped" anywhere in the geologic layers to my knowledge.
      You are correct. However, there is some nonzero chance that information about the sun's magnetic field might be present in the geologic layers... Thinking about it a little more, likely not. More likely that that information would be found in rock of another solar-system object, one which doesn't have a strong magnetic field of its own.
      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    2. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by starman97 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Cosmic rays are basically high energy nuclei, which include essentially all of the elements in the periodic table; about 89% of the nuclei are hydrogen (protons), 10% helium, and about 1% heavier elements. They are accelerated to between 40% and 99% of the Speed of light, or between 100Million electron Volts to 10GeV, this must leave some sort of chemical or isotopic signature on things like organic molecules in ice cores.
      Sort of like the carbon14/12 ratio which is used to date formerly living things.

      If the Cosmic Ray flux has changed substantially over a few thousand year period, there should be some way to test for it's effects.

      --
      Starman97@Gmail.com (bring it on spammers)
    3. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Prune · · Score: 1

      Thinking about it a little more, likely not.

      Why did you correct yourself and leave your mistaken assumption in the first sentence without erasing it before posting?

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
    4. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by zappepcs · · Score: 1

      Cosmic radiation is an interesting thing. One other theory suggests that it is responsible for much of how lightning acts. Despite any theories, there is enough basic information to warrant further investigation with regard to climate and genetic mutations and many other things. The effect that solar radiation, cosmic radiation, and other not-of-this-world factors need to be taken into account ,as any programs to counter man made warming could be exacerbated or perverted into a situation that worsens the warming trend if all factors are not known.

      The only logical plan is to use multiple attempts to reduce factors that contribute to warming, and continue to study climate vigorously to ensure that we don't try to counter the natural way of things. Logic and temperate thinking is the only way to achieve buy-in by those with power and money needed to effect climate warming control measures.

      This is an idea that might better help us understand how the climate works, and as such should be considered by all concerned. While it may or may not be significant, studying it may lead to truly innovative thinking and understanding of the planets climate.

    5. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by BigPaise · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually we perhaps do have a pretty good record of cosmic ray activity from the C14 levels in tree rings. This is because it is cosmic rays that convert nitrogen into C14 making the radioactive CO2 that plants (trees) ingest and incorporate into their growth rings. Some trees are hundreds if not over 1000 years old.

    6. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Kalle+Barfot · · Score: 1

      You say "how big this effect is is very hard to say" -- and THAT'S THE WHOLE POINT!

      There is no evidence that current climate changes are DRIVEN by human activity. There is on the other hand AMPLE evidence that CO2 levels have wildly fluctuated in the past 500 My (3-5 times higher than today) and that temperatures have wildly fluctuated over even the last 400,000 years (much of the Northern Hemisphere was covered with 3-4km-thick ice sheets about 12,000 years ago).

      We live in an interglacial period and should be grateful about the greenhouse effect! is there any evidence of "global warming" in the past that may have hurt life on Earth? there have been long periods without ice sheets in the past, i.e. the warm periods between ice ages.

      --
      "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield." -- Tennyson
    7. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      Hmm. The rate of synthesis of 14C is known to be variable depending on cosmic ray flux. There are known correction factors for radiocarbon dating based on those changes, so something must be known.

    8. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      >Logic and temperate thinking is the only way to achieve buy-in by those with power and money

      I want to live in a world where that works. Meanwhile, you're right that we need all the data we can get.

    9. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by kestasjk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not taking this theory into account and then saying there is a 90% certainty that humans have caused global warming is not scientific.
      I haven't read the draft of the latest report, but I did read the 2001 one.

      There's a graph showing the effect they think various potential influences had, listed along with our scientific understanding of them. Solar influence was at the far right of the scale of our scientific understanding (at the lowest level), and was listed as having a comparatively small heating effect. Greenhouse gases were listed to the far left, and had a comparatively very high heating effect.
      You can read this as "we're not sure what effect solar radiation has, but we're damn sure greenhouse gases have a large heating effect".

      If they haven't taken it into account to the same degree as other influences it's because they don't fully understand it and don't have much to report, not because there's some conspiracy.
      Just because we don't understand dark matter doesn't mean we don't know the direction a ball will fall in when we release it; solar radiation may or may not be having a impact, but what we do know is that the Earth is warming and humans are having a huge warming influence.

      Does the editor of New Scientist might have a clue what he's talking about? Have you read New Scientist recently? Every time I see a copy in a waiting room I learn that there may be black holes everywhere, or how some scientist has come up with a theory of everything, or how the entire field of physics has just been turned on its head.
      Most of the time it's just sensationalist rubbish to get sales. "A 1000 year old problem solved?" "Is N-theory the successor to M-theory?" "Are there millions of galaxies within every atom?" "Has time travel been achieved?". Then, in the list of extras "Are you more like Einstein or Newton? Take our test", etc, etc.
      With all the recent reports of oil companies paying people to discredit the IPCC should we trust the editor of a magazine? Or a report compiled based on the cumulative efforts of thousands of climatologists?
      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
    10. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by 1u3hr · · Score: 3, Informative
      There is no evidence that current climate changes are DRIVEN by human activity.

      Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

      Most of the observed increase in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations 12 . This is an advance since the TARs conclusion that most of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations. Discernible human influences now extend to other aspects of climate, including ocean warming, continental-average temperatures, temperature extremes and wind patterns...

    11. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by zCyl · · Score: 1

      I think the estimates we saw in class a year ago was that this could explain from 10% to maybe 30% of the heating that has happened in the last 30 years.

      Does this estimate of 10% to 30% due to cosmic rays include or not include a positive feedback due to water vapor?
    12. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      For the same stupid reason you made your lame follow up post. Thinking about it a little more, they aren't that's not the reason at all.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    13. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Reverse+Gear · · Score: 1

      Does this estimate of 10% to 30% due to cosmic rays include or not include a positive feedback due to water vapor?

      I am not totally certain, but I seem to recall that the the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere did not have the big effect as this is pretty much constant through the atmosphere after a short time interval and therefore this created both high and low clouds, where the high clouds actually decrease warming of the atmosphere, as a lot of the energy they absorb are transferred "to the rest of the universe" instead of to the lower atmosphere and they at the same time reflect a big portion of the light that hits them.

      The important effect of this is the clouds that are formed over the sea surface where the amount of moisture in the air is always close to 100%.

      But then again this is a pretty new developed theory, I don't think enough modeling of this has been made to give you a conclusive answer, the 10% to 30% is only an estimate and no where conclusive.

    14. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by ArcherB · · Score: 1
      From here:

      A small, but very vocal, band of extremists have been hawking a doomsday scenario, in which Greenland suddenly melts, raising sea levels 12 feet or more by 2100. While this forecast enjoys no real support in the traditionally refereed scientific literature, it is repeated everywhere, and its supporters are already claiming that the IPCC -- the self-proclaimed "consensus of scientists" -- is now wrong because it has toned down its projections of doom and gloom.

      But the integrated warming of southern Greenland (the region that sheds ice) was much greater for several decades in the early and mid-20th century than in the last decade. In fact, with the exception of one year (2003), Greenland's recent temperatures aren't particularly unusual, nor is its rate of ice loss.

      As measured recently by satellite, and published in Science magazine, Greenland is losing .0004 percent of its ice per year, or 0.4 percent per century. All modern computer models require nearly 1,000 years of carbon concentrations three times what they are today to melt the majority of Greenland's ice. Does anyone seriously believe we will be a fossil-fuel powered society in, say, the year 2500?

      In summary, what's not new in today's IPCC report -- that humans are warming the planet -- will be treated as big news, while what is new -- that sea levels are not likely to rise as much as previously predicted -- will be ignored, at least by everyone except the extremist fringe.


      Actually, this prediction is much more accurate that all the global warming predictions I've seen combined!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    15. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Reverse+Gear · · Score: 1

      Thank you, I never thought of this, but of course this effect has to be there.

      Do you know if any research has been done into this and if so has it been possible to establish a record of C12/C14 ratio from the tree rings?

      Actually we do have tree ring data from even further back, there are all these tree that have been found in swamps and also some older buildings where they have been conserved, I think a tree ring record has been pretty much establish for 10000 years based on this.
      I guess doing C12/C14 can be a bit difficult as it requires a decently sized sample that has not been contaminated with other living (or maybe rather once living) organisms (which probably does happen when they are conserved in a swamp).
      I never thought this could be used for anything but estimating how good a growth season it had been.

    16. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      A small, but very vocal, band of extremists ...

      I didn't quote a "small very vocal band of extremists". The IPCC is a very conservative scientific panel. That's "conservative" in the scientific sense of not making unsubstantiated claims, not in the American political sense like the nutjobs you linked to.

    17. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by ArcherB · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I didn't quote a "small very vocal band of extremists". The IPCC is a very conservative scientific panel. That's "conservative" in the scientific sense of not making unsubstantiated claims, not in the American political sense like the nutjobs you linked to.

      Exactly. You are calling those that did NOT ignore the "good" news from the report extremists... actually, you called them nutjobs.

      As to the IPCC report you're talking about... it hasn't been released yet. What you've read is the "Summary for Policymakers"... in other words, the cliff-notes for politicians. I think the world will survive long enough for the actual report to come out. Even then, I don't know how much stock I'm going to put into a bunch of UN hired scientists. I put them just below Exxon employees on the credibility scale. At least Exxon did not watch half a million children die from starvation, tainted water and disease due to UN corruption. (UNICEF'S numbers, Oil for food program is the corruption in case you couldn't figure it out. Don't even get me started on Darfur, Rwanda or even Bosnia!)

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    18. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by mstone · · Score: 0

      You do realize that you're quoting the report written by politicians, right? The one that's still being written by scientists is due to be released some time around spring.

    19. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Exactly. You are calling those that did NOT ignore the "good" news from the report extremists... actually, you called them nutjobs.

      Actually, I'm calling them nutjobs after reading their website. Not just on this one issue.

      I don't know how much stock I'm going to put into a bunch of UN hired scientists. I put them just below Exxon employees on the credibility scale. At least Exxon did not watch half a million children die from starvation, tainted water and disease due to UN corruption

      You've just confirmed my opinion of American conservatives. Better dig your bunker before the UN stormtroopers invade.

    20. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by the_brobdingnagian · · Score: 1

      Cosmic rays appear to exist with much higher energies than 10GeV. A while ago the http://www.hisparc.nl/ project reconstructed a cosmic particle with the energy 7.6x10^19 eV. This is more than the GZK cutoff (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GZK_cutoff), a theoretical limit on the energy of cosmic rays.

    21. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Cosmic radiation does is not "trapped" anywhere in the geologic layers to my knowledge.

      Concentrations of Beryllium-10 in ice cores, produced by cosmic rays, have been used as a proxy for cosmic radiation fluxes. So, in some sense, Cosmic radiation is "trapped" in the cryo/geological record.

    22. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by 1u3hr · · Score: 2, Informative
      You do realize that you're quoting the report written by politicians, right?

      Wrong.

      Drafting Authors: Richard Alley, Terje Berntsen, Nathaniel L. Bindoff, Zhenlin Chen, Amnat Chidthaisong, Pierre Friedlingstein, Jonathan Gregory, Gabriele Hegerl, Martin Heimann, Bruce Hewitson, Brian Hoskins, Fortunat Joos, Jean Jouzel, Vladimir Kattsov, Ulrike Lohmann, Martin Manning, Taroh Matsuno, Mario Molina, Neville Nicholls, Jonathan Overpeck, Dahe Qin, Graciela Raga, Venkatachalam Ramaswamy, Jiawen Ren, Matilde Rusticucci, Susan Solomon, Richard Somerville, Thomas F. Stocker, Peter Stott, Ronald J. Stouffer, Penny Whetton, Richard A. Wood, David Wratt
      Google the names. Professors, not politicians.
    23. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Kalle+Barfot · · Score: 1

      Quoting the IPCC is not evidence but agit-prop. The IPCC is a political group devoted to an ideological, anti-industrial platform, not a source of facts.

      If you talk to real scientists, and ask them what factors cause climate changes, and what evidence they have for their theories, you will find that they have a bunch of leads and simply don't know for certain what the primary and secondary causes are. Which means that there is no proven "global warming is driven by humans" scientific theory.

      Quoting the IPCC will not make go away the following facts: CO2 levels mostly tanged 3-5 times higher than today over the last several 100 million years; temperatures have repeatedly risen and fallen wildly over the last several 100,000 years; there is no proven, causal correlation between CO2 release in the atmosphere and radical global temperature changes; there are multiple candidate causes for climate change, including solar variability and volcanic activity.

      I've been reading the relevant scientific literature for 20 years, have you?

      --
      "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield." -- Tennyson
    24. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by cnettel · · Score: 1

      However, cosmics rays are many different particlse. The direct source of C14 are neutrons, but those are released by other processes. Of course, the C14 data is better than nothing.

    25. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by BigPaise · · Score: 1

      Yes, it has been done to some extent as a way to calibrate radiocarbon dating. With a half-life of around 5000 years C14 goes away rather quickly on a geologic time scale and the error bars may increase with age. With a large enough statistical sample set, the accuracy can be improved but then one needs to know the exact age of death for trees in a swamp or bog. I've not heard of any research relating tree-ring C14 to past climate, but it might be worthy of a thesis project. Serendipitously, tree-ring data also says something directly about the climate.

    26. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      The energy distribution of cosmic radiation is pretty steep and its is the low energy end that is affected by the magenetic field transported away from the Sun by the solar wind. So, in a way you can say that the Sun's wind affects the most abundant cosmic rays. This is a plus for the theory. The history of of the cosmic ray flux can be reconstructed from ice core measurements of beryllium http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Solar_Activity_ Proxies.png suggesting that, for example, the Sun's magnetic cycle continues even when sunspot activity is reduced. C14 can also be used albeit at a lower time resolution http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Carbon-14_with_ activity_labels.png. Note that Years Before Present can be ambiguous.

      The reason this theory can be excluded from the recently released report on climate change is that the report looks at warming after 1750 where the solar activity has had lower variability, modulo the 22 year cycle (Be data). This means the variables (cosmic radiation and GHG concentration) are seperable in modern times (because we've changed the CO2 concentration so much). The effect of the Sun is small compared to what we are doing ourselves in the current warming http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/02/executive-summ ary.html.

      It seems to me that the link in the original article must be misrepresenting the recent IPCC climate report so while the experiment is certainly interesting, not much can be said regarding its impact on the conclusions drawn there http://www.ipcc.ch/.
      --
      Get solar: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users -selling-solar.html

    27. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by 1u3hr · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      The IPCC is a political group devoted to an ideological, anti-industrial platform, not a source of facts.

      Really? How interesting. Your ideas are intriguing to me, and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

    28. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by HBI · · Score: 1

      With all the recent reports of oil companies paying people to discredit the IPCC should we trust the editor of a magazine? Or a report compiled based on the cumulative efforts of thousands of climatologists?

      With all the watermelons in this field, and all the political and monetary pressure to come up with a "man-made global warming" result, why should we trust the thousands of climatologists?

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    29. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1
      Two points on what you said:
      1. here's a graph showing the effect they think various potential influences
        There could be a lot more, or a lot less. And they could be wrong about all. That's not to say they are. But again, it's what they think, not what they know for certain.
      2. You can read this as "we're not sure what effect solar radiation has, but we're damn sure greenhouse gases have a large heating effect".
        Even if they are, it does not mean that humans are the generator of those greenhouse gases. It could be solar interference that is causing the green house gases to rise. There is simply not enough information, and not enough understanding about all the factors.
      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    30. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Look at my moderation and see what happens to those who question the group-think.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    31. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Look at my moderation and see what happens to those who question the group-think.

      Don't despair. Maybe you can call the ACLU and get them to intercede for this discriminatory act. It's not your fault you're differently abled.

    32. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by toddhisattva · · Score: 1

      Professors, not politicians.
      Professors are politicians.
    33. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know if you can directly measure cosmic rays, but we can measure some of their effects. Here's an article linking plankton production in a certain area to sunspot cycles. The was written by Dr. Tim Patterson, Professor of Geology at Carleton University.

      http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=010405M

    34. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      If the Cosmic Ray flux has changed substantially over a few thousand year period, there should be some way to test for it's effects. I once attended a talk by Richard Alley in which he said that there was a period of time when there was a significant increase in cosmic ray flux which is detectable in the paleo data, but no corresponding significant change in climate could be detected in the data (either warming or cooling). Unfortunately, I don't have the reference.
    35. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by kestasjk · · Score: 1

      With all the watermelons in this field, and all the political and monetary pressure to come up with a "man-made global warming" result, why should we trust the thousands of climatologists?
      Good point; research grants are such a gold mine that they are worth a conspiracy amongst thousands of scientists (and those who have peer reviewed their works too, presumably).

      I've been wondering why I'm always bumping into filthy rich climatologists these days, always throwing around research grant money and driving around in their gas guzzling sports cars.
      It would also explain why there are so many "climatology for dummies" books cropping up, all selling themselves with the rich lifestyles climatologists have.

      Now that I think about it.. Didn't the WTC contain a research lab that was due to release a report on alleged "IPCC inconsistencies" on 9/12? O_O It's all a conspiracy! These people have access to satellite data too! Put on your tin foil hats!
      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
    36. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Reverse+Gear · · Score: 1

      I would just like to thank the person modding the parent of this comment "flamebait" for inspiring me to do a blog post and making me think twice about that word.

      I am kind of curios what this comment will be modded now, having a good enough karma to not have to care all that much is really a blessing ;)

    37. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Cute, but you don't have to be differently abled to know that the Constitution only applies to government censorship, not censorship by a company or other people. Since the ACLU is really only interested in protecting the Bill of Rights, I doubt they would interested in my plight.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    38. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      idiot.. no one is saying it never fluctuated. It's just increased more than natural fluctuations in the past. Go read a book jackass and stop listening to Rush

    39. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by skoaldipper · · Score: 0

      Look at my moderation and see what happens to those who question the group-think.
      Fear not 'ole buddy! Tis better to be amongst friends than in charge of none.
      --
      I hope, when they die, cartoon characters have to answer for their sins.
    40. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Do you happen to know of any easy to access graphs of that data, preferably mapped up against CO2 and/or estimated world temperatures for the time?

      I did find this off of wikipedia: Carbon 14 graph

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    41. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by abefij · · Score: 1

      According to http://www.sciencebits.com/ice-ages Iron meteorites can be analyzed to obtain a history of Cosmic Ray Flux. The linked web site shows a correlation between the solar systems spiral arm passages and increased cosmic rays reaching the earth. The periods of increased cosmic rays are also correlated with the ice ages. Every time the Earth makes a passage through one of the Galaxys spiral arms, we have an ice age. The theory appears to have some merit, because of the coinciding periodicity.

    42. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by PSC · · Score: 1

      They are accelerated to between 40% and 99% of the Speed of light, or between 100Million electron Volts to 10GeV

      10 GeV is nothing for a cosmic ray. The KASCADE experiment measured cosmic rays of up to 10^9 GeV (10^18 eV) years ago, and the Auger experiment will measure cosmic rays of 10^20 eV.

      (For reference: the most powerful particle accelerator is currently the Tevatron at Fermilab at 2 TeV.)

      --
      --- The light at the end of the tunnel is probably a burning truck.
    43. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Dean+Hougen · · Score: 1

      Professors are politicians.
      Then I'm getting ripped off. Why aren't lobbyists buying me lunch and flying me to golf resorts in Scotland?

      Dean
    44. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Professors are politicians.

      If your definition is so broad, who isn't?

    45. Re:Pretty much unknown how big an effect ths has by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can someone explain the Maunder Minimum to me? The Maunder Minimum is the name given to the period roughly from 1645 to 1715 A.D., when sunspots became exceedingly rare, as noted by solar observers of the time. It is named after the later solar astronomer E.W. Maunder who discovered the dearth of sunspots during that period by studying records from those years. During one 30-year period within the Maunder Minimum, for example, astronomers observed only about 50 sunspots, as opposed to a more typical 40,000-50,000 spots.

      I don know if there was any global warming then, but it may validate or debunk the cosmic ray theory.

  5. wait! by Simon+Garlick · · Score: 5, Funny

    I for one refuse to comment on this subject until Michael Crichton tells me what is right!

    1. Re:wait! by edwardpickman · · Score: 2, Funny

      I prefer to wait for the movie to come out. I'd like to have Stephen Speilberg's opinion as well.

    2. Re:wait! by semiotec · · Score: 1

      nah, Spielberg is not spectacular enough. Bruckheimer will do a much better job in showing Earth heating up so much that it explodes! the ultimate gratuitous explosion! that will get people's attention much better than some UN report.

    3. Re:wait! by dbIII · · Score: 1

      until Michael Crichton tells me what is right!

      If you ask him he'll just go on about homocidal albino Gorillas with stone ping pong bats or giving doctors the right to nuke bits of the USA.

      Asimov and Clarke were/are worth listening to on quite a few issues because they also wrote non-fiction - but really poeple have to remember that SF writers are not a superior source of info to experts in a feild.

    4. Re:wait! by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Is that any stupider than waiting until Al Gore tells you what's right?

      At least ONE of them has a serious education.

      --
      -Styopa
    5. Re:wait! by subl33t · · Score: 1

      Crichton *has* written non-fiction; he is also a doctor. The man does his research.

      Maybe you should too.

  6. Seems familar... by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Also, pretty much summed up in a recent Mark Steyn commentary.

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
  7. Other predictions by grouchyDude · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Interestingly enough, his theory does even more! It predicts the
    substantial positive change to his bank balance due to a payment from
    an oil cartel discussed here last week.

    1. Re:Other predictions by timmarhy · · Score: 2, Informative

      unlikely since this is a 5 year long research project recently completed. even less likely since it's nothing to do with oil.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    2. Re:Other predictions by 3p1ph4ny · · Score: 2, Informative

      From TFA:

      The only trouble with Svensmark's idea -- apart from its being politically incorrect -- was that meteorologists denied that cosmic rays could be involved in cloud formation. After long delays in scraping together the funds for an experiment, Svensmark and his small team at the Danish National Space Center hit the jackpot in the summer of 2005.

      Why didn't the oil cartel fund his experiment if they were so interested in it? Or did you just choose to assume, without actually reading the article?

    3. Re:Other predictions by Marcos+Eliziario · · Score: 1

      I, personally, believe that there is some global warming, and that yes, it must have been caused, at least in some degree by human activities. But, I am no climate scientist, and for what I have seen so far, there's still not a complete theory, unchallenged that is able to quantify the warming, and the role of human effects on it.
      I was trained as a economist (as a result of a silly familiar pressure on programming not being a respectable profession), and because of that, I've seen the stupidity that can happens when models are taken as more important than reality itself. Because of that, I get very worried when I see people trying to interdict scientific debate using moral, and utterly politically loaded statements to discredit everyone that holds a theory that contradict his/her particular view.

      --
      Your ad could be here!
    4. Re:Other predictions by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I get something else out of your comment too.

      If you are not pro-GW, you may have greater difficulty finding funding.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    5. Re:Other predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because of that, I get very worried when I see people trying to interdict scientific debate using moral, and utterly politically loaded statements to discredit everyone that holds a theory that contradict his/her particular view.

      I haven't read every paper ever published on GW in the last 20 years, but in the few dozens I have, I've nerver come across "moral and utterly political statements" to discredit anyone in any of them. So I can't see that you get that in the scientific debate. However, once you step out of the purely scientific debate, (and I would not count even a scientifically informed blog such as Real Climate as part of the scientific debate), you seem to hear little else. You, yourself don't seem to be immune from this.

    6. Re:Other predictions by ArcherB · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Interestingly enough, his theory does even more! It predicts the
      substantial positive change to his bank balance due to a payment from
      an oil cartel discussed here last week


      I see it another way... Here is a scientist that has more to lose by saying that global warming is NOT man made than he has to gain. You don't have to look much farther than the former state climatologist of Oregon to see the blackmail this guy is about to face for stating what he believes based on his own scientific observations. The pittance this guy may or may not be getting from Exxon is not going to support him for the rest of his life.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    7. Re:Other predictions by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Ah, the ol' response to anything critical of the consensus. It must be petrol-funded!

      Meanwhile, let's ignore all the "donations" and other grants the global warming alarmists get from Greenpeace and other groups.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    8. Re:Other predictions by skoaldipper · · Score: 0

      If you are not pro-GW, you may have greater difficulty finding funding.

      [ As I writhe my hands together at the keyboard ... ]

      And so now the hunters become the hunted!

      muahhaha...

      muahahaAHAHAAA!

      MUAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAA!!
      --
      I hope, when they die, cartoon characters have to answer for their sins.
  8. It's Pirates I tell Ye Laddy by goombah99 · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's well know that the decline of seafaring pirates correlates the rise of global warming me hearties. sunspots too

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:It's Pirates I tell Ye Laddy by KDR_11k · · Score: 1
      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    2. Re:It's Pirates I tell Ye Laddy by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Indeed, it also explains why 1998 was the hottest year up to now. In 1999, the first version of Napster was released, which enhanced piracy and therefore reduced the temperature.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  9. FSM link by goombah99 · · Score: 3, Funny

    It surely be pirates, jim lad. Never a truer tale been told. All this shows is that pirate decline may be associated with cosmic rays.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:FSM link by Walt+Dismal · · Score: 3, Funny
      It can't be pirates, because my friends from the planet Xenon told me it is indeed cosmic rays. See, when they visited me last month, they said "Your planet is being warmed because cosmic radiation is affecting the atmosphere." I said "Wow! You came all the way here to tell me that?" But the big gray one said "No, actually, we came because our scientists also said the PS3 was the most advanced computer on Earth, and we wanted to buy one, but there was a big line and Circuit City was all sold out when we tried." I asked, "The same scientists who told you about cosmic rays?" and he said "Yes. But we got a raincheck from the clerk. And then he sold us something called an 'iPod'. He said it was cooler than an anal probe."

      I have a few doubts about the cosmic ray advice, frankly. But, yes, iPods are cooler than an anal probe.

    2. Re:FSM link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Flying Spaghetti Monster is not amused

    3. Re:FSM link by fyngyrz · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The Flying Spaghetti Monster is a really fucking tired meme.

      Just think how tired a meme Christianity is, then, and you're beginning to get at least one of the points of the whole FSM thing.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    4. Re:FSM link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, the difference between, say, Christianity and FSM, is one is a system of belief based on a man being revived from the dead, turning water into wine, becoming flesh and blood out of biscuits and wine thousands of years later, that all of one man's ancestors are born in sin, etc. The other one is just made-up bullcrap.

    5. Re:FSM link by ComaVN · · Score: 1

      potatoes, potatos

      --
      Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
    6. Re:FSM link by neuromancer2701 · · Score: 1


      Besides the fact that there is historical proof that a "man" named Jesus lived around the 30s AD. How many ppl on slashdot have sigs pointing to Christian sites that say your a dilutional idiot if you think God does not exist. I know that they exist out there ,that is not my argument.

      --
      "If you like Battlestar Galactica, you're probably a huge nerd." -Stephen Colbert
    7. Re:FSM link by evillorddan · · Score: 1

      I know it is not for me to question the central tenets of the one true faith, but actually I think you will find that pirates are on the increase these days...

    8. Re:FSM link by spoondisaster · · Score: 1

      Nowhere in the FSM Bible have I seen anything about being revived from the dead and all that stuff! Lies!

    9. Re:FSM link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/biscuits/pasta/, moron

    10. Re:FSM link by fyngyrz · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      Besides the fact that there is historical proof that a "man" named Jesus lived around the 30

      Now, I could be missing some data, and if so, by all means correct me, but my current understanding is that the first actual record that we have is from about 24 years after Jesus was to have died, in an AD 64 letter from Tacitus that mentions the Christian cult (his own words.) Josephus mentions Jesus, but as Josephus wasn't even born until AD 37, and was writing in the AD 80's, I think we can agree he had no direct experience. Then Pliny the Elder mentions Jesus and the cult again in AD 100. Also, Jesus, as I understand it, hasn't been described as having "lived about AD 30", he is purported to have lived from about AD 0 or perhaps BC a few to AD 30.

      What all this amounts to is evidence of the cult of Christians in the times following (by 3 decades at the closest) when he was reputed to have lived, but not of Jesus himself, no bill for a cross, no records at court of having to reprimand him, no records of him picking up the whips in the temple; Other than the bible itself, which of course we only have components from about AD 300 onwards and so it isn't a reliable historical source, the mentions of Jesus all seem to be about the cult, not the man. Note that I am not in the least saying that very early Christians aren't real; just that there is no particular evidence that supports Jesus himself. He may, of course, have lived anyway - but the evidence doesn't appear to be there to say so.

      Given that I am unaware of any records of Jesus, as opposed to records of the Christians - please, if you are aware of any such records, I would like to know about them. Thank you.

      It is important to note that were we to be able to establish that Jesus was real, had followers, and so forth, we still have not in any way established that he was the son of a god, or that there is a god. We've simply gone about finding some guy who said so. I can find the guy who established the FSM meme, too. :)

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    11. Re:FSM link by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 1

      that all of one man's ancestors are born in sin,

      Er...Adam had no ancestors. Perhaps you mean descendants? :)

    12. Re: FSM link by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      >> Besides the fact that there is historical proof that a "man" named Jesus lived around the 30

      > Now, I could be missing some data, and if so, by all means correct me, but my current understanding is that the first actual record that we have is from about 24 years after Jesus was to have died, in an AD 64 letter from Tacitus that mentions the Christian cult (his own words.)

      And IIRC all he mentions is that there was a disturbance among the Jews of Rome arising from a dispute over whether a certain "Chrestos" was dead or alive.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    13. Re:FSM link by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I'm curious about the evidence, since I've seen claims that there is evidence independent of the Bible, but not the evidence itself.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    14. Re:FSM link by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      The Josephus reference is considered by most people to be a fabrication, not written by Josephus at all.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    15. Re:FSM link by fyngyrz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      There are two references he makes. One is very good contextually, and not disputed as far as I am aware. That's where he says "Ananus... convened the judges of the Sanhedrin and brought before them a man named James, the brother of Jesus who was called the Christ, and certain others. He accused them of having transgressed the law and delivered them up to be stoned." The main one scholars object to is the one where he call Jesus the "messiah" which of course is a very unlikely (or worse, blasphemous) term for a non-Christian jew to use at the time, and also made unlikely by other, contemporaneous reports of Josephus' outlook, which was decidedly non-Christian.

      It really is amazing how strongly the thread of presumed "evidence" for Jesus' actuality runs through society. When you go looking, you find basically nothing.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  10. Cosmic rays by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, no it's not the billions of cars and factories spewing out humongous amounts of CO2 and CH4, no, no, its COSMIC RAYS!

    It's very much like my four-year old girl insisting on that it was some stranger who used permanent markers on the wallpaper in her room.

    1. Re:Cosmic rays by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Look, if you don't have the evidence to disprove her (apparent) knowledge of such events, I suppose you'll just have to save any punishement for that stranger, when her or she appears.

      That's what most of the posts supporting these guys appear to believe.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  11. Here we go again.... by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All those crazy "climate change has nothing to do with carbon levels" crackpots are going to have a field day. And all the "Yes it bloody well does!!" crackpots are going to get all defensive and who's going to win in the end? The trolls. That's who. The trolls.

    In all this I'm reminded of a mock argument I heard on the radio between a geologist and a biologist about the source of oxygen in out atmosphere. Both "experts" were convinced that it was largely due to some effect described in their field of study and dismissed the other.

    What I'm trying to say is that there is solid evidence that carbon in the atmosphere can trap heat. If we now discover that cosmic rays are warming the planet, that doesn't exclude the effect of carbon as an insulator from the equation. Now if both theories are true we have a serious problem. Cosmic radiation is warming the planet at a higher rate and carbon is preventing it from cooling.

    What do we do about it?

    1. Reduce carbon emissions.
    2. reduce Earth's exposure to cosmic rays

    If reducing cosmic rays can be done along the lines of Mr. Burns blocking out the sun with his big dish, I'm all for it, as long as I'm the one who owns the dish. Otherwise, with sincere apologies all the "I'm gonna fcsking well drive my big Ford SUV 2 blocks to buy my cheese in a can" crackpots, but it has to be option 1.

    --
    I don't therefore I'm not.
    1. Re:Here we go again.... by stormj · · Score: 1

      Thanks. Up until I read this insight, I was a full believe in this hoax called global warming. But the sheer force of this comment changed my mind. None of these scientists ever thought about VENUS before. Only people on this site who maybe had an intro astronomy class in college and think they're smarter than everyone could have caught that one. .... oh wait, Carl Sagan discussed this 30 years ago in Cosmos. Next.

    2. Re:Here we go again.... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Does that mean that you actually would like to live on Venus?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    3. Re:Here we go again.... by cats2ndlife · · Score: 1

      LOL. Nice try. Nicely said Max Littlemore. Couldn't agree with you more. The fact is that it doesn't matter how our climate is affected by external factors because we have the ability to control it. If we want to maintain the stability of our climate since the last ice-age, we have to start reducing CO2 levels, if the cosmic ray theory turns out to be a big cause of global warming, doesn't that mean we have to start restriction carbon emission right away and may be even set the emission limit lower? Either way CO2 is still trapping heat in the atmosphere like a thick blanket under the sun. The question is by how much do we have to reduce CO2.

    4. Re:Here we go again.... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      If we now discover that cosmic rays are warming the planet, that doesn't exclude the effect of carbon as an insulator from the equation.

      No, but HOW MUCH of an effect is up for unlimited debate.

      What do we do about it?

      1. Reduce carbon emissions.

      Doing this is going to require a serious economic hit to pretty much every country around the world. IF Co2 is only responsible for 10% of global warming, then it's probably not worth the economic hit it will take to reduce our emissions of it.

      People that say "do it anyways" must subscribe to the "broken window" theory of economics, which has been disproven time and time again.

      I'm all for it, as long as I'm the one who owns the dish.

      What? Why is that now a requirement? Just because you personally don't like an idea, doesn't preclude it from consideration.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    5. Re:Here we go again.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... your problem is that all of the "Global Warming nuts" are able to explain how venus whatever-you-were-ranting-about?

      I just wonder which teacher you are upset with most for failing you: your English teacher, your logic teacher, or your Science teacher, your Econ teacher, or your Humanities teacher. 'Cause from here it looks like it any one of those.

      You fail it. The only question is which it.

    6. Re:Here we go again.... by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 4, Informative

      Oh, hell, I'll bite. Venus was always slightly too close to the sun for it's atmospheric water to condense. As a result, no oceans. Without aqueous chemistry, carbon dioxide couldn't turn into carbonates and stayed in the atmosphere. With no water and no life to create an ozone layer, and all it's water stuck in the upper atmosphere, high-energy radiation dissocated the water into hydrogen and oxygen. As the hydrogen went into space, sulfur-containing compounds got oxidized and reacted with the remaining water to make sulfuric acid.

      And to make this worthwhile, consider: Earth's ecosystem handles the increasing luminance of the Sun by reducing CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere to reduce the warming effect. In 1 billion years, the concentration will hit zero and then earth fries. Cheers!

    7. Re:Here we go again.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do we do about it?

      1. Reduce carbon emissions.
      2. reduce Earth's exposure to cosmic rays


      RTFA. The hypothesis is that cosmic rays seed cloud formation and thereby cool the earth.

      To counteract a warming trend, you would want to increase the cosmic ray flux.

      Of course, you could not actually do that. But the point of the paper is not to give you a handle to change our planet's climate. It is to try to improve our climate models by investigating a plausible contribution to climate change. Isn't that worthwhile in itself?

    8. Re:Here we go again.... by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      1. Reduce carbon emissions.
      Doing this is going to require a serious economic hit to pretty much every country around the world. IF Co2 is only responsible for 10% of global warming, then it's probably not worth the economic hit it will take to reduce our emissions of it.
      What about Methane? Should we not all stop eating beef and milk also to reduce methane emissions? While the present emissions of methane are far low than that of CO2, methane is a much more powerful warming agent than CO2.
      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    9. Re:Here we go again.... by $uperjay · · Score: 1

      If global warming was reduced by 10%, the increase in climate stability would pay off. Easily. Unstable weather patterns cause a huge, huge amount of economic damage, so much so that pollution-reduction plans will pay off for a long time before hitting any sort of diminishing returns.

    10. Re:Here we go again.... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      You're assuming you know how much MORE global warming is going to cost (world wide) than the status quo.

      Don't.

      Indeed, it would have to be a RIDICULOUSLY high amount of monetary damage, for just 1/10th of it to be worth the incredibly high price of stopping all activities that emit Co2.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    11. Re:Here we go again.... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Should we not all stop eating beef and milk also to reduce methane emissions?

      If it is so important, it would be possible to keep cattle enclosed, and containing the vast majority of methane releases.

      In fact, it would partially pay for itself, as the methane would be sold as fuel.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    12. Re:Here we go again.... by Eivind · · Score: 1
      Besides, the bill won't be picked up by those doing the polluting anyway, rigth ? Most of the damage from flooding will be in low-lying regions with little resources to defend themselves, like for example poor islands in the pacific.

      You're putting up a straw-man. Nobody is suggesting "stopping all activities that emit Co2", that would, for starters, mean stop breathing, because as you may (or may not, seeing your political inclination) be aware our metabolism emits CO2 every time you exhale.

      The truth is, the price varies. There are some areas where huge reductions are cheap, and I don't see any reason not to do it. For example, the budgets for pumping CO2 from gas-powered powerplants back into the wells where the gas originally came from rather than releasing it to the atmosphere are that it'll make the powerplant ~20% more expensive, and will make them emit 95% less CO2. Another example -- building a house that needs 1/3rd the energy for heating and AC compared to a standard house costs on the order of 10% more -- cheap enough that at todays energy-prices it makes sense even in strict economic terms. (i.e. it makes sense even if you completely ignore the benefits to the environment)

    13. Re:Here we go again.... by evilviper · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're putting up a straw-man. Nobody is suggesting "stopping all activities that emit Co2",

      Yes, that is exactly the scenario the parent suggested.

      Evilviper: "IF Co2 is only responsible for 10% of global warming"
      $uperJay: "If global warming was reduced by 10%,"

      In order to get 10% out of 10%, that means a 100% reduction in CO2. You understand (or you may not, seeing your political inclination) this just a hypothetical, of course. Even in less extreme examples, you have exactly the same problems.

      (or may not, seeing your political inclination)

      I suggest you keep your speculation to yourself, as you have no idea what my political inclinations are...

      I could just as easily speculate that you are very simple minded, and just swallow whatever political tripe you are offered by Green Peace, and in your world there exists no possibility of rational debate of an issue, and any dissent must be silenced, or written off as idiocy.

      the budgets for pumping CO2 from gas-powered powerplants back into the wells where the gas originally came from rather than releasing it to the atmosphere are that it'll make the powerplant ~20% more expensive, and will make them emit 95% less CO2.

      20% is quite a big expense, doesn't scale up, and all for a very small change in the level of atmospheric CO2. It's also potentially quite dangerous to sequester CO2. Should it ever leak, it could suffocate anyone in the vicinity. Potentially a huge number of people killed, even dozens of miles away (if they're downhill from the leak).

      And, if you aren't very careful about it, you end up with a 20% tax on power plants, while other (quite numerous) CO2 emitters that aren't forced to cut back, effectively get a 20% subsidy, and you encourage investment in other CO2 emitters that are harder to contain.

      Another example -- building a house that needs 1/3rd the energy for heating and AC compared to a standard house costs on the order of 10% more

      Now THAT'S a REAL straw man!

      Congratulations.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    14. Re:Here we go again.... by Dunbal · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If global warming was reduced by 10%, the increase in climate stability would pay off.

            What, so if we do this and invest trillions of dollars, there will be no more major hurricanes? Like last year you mean? Ooops.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    15. Re:Here we go again.... by Eivind · · Score: 1
      Evilviper: "IF Co2 is only responsible for 10% of global warming" $uperJay: "If global warming was reduced by 10%," In order to get 10% out of 10%, that means a 100% reduction in CO2.

      Assuming things scale linearily (which ain't at all a given!). Anyway, that's just someone not really thinking what they're writing. All current research shows CO2 is likely responsible for a lot more than 10% of the warming, and nobody is seriously suggesting that -zero- is the highest CO2-emission permissible from human activity. (human CO2-emissions have -never- been zero since the first human drew his/her first breath anyway)

      It's not an all-or-nothing thing anyway. It's perfectly possible, likely even, that less CO2 causes *less* damage. Even if neither the damage nor the CO2 is zero.

      the budgets for pumping CO2 from gas-powered powerplants back into the wells where the gas originally came from rather than releasing it to the atmosphere are that it'll make the powerplant ~20% more expensive, and will make them emit 95% less CO2.

      20% is quite a big expense, doesn't scale up, and all for a very small change in the level of atmospheric CO2.

      20% extra cost in building powerplants would lead to electricity costing 20% more. (assuming the operating-costs are similarily influenced, which is actually an overstatement in this case, but close enough) If new powerplants started generally doing this, it'd lead to an 80% reduction in CO2 emitted from them, compared to not doing anything. I'm not sure what you mean by "scaling up", the powerplants *are* full-scale comercial powerplants.

      It's also potentially quite dangerous to sequester CO2. Should it ever leak, it could suffocate anyone in the vicinity. Potentially a huge number of people killed, even dozens of miles away (if they're downhill from the leak).

      Except the Norwegian gas-wells are under typically 1-3 *KM* of rock, in the middle of the north sea, a hundred km or so from anything or anyway -- even ignoring the fact that *should* the wells end up leaking CO2 back to the atmosphere, they'd do it slowly, it's not like a Balloon, we're talking gargantuan volumes of *rock* here. Rock that today hold natural gases. (which are, by the way, equally suffocating and *worse* for global warming should they suddenly be released)

      Another example -- building a house that needs 1/3rd the energy for heating and AC compared to a standard house costs on the order of 10% more Now THAT'S a REAL straw man!

      Why ? It's just an example of something that saves a lot of energy with modest cost. It also reduces global warming, assuming your energy was produced by a CO2-producing powerplant.

    16. Re:Here we go again.... by Poppa_Chubby · · Score: 1

      That isn't necessarily true, Venus' orbit is within what scientists consider the "habitable zone" for our sun. Venus' "problems" started with either its lack of, or loss of, its solid core which prevents the formation of the planet's magnetic field (necessary to protect its atmosphere from the solar wind and radiation). Although not likely the only problem, this was one of several factors that combined to cause the runaway greenhouse effect on Venus. There is still a valuable lesson for people to from there.

    17. Re:Here we go again.... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      If new powerplants started generally doing this, it'd lead to an 80% reduction in CO2 emitted from them, compared to not doing anything.

      Yes, well the onus is on you to demonstrate that the 80% reduction from this source alone, will save billions of dollars in damage that would otherwise be caused by global warming, that this will cost to institute.

      Saying that it's better than nothing is completely avoiding the real issue... Is that SOMETHING worth the cost? By all means, prove it is.

      I'm not sure what you mean by "scaling up", the powerplants *are* full-scale comercial powerplants.

      I mean full-scale use of this option... If everyone starts doing this, you're going to have problems in excess of the normal 20% cost. How long until the more ideal spots are full? How long until you exceed the capacity of the wells? You certainly can't pump the coal exhaust back into coal mines...

      even ignoring the fact that *should* the wells end up leaking CO2 back to the atmosphere, they'd do it slowly, it's not like a Balloon, we're talking gargantuan volumes of *rock* here.

      It doesn't matter how much material there is, or what it's made up. Things like earthquakes an volcanoes open up underground gas deposits regularly.

      Why ? It's just an example of something that saves a lot of energy with modest cost.

      Exactly. It has NOTHING to do with CO2 at all (except incidentally). Whether CO2 is a major cause of global warming or not has little bearing on whether people should try to be more energy efficient... I certainly never said that we SHOULDN'T do so.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    18. Re:Here we go again.... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Not quite. Eliminating all of the global warming which results from excess CO2 does not mean eliminating all CO2. It means eliminating the excess. It would cost roughly $1bn/year to balance the global atmospheric carbon budget, so it's a very worthwhile effort, if only to save all the man-hours currently being wasted in discussion of the topic.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    19. Re:Here we go again.... by evilviper · · Score: 1

      It would cost roughly $1bn/year to balance the global atmospheric carbon budget,

      Now THAT'S what I come to /. for... Laughably ridiculous claims, with absolutely no sources to back them up.

      Bring it on.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    20. Re:Here we go again.... by MacDork · · Score: 1

      Without aqueous chemistry, carbon dioxide couldn't turn into carbonates and stayed in the atmosphere.

      Ahhh, so that's why all that limestone looks like fossilized plankton... aqueous chemistry... Got it! Good thing that aqueous chemistry locked up all that C in 66,000,000 gigatons of limestone and dolomite and that life on earth only locked up a paltry amount in 4000 gigatons of fossil fuels. (Source) Man, if only there were some way to get life on earth to get with the program and reduce CO2 in the atmosphere, we could counteract any effect CO2 might have by removing it from the atmosphere completely... If only there were some government study or something to show us how!

      Oh well, on to plan B. We should we should cease use of the internal combustion engine and shut down all power plants that utilize fossil fuels in the production of electricity. At least that stops adding CO2 to the atmosphere, even though it does nothing to remove the CO2 there and completely handicaps modern society in a multitude of ways. Brilliant plan! Let's begin immediately.

  12. I'll wait... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Informative

    ... until the experiment has been independently reproduced and there is some more data on whether and how much cosmic radiation affects our climate. So far, there is one paper on this topic (July 2002 issue of Journal of Geophysical Research-Space Physics), and not much else. The experiment is interesting, but rather tenuous in its conclusions. We have a potential mechanism, along with some ways on testing the validity of its predictions. But it's far too early to make this anymore than it is - an idea that needs further exploring.

    Besides, can we link to something more than someone's blog? Here's a link that has a lot more substance and not so much speculation: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/07/02073 1080631.htm

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    1. Re:I'll wait... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... until the experiment has been independently reproduced

      FTA, Getting independent reviews is hard because if you don't support the official "Global Warming" theory, then you're in the pocket of the oil companies. And no one will touch you then for fear of a public backlash.

      Since when has science been about not offending the public's sensibilities :-)

    2. Re:I'll wait... by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      The CERN results should be interesting, and with luck we'll get enough actual numbers to stir into the global circulation models.

    3. Re:I'll wait... by benzapp · · Score: 1

      But there is the issue of martian polar ice caps, ice composition of Pluto, and a few of the more icy moons around Saturn...

      There is quite a bit of circumstantial evidence that earth may not be the only body in our solar system to be experiencing this warming trend.

      Don't ask me for a link, google the articles - they are common.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
  13. Kill the bastard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How DARE he even challenge the rule of law placed down by the high priests of the UN? Surely he must be burned at the stake for speaking such heresy!

    Remove his accreditation! Silence him! Denier, denier, denier!

    Long live the Democratic Cause! Return the global environment to the masses!

  14. same Nigel Calder? by jonkster · · Score: 3, Informative

    This the same Calder often quoted derogatorily on certain websites with anti environmentalist leanings?
    several quote an article "In the Grip of a New Ice Age?" in the National Wildlife Federation's journal, International Wildlife attributed to a "Nigel Calder" in 70's
    the line they like to quote is: "the threat of a new ice age must now stand alongside nuclear war as a likely source of wholesale death and misery for mankind."
    eg http://www.ncpa.org/ba/ba337/ba337.html
    http://www.mises.org/story/2119
    http://www.heritage.org/Research/PoliticalPhilosop hy/BG1143.cfm

    1. Re: same Nigel Calder? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Informative

      > This the same Calder often quoted derogatorily on certain websites with anti environmentalist leanings? several quote an article "In the Grip of a New Ice Age?" in the National Wildlife Federation's journal, International Wildlife attributed to a "Nigel Calder" in 70's the line they like to quote is: "the threat of a new ice age must now stand alongside nuclear war as a likely source of wholesale death and misery for mankind."

      Interestingly, Wikipedia shows him as indeed the former editor of New Scientist - from the early 1960s. Since then he's been an SF writer, with a respectable list of publications.

      As for "new ice age", within the past few years there has been an article in Scientific American where the author claimed that we would be slipping into an ice age right now, if not for anthropogenic global warming. Unfortunately (according to the author), we're slightly overcompensating rather than keeping the temperature flat.

      As for nukes, as I understand it it was Sagan et al.'s analysis of how a nuclear war could lead to a nuclear winter that got people thinking about the effects of all the stuff we've been putting in the air.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  15. My own bias by Nyeerrmm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know what I hate most about these articles? My own bias is plainly obvious to me.

    When I read something that says global warming is wrong, I want to say yes! Brilliant! When something confirms it, I can't help but think 'alarmist fear-mongering can't-think-for-themeselves idiots.' But at the same time I know those thoughts are ridiculous, and that I don't really have the understanding of all the parameters to make an intelligent decision.

    I guess that's what happens when you politicize a scientific topic. Or maybe I'm just an optimist.

    1. Re:My own bias by lionheart1327 · · Score: 0

      I just think that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

      Anybody that claims "We're all gonna die!" has to back it up extremely well.
      Quite simply because, first of all, every other person before them in the history of mankind who has said "We're all gonna die!" was wrong.

      And I don't think that terminal global warming has enough evidence yet.

      Is the earth warming? Yes.
      Is human-caused carbon dioxide contributing? Yes, practically by definition.

      Should we panic? Or spend trillions trying to "fix it"? Not yet.

    2. Re:My own bias by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I must admit I often have similar feelings, only in reverse. It is sad, isn't it? At least when you realise what is going on in your head, you can try to account for it...

      That's why we really need to get this whole issue out of politicking and into the hands of experts. General population - politicians and /. readers included - simply does not have enough understanding of the subject for any purposeful rationalising on it.

    3. Re:My own bias by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 1

      My own bias is plainly obvious to me... You must be new here.
    4. Re:My own bias by Talgrath · · Score: 2

      Should we panic? Or spend trillions trying to "fix it"? Not yet.
      Wouldn't it be on the safer side to take relatively minor steps to try and slow the effects, just in case they really are right that global climate change is as serious as some say it is? Steps such as raising required fuel efficiency for cars and trying to consume where possible are relatively simple and small things we can do in order to slow the rate we are putting carbon diaoxide and other chemicals into the atmosphere. That wouldn't cost us trillions, just a minor inconvenience. And despite what American car makers are saying; non-American car makers are killing American car makers precisely because they make fuel-efficient cars at lower prices. At worst, we'd (horror of horrors) no longer see abominations like Hummers on the road (who needs an assault vehicle to pick up their kids from soccer anyway?).
    5. Re:My own bias by lixee · · Score: 1

      Or maybe I'm just an optimist.
      We are all optimists at heart. Else, we'd be running around like crazies if we didn't believe there's a way to make it all better. The difference is that "pessimism of the intellect" is necessary if we wanna begin to question our - by now obvious - wasteful lifestyles.

      Also, let me ask you a simple question: What's those "alarmist fear-mongering" people gotta win by promoting their side of the story? I can sure see why an industrialist lobby would wanna dismiss global warming. Evidently, the latter has a LOT more power and resources than the former.
      --
      Res publica non dominetur
    6. Re:My own bias by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      What's those "alarmist fear-mongering" people gotta win by promoting their side of the story? I can sure see why an industrialist lobby would wanna dismiss global warming.
      Basically, they win political power, which can then be used for other, secondary purposes. Actually, any subject where the practical options are either imposed state control, on one hand, or laissez-faire, on the other, are prone to this kind of manipulation. Climate change is a big fish because, no matter if its true or not, it being believed as true means government getting carte blanche to mess around into tons of fields previously out of its reach. Now, it's obvious that those potentially affected by this, as well as all anti-government activists, align themselves in opposition to this, the first due to their self interest, the later for actual idealism.

      Climate-change skeptics doubt the government when it says climate change is happening precisely because it's in the best interest of government itself that it be changing. Except for when said government receives tons of money from the industrial lobby, in which case this role reverses. What all this causes is that whatever the government says on the subject, either pro or against, ends up being doubtful. Whenever politics gets into something, the field becomes a mess.
      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    7. Re:My own bias by moonbender · · Score: 1

      Great post. Like another poster said, I sometimes feel the same - only with the opposite point of view. This isn't limited to just global warming, either, it's a lot "worse" with other issues. That's a good thing: I think being aware of your own bias is the first step in having a chance of at least seeing the other side's arguments.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    8. Re:My own bias by lixee · · Score: 1

      Basically, they win political power, which can then be used for other, secondary purposes.
      Thank you for taking the time to reply. There's no doubt that the issue has been hijacked for political purposes. Yet, the political power you're refering to is an incentive for both sides. So, from my stand-point, it evens out.
      --
      Res publica non dominetur
    9. Re:My own bias by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Yet, the political power you're refering to is an incentive for both sides.
      Three sides actually: a) the side that wants the government supporting the industrialist lobby, b) the side that wants the government supporting the environmentalist lobby, and c) the side that wants the government not supporting anyone because neither economy nor ecology should be matters of state policy.

      Sides 'a' and 'b' see it as an incentive. Side 'c' sees it as an disincentive, something that must be fought against.
      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    10. Re:My own bias by radtea · · Score: 1
      You know what I hate most about these articles? My own bias is plainly obvious to me.

      I have the same problem in the opposite sense, and am trying to solve it by reducing the anthropogenic global climate change equation to a simple, closed-form argument that no one could possibly disagree with. My current take goes like this:

      There are two facts that no one disputes. The first is that the Earth's climate is in a dynamic equilibrium that is capable of excursions of civilization-ending magnitude. We have ice ages, local droughts lasting a thousand years, little ice ages, and so on. Any of of these could ruin our whole millennium. The second is that we are giving this dynamically stable system a wack with a hammer in the form of a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide in the past two hundred years, which is equivalent to increasing the brightness of the sun by about one percent. This is a comparable change to the difference between an ice age and an interglacial.

      The idea is simply that we can ignore all the details and simply focus on the fact that the Earth's climate is dynamically stable and we are giving it a push. And I don't care about the polar bears or any other charismatic megafauna. All I care about is global civilization and the economy it depends on.

      So far, so good. But when digging a little deeper into the 1% figure I used in the argument, I've found even this may over-state the case.

      According to an article on the George C. Marshall Institute website whose intent is to suggest that global climate change is a non-issue the effect of doubling CO2 is to add about 4 W/m**2 to Earth's energy budget. This was the source of the original 1% figure, because Earth's average insolation is about 340 W/m**2. But the actual figure due to all anthropogenic gasses added to the atmosphere between 1750 and 2000 from the IPCC is about 2.5 W/m**2. So I've already over-stated the case.

      The next question is: is it true that past catastrophic climate variations were due to changes as small as 1% in total insolation?

      It is surprisingly hard to find clear statements of effects in terms of insolation variation, which seems to me to be the common currency of global climate change. In most engineering problems we want to focus in outputs rather than inputs because the two may be largely unrelated to each other due to supervening factors. But on this planet we obey the law of conservation of energy, so we know if the inputs change, effects must follow regardless of the source of those inputs.

      Deniers of anthropogenic global climate change usually focus on non-human influences, like the Milankovitch cycles and volcanoes. But Milankovitch cycles are almost entirely about the relative insolation of the northern and southern hemispheres, which may vary by 10% or more over a a cycle, rather than changes in total insolation, which changes by less than 1%. Volcanoes produce cooling rather than warming, and are short-term, but the Mount Pinatubo erruption in 1992 produced prompt global cooling of about 0.5 C and was associated with a change in reflected light of about 7 W/m**2. This is good news, in one sense, as it means we have some elbow room, but it also means that we shouldn't keep dumping stuff into the atmosphere as if it's never going to matter. It will, and before the current century is out if we aren't careful.

      One rational approach to this would be similar to that of earthquake risk reduction, where the goal is to ensure that the next house built will always be more earthquake resistant than the previous one. If we take the same approach to energy production and use we should be able to find a reasonable balance between the real risk on the one hand of ruining our grandchildren's millenium by inducing economically catastrophic

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    11. Re:My own bias by lixee · · Score: 1

      c) the side that wants the government not supporting anyone because neither economy nor ecology should be matters of state policy.
      Correct me if I'm mistaken, but isn't less government interference that exactly what the industrialist lobby is pushing? As far as I know, more liberal economic policies has always been the lobby's main goal be. The adverse effects of said liberalism ranged from an ever-increasing gap between the haves and the have-nots to abject destruction of the environment (extinctions of species, deforestation, early signs of climate change...)

      Now, if only scientists find a way to extend our life span, maybe people will start caring...
      --
      Res publica non dominetur
    12. Re:My own bias by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I'm mistaken, but isn't less government interference that exactly what the industrialist lobby is pushing? As far as I know, more liberal economic policies has always been the lobby's main goal be.

      It actually depends. Big industrial capitalists have one interest: personal profit. In some cases, higher profits come from less government interference, thus they'll favor this. In other cases, higher profits come from more government interference, thus that's what they'll favor. It all comes from the specifics of each case.

      Anti-government idealists, on the other hand, favor less government interference no matter if it'll cause this specific corporation higher profits or that specific corporation lower profits. They have a number of arguments on the line that a less interference, when generalized, causes in the long run increased prosperity for the whole nation, including for its poorer members.

      The adverse effects of said liberalism ranged from an ever-increasing gap between the haves and the have-nots to abject destruction of the environment (extinctions of species, deforestation, early signs of climate change...)

      It also depends. Nations who want to reach a higher standard of living very fast are usually very hard on their own environment, at least until they reach that goal. But once they get there and the population doesn't have to worry that much anymore about food and shelter, they start thinking about quality of life (what includes living in a better environment), thus proceeding into these secondary goals.

      Such new goals end up having, now and then, far reaching consequences. For example, due to the fact that in Europe a lot of people are more inclined to purchase all things green, even if these cost more, a lot of wood producers here in Brazil began getting green certification by following the standards set forth by their European customers (not the European governments, mind you), which are way more strict than what's required by the Brazilian law. They do so simply because it's more profitable to do so, and it's more profitable because Europeans have the surplus money to spend on ecologically-friendly goods.

      The bottom line is that, once the entire world reached "1st World" status, the same entire world would be acting in a hugely more ecologically-minded way than what it will ever be by way of alternative solutions. But for this to work, it would mean that in the short term things should be allowed to become worse, what, I agree, is very counterintuitive, so no surprise that environmentalists don't buy on the idea. But a careful study on economics can show that this indeed works as explained, so maybe all these people should look into this direction, if not to adopt it, at least to understand it better and then incorporate it, at some level and in some way, into their own political agendas.

      And regarding the gap between the haves and have-nots, I personally don't see this as a problem, provided the "have-nots" aren't literally such, but have enough for a fairly good standard of living. For the rich to be astoundingly rich (meaning a huge gap) isn't a problem if the poorer are living well. The problem is for the poorer to be living badly. If diminishing the gap meant ipso facto improving living conditions for the poorer, then I would be all for it, but the case is that the two things are unrelated. You can have a huge gap but with good living for the poor, and a small gap, or even no gap at all, with everyone living very bad.

      No gap and everyone living very well is something that never happened, and I think it's actually not feasible. Why? Because either you: a) take "everyone" as meaning the entire whole world, and in this case the simple math shows you that the world's gross product per capita is very small and everyone would be in a very bad shape, with the poorer getting only a slightly, almost unnoticeable boost, or b) take it as meaning the people of a single nation, and in this

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    13. Re:My own bias by lixee · · Score: 1

      in this case the simple math shows you that the world's gross product per capita is very small and everyone would be in a very bad shape
      This is a fallacy. A rough estimate gives about 10 thousand dollars per person. https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/prin t/xx.html
      I live with about that amount of money (+/- 5%) and it'd be preposterous to say that I am in a bad shape.
      --
      Res publica non dominetur
    14. Re:My own bias by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      This is a fallacy. A rough estimate gives about 10 thousand dollars per person. https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/prin t/xx.html
      I live with about that amount of money (+/- 5%) and it'd be preposterous to say that I am in a bad shape.
      Hmm... yes, taken as a direct amount of money it wouldn't be that bad. But you forget that two things must be deducted from it: taxes, around 40% by current standards, what leaves $6k (probably way less, since such a broad redistribution effort would require a lot more bureaucracy, thus tons of additional costs); and money for investment, so that there's some way to produce more money for the next year, an amount I don't know how to quantify.

      Anyway, I was wrong in saying "simple math". It's actually far from simple.
      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
  16. Ignorance of solar effects. by MtViewGuy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think most of the global warming crowd conveniently forget that by far the biggest determinant of Earth's climate is this object about 150 million kilometers from us called the Sun.

    If you look at our sunspot cycle (which has been recorded since the 1600's), it should be noted that Earth warms up every time we have many sunspots and cools down when we have few sunspots. The famous Maunder minimum that bridged the 17th and 18th Centuries with very little sunspot activity resulted in seriously cold winters at the higher latitudes, as noted by the Thames River through London freezing over in winter regularly during this period.

    But getting back on topic, scientists have noted that almost every planet in our Solar System is experiencing a warmup during the last 4-5 years. Note that the Martian ice caps are getting smaller and smaller, the atmospheres on our "gas giant" planets are warming up quite a bit, and even Pluto's surface is experiencing warming. That tells us either the Sun is generating a lot of unusual radiation or our Solar System is going through an area of our Milky Way galaxy with higher than normal cosmic radiation.

    1. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by stormj · · Score: 1

      Ugh. At least the cosmic ray "theory" is new. All of these the sun did it, its water vapor, but there's more ice in Antartica!, etc. etc. are old, tired, and only a google search away from dispatch.

    2. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think most of the global warming crowd conveniently forget that by far the biggest determinant of Earth's climate is this object about 150 million kilometers from us called the Sun.


      True. You remove the sun, and we turn into pluto. Now quantify that effect. Exactly how much does a change in the output of the sun affect the temperature on the earth? Note: correlation != causation.

      But getting back on topic, scientists have noted that almost every planet in our Solar System is experiencing a warmup during the last 4-5 years.


      Just flat out wrong. Find the research papers (not a blog) that demonstrate this. I hope that you'll learn in the process not to equate someone's opinion with science.
      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    3. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "True. You remove the sun, and we turn into pluto. Now quantify that effect. Exactly how much does a change in the output of the sun affect the temperature on the earth? Note: correlation != causation."

      Anyone with a little math skill can make up a crude model that can answer your question. The more energy the Earth is receiving from the Sun, the MORE energy it has to radiate out to space. Its always at equilibrium. The temperature has to go up in order to compensate, and thus more energy is radiated out.

      Sadly, I think some people have just become so used to or accepting of the idea that manmade carbon dioxide emissions are the one and only cause of global warming that they will not consider anything else. Actually, too many people have their name, time, and money riding on CO2 being the root cause of it all. We wouldn't want to see some scientists ruin their precious careers, now would we?

      "Just flat out wrong. Find the research papers (not a blog) that demonstrate this. I hope that you'll learn in the process not to equate someone's opinion with science."

      But that's just what most of the people are doing these days. I grow increasingly tired of hearing people make claims that they have no real knowledge to back up, and that includes all those saying that sea levels are going to rise, temperatures are going to get so high in 100 years, and so on. They simply have no idea if they are right, and most of them are only trumpeting what someone else said, provided it fits their own agenda. I also grow tired of the increasing arrogance on the part of people...people who seem to think we have it all figured out and we know everything. We actually know very little about this planet we live on.

      BTW, I am sure that we as humans are having some sort of influence on our planet. The question is how much of an influence. Anyone claiming to know for sure it just mouthing off some BS.

    4. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "But getting back on topic, scientists have noted that almost every planet in our Solar System is experiencing a warmup during the last 4-5 years."

      Wow. The use of SUVs as a source of global warming has been seriously underestimated....

    5. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by RonBurk · · Score: 1

      even Pluto's surface is experiencing We got a thermometer on Pluto? Man, that Oregon Scientific is the shizzle!
    6. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      The use of SUVs as a source of global warming has been seriously underestimated....


            Personally I blame it on the plague of giant space cows.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    7. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 0

      I just hope they didn't reuse the thermometer from Uranus!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    8. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Note: correlation != causation.
      Does that not also apply to theories of greenhouse gases?

      Find the research papers (not a blog) that demonstrate this.
      People are linking the RealClimate blog left and right in this discussion.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    9. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I think most of the global warming crowd conveniently forget that by far the biggest determinant of Earth's climate is this object about 150 million kilometers from us called the Sun.

      And please explain how people that believe that CO2 will trap more of the Sun's heat are claiming that the Sun is not involved in the climate. Seeing as how the Sun shows up (stated or implied) in every Global Warming theory I've ever seen, I don't see how it isn't acknowledged by the crowd you mention.

    10. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      I believe scientists are using special light measurements to compute the temperature on the planet. We do know that the upper atmosphere of Jupiter and Saturn have been acting very strangely based on recent photos from ground-based telescopes around the world, something we normally associate with upper atmospheric heating.

      The issue of faster polar ice melts on Mars recently has been monitored from the Mars Odyssey 2001 orbiter.

    11. Re:Ignorance of solar effects. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      The difference with greenhouse gases is that there is more than just correlation - there's also a theory behind it that provides causation, along with predictions that can be verified. I would love to have people stop linking directly to realclimate.org. There's some good stuff on there, but it'd be better if people use realclimate.org to find the original papers.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  17. Re:Eugenics anyone? by stormj · · Score: 1

    Lol. You're parroting Crichton's book exactly. Polly wanna cracker? These terrible terrible people trying to stop mankind from messing something up, they might have exagerated a little bit. Let's ignore them and just keep doing what we're doing. lol.

  18. We only have one earth by Bootle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's too risky to not ALWAYS be looking at worst-case scenarios. For our very survival, we need to assume things are our fault and we must be willing to change, even if it may not be our fault.

    1. Re:We only have one earth by lionheart1327 · · Score: 1

      How can you not realize how idiotic that is?

      By ALWAYS assuming the worst-case scenario every single time some guy yells "we're all gonna die" you end up shooting yourself in the head.

    2. Re:We only have one earth by Bootle · · Score: 1

      I said looking at worst-case scenarios. Do you realize how idiotic it is to not read?

    3. Re:We only have one earth by AngelofDeath-02 · · Score: 1

      Could be replaced with shooting oneself in the foot, however.

      I generally agree with you. There are some good reasons to be more environmentally friendly besides just potentially saving our planet!

      --
      No, I am not an English major. My posts are subject to typos and incorrect grammar. Do not expect perfection.
    4. Re:We only have one earth by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      It's too risky to not ALWAYS be looking at worst-case scenarios. For our very survival

            Why? We managed as a species for over 4 million years. Without technology, even. Why should the next thousand pose a problem for us? You sound like my ex-wife. Maybe we shouldn't allow the kids to leave the house then, in case something happens to them.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    5. Re:We only have one earth by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      What you describe sounds more like the mantra of ultra-liberalism, which dictates that we must self-loathe at every opportunity and feel ashamed at ourselves so that we'll be more willing to pay higher taxes to a government to "fix" the messes we cause.

      Always be wary of people who want you to feel guilty for your own existence. They usually have agendas.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    6. Re:We only have one earth by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Running around as if the sky is falling and having people dictate to us how to live our lives like holier-than-thou priests because we can't take care of ourselves is not living. It's the opposite of living. Why must we change if something is not our fault? How many times have we screwed something up trying to fix something that needed no fixing?

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    7. Re:We only have one earth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> It's too risky to not ALWAYS be looking at worst-case scenarios.

      Call me a troll if you like, but AFIAK often this approach and the lack of enough information, per se itself is *the worst case*.

      In a Neolithical|mezoamerican village:

      the famine and the plague are devastating our village, maybe we are guilty (unknow cause)and the gods are angry with us... lets sacrifice our cattle, elders, virgins and childrens... . The reactions among the tribe? the "religious" villagers think that way and always agree, and a "rational" villager just believe in a "worst case scenary", but (more important) *never* disagree. Maybe, the aldeans save the lives of a bunch of them (just simple coincidece), but given such a lack of proper knowldege (farm, medicine, irrigation, etc.), their own efforts only drives them to extintion.

      What i said above doesn't necessarily covers the global warming issue, but is just an example of harmful collective thinking, suported by a kind of empirical thinking.

      The divergent opinions are always necesary, because, the "conservative" (in the whole mean of the word) approach is too blind to see the danger

    8. Re:We only have one earth by greenbird · · Score: 1

      For our very survival, we need to assume things are our fault and we must be willing to change, even if it may not be our fault.

      The problem is the law of unintended consequences. History is rife with mans attempt to modify nature for the better only to have law of unintended consequences bite them in the ass when their efforts make things worse. A classic example of this was the mid-1900's theory that since forest fires destroyed mother nature's beautiful forests they must be bad and must all be extinguished. Later in the century they started discovering that many, if not most, forest fires were good things and were required to keep forest healthy.

      So no, always assume the worst case and acting on it is not only what we need not to do, but it is what we need to take caution against. Our understanding of the planets climate is limited at best and grossly inaccurate at worst. Any claim otherwise is conceit of the highest level. In either case taking drastic actions to attempt to effect it is likely to cause much more harm then good. The northwestern countries economies are essential to the worlds health. The collapse of those economies would have far more dire consequences for the world (much worst for developing and undeveloped countries) than climate effects. Should we look at energy efficiency? Most assuredly, but it has to be implemented in an economically viable manner otherwise the results would likely be far worse than the disease it was intended cure.

      --
      Who is John Galt?
  19. Mod parent up. by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

    Nothing like a good belly laugh
    "Elvis Presley is dead, but not all of the class of dead people is Elvis Presley"

    --
    I don't therefore I'm not.
  20. Re:Eugenics anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you actually believe there are no genetic differences between the races and that we're all equal?

    You also mis characterized eugenics. Eugenics was about improving the quality of members of a particular group. What you are referring to are the anti-miscegenation laws.

    Who is the deluded religious fanatic here exactly?

  21. Re:Eugenics anyone? by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The President of the USA said that almost word for word.

    ....then he discovered he could encourage them to join the army and send them to Iraq

    --
    I don't therefore I'm not.
  22. So... by Geeselegs · · Score: 4, Funny

    infrared radiation from the sun causes global warming... Who'd have guessed

  23. I, for one, welcome the cosmic rays... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as long as it gives me the powers of the Fantastic Four.

    1. Re:I, for one, welcome the cosmic rays... by revolu7ion · · Score: 1

      Well, actually - they weren't cosmic rays.

      If anything - Cosmic rays were responsible for only one superhero. Super-ted.

      --
      Jesus Saves
  24. You're a nerd. Go detail-oriented. by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The term "global warming" conceals several completely different ideas with completely different levels of evidence and likelihood.

    Only some of the following statements are true or even supported by evidence:
    1. The average temperature of the Earth is going up.
    2. It is likely to continue doing so.
    3. The largest cause is CO2.
    4. The rise in CO2 levels is human-caused.
    5. The results will be catastropic.
    6. The result will be a mass extinction event.
    7. The result will wipe out the human race.
    8. This is proof that our economic system is evil.
    9. We must destroy or replace the foundation of our economic system.
    10. The planet is in jeopardy.
    11. The Kyoto accord should be ratified.

    It's logically consistent to snort with contempt at 8 and 10 while accepting 1-4 pending further data.

    What frosts me (sorry) is that the policy implications don't have to be this politicized. We need a malaria vaccine anyway, regardless of whether the mosquito habitat moves north. We benefit a zillion ways from replacing coal burning by almost anything else. Fuel efficient vehicles are great just in terms of national security alone. Bangladesh is in trouble no matter what we do about future CO2 emissions and we need to make decisions about that (seawall? Resettle? (WHERE?!)).

    >I don't really have the understanding of all the parameters to make an intelligent decision.

    No one person does, but judicious application of "How do you know?" will cut through a lot of garbage and allow intelligent decision though not certainty.

    1. Re:You're a nerd. Go detail-oriented. by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      We need a malaria vaccine

            Good luck, since malaria is an intracellular parasite, not a virus.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:You're a nerd. Go detail-oriented. by LihTox · · Score: 1

      It's logically consistent to snort with contempt at 8 [This is proof that our economic system is evil]...while accepting 1-4 pending further data.

      and the connections are being made on both sides of the fight, I think: some anti-capitalists want to use global warming as proof that capitalism is evil, while some capitalists take announcements of global warming as a personal insult. If global warming is man-made (as I think it is), it isn't necessary that people be made to feel guilty about it; it's just important to slow it down (which is true even if we are seeing a natural, long-term warming trend--it'll be small comfort to us, with New York City or [insert other favorite low-lying area here] underwater, that we didn't cause it to happen).

  25. It used to be worse. by Rothron+the+Wise · · Score: 1

    At least the global warming skeptics have become "global warming is man made"-skeptics. During the 90ies, the dispute was about weither there actually was any warming going on at all.

    No matter what the contributing causes for global warming is, it is very real, and we're going to have to deal with it one way or another or suffer massive global consequences. Now that we have consensus on that global warming is happening, the naysayers should find another strategy than "business as ususal", or else making money may become really difficult in the future.

    --
    A witty .sig proves nothing
    1. Re:It used to be worse. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Skepticism in science is bad.

      Everyone should immediately believe everything that anyone connected with Science says and completely change their lives in response to the announcement of the hour. Anyone who doesn't is evil. Scientists are never wrong, ever.

    2. Re:It used to be worse. by imsabbel · · Score: 1

      But why are all those sceptics ALLWAYS and ONLY sceptic vs pro global warming scientists and studies?
      It stinks awefully of denial.

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    3. Re:It used to be worse. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Because global warming is more politics and enviro-religion than science.

      Traditional science is about learning. Global warming "science" is about socialism, money, and apocalyptic judgment for environmental energy-sinners.

    4. Re:It used to be worse. by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      At least the global warming skeptics have become "global warming is man made"-skeptics. During the 90ies, the dispute was about weither there actually was any warming going on at all.

      Well, when the global temperature record shows no rise in temperatures since 1999, and New York is under inches of snow, and we had the least inactive storm season in 10 years despite dire predictions to the contrary, one tends to grow skeptical of alarmist claims of global warming.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
  26. Pedantry by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >there is a well established correlation between CO2 levels and temperature.

    It's a superb correlation, the curves track each other amazingly.

    By itself that doesn't prove anything. Given only the correlation, you couldn't rule out that temperature increases cause increased CO2 levels. Which is plausible, since organic decay releases CO2 and goes faster when it's warmer (if you doubt that, unplug your refrigerator and see what happens).

    Given only the correlation, you couldn't rule out that some other factor causes both warming and CO2 increases.

    The reason to think it's causal is that there's a well-demonstrated mechanism and that the details match up.

    >Florida may be the first state in the union to give fish the right to vote.

    Hey, we already know all about Florida elections.

    1. Re:Pedantry by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1

      A correlation, say, between petrochemical and coal pollution and CO2 levels?

    2. Re:Pedantry by hador_nyc · · Score: 1

      >there is a well established correlation between CO2 levels and temperature. It's a superb correlation, the curves track each other amazingly.
      I disagree with you there. That's only true in Mann's data with that hockey stick, and that was shown to be rubbish. The other problem is that it doesn't explain the other cold and warm periods in the last 2000 years. In Roman times they grew grapes in England, and yet you can't even today. I'm not saying that Global Warming isn't happening, but I'm not convinced that CO2 is the sole and main cause.
      --
      - Mike
      Once you've lost your temper, you've lost the argument - Me
    3. Re:Pedantry by Ambitwistor · · Score: 3, Interesting

      By itself that doesn't prove anything. Given only the correlation, you couldn't rule out that temperature increases cause increased CO2 levels. Indeed, it is likely that temperature increases cause increased CO2 levels. A more significant cause than accelerated organic decay is the reduced ability of oceans to take up atmospheric CO2.

      However: increased CO2 levels also cause temperature increases. There is a positive feedback mechanism at work.

      The basic idea is that some effect causes a temperature increase, which in turn causes CO2 levels to increase, but those increased CO2 levels force the warming to continue where it otherwise would have leveled out. This warming/CO2/warming cycle continues until you hit other negative feedbacks which stop the warming.
    4. Re:Pedantry by Ambitwistor · · Score: 3, Informative

      That's only true in Mann's data with that hockey stick, and that was shown to be rubbish. That's incorrect. In fact, the most dramatic correlations between CO2 levels and temperature come from the Vostok ice core data, not Mann's "hockey stick".

      Incidentally, the "hockey stick" was not shown to be rubbish; McIntyre & McKitrick's work itself has plenty of flaws. You can read Mann's rebuttal, or Tim Lambert's independent analysis. And even if Mann's work was flawed, there are other reconstructions, performed by completely different methods, which also show a "hockey stick" shape. (In fact, all of them have a noticeable upswing in recent times, they just differ on when that upswing starts: 1800 vs. 1900.) I don't know why everyone singles out Mann's work in this respect.

      The other problem is that it doesn't explain the other cold and warm periods in the last 2000 years. How is that a problem? CO2 is not the only driver of climate change. Solar variations, for instance, have played a greater role in the past.

      I'm not saying that Global Warming isn't happening, but I'm not convinced that CO2 is the sole and main cause. CO2 definitely is not the sole cause. It is, however, the main cause of the warming in the 20th century, particularly in the last 40 years. See, for instance, Fig. SPM-2 in the IPCC AR4 SPM (PDF). At different points in history, different factors have been the primary drivers of climate change. Right now, it happens to be CO2, largely due to anthropogenic emissions since the Industrial Revolution.
    5. Re:Pedantry by hador_nyc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm not saying that Global Warming isn't happening, but I'm not convinced that CO2 is the sole and main cause. CO2 definitely is not the sole cause. It is, however, the main cause of the warming in the 20th century, particularly in the last 40 years. See, for instance, Fig. SPM-2 in the IPCC AR4 SPM [www.ipcc.ch] (PDF). At different points in history, different factors have been the primary drivers of climate change. Right now, it happens to be CO2, largely due to anthropogenic emissions since the Industrial Revolution.
      You made a good argument. I'll look into that.
      Still, if you limit the data to the 20th century, then the graphs are not in sync. Most of the warming was in the early part of the century followed by that cooling period from about 46-75ish, and then some warming again after that. Also, there seems to be a pause in the warming since 2000 where AGT hasn't done much other than fluctuate a bit. Also, the deep ocean data doesn't seem to fit with the models either. None of the recent work of the Argosy project was included in the report. That's another reason why I'm still not convinced.
      Also, this article, and the work behind it, which I heard about back in October, has experimental proof of how their cloud formation works. Solar intensity is increasing, and has increased over the last few decades, as we've been able to confirm directly with the satellites. The Solar theory has enough merit to question the CO2 theory in my mind; at least for a few more years.
      --
      - Mike
      Once you've lost your temper, you've lost the argument - Me
    6. Re:Pedantry by Ambitwistor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most of the warming was in the early part of the century followed by that cooling period from about 46-75ish, and then some warming again after that. That cooling period is well explained by sulphate aerosols (pollution); it agrees in magnitude and timing with aerosol concentrations.

      Also, there seems to be a pause in the warming since 2000 where AGT hasn't done much other than fluctuate a bit. The observed variability is not much different than over any other 6-year period, e.g. here. You can't really conclude "global warming has stopped", or even that it has slowed, on that basis.

      Also, the deep ocean data doesn't seem to fit with the models either. None of the recent work of the Argosy project was included in the report. I'm not familiar with the deep ocean data or the Argosy project. Do you have references?

      Also, this article, and the work behind it, which I heard about back in October, has experimental proof of how their cloud formation works. They have a laboratory demonstration, but they haven't established a correlation between cosmic ray flux and actual cloud formation patterns, nor do they have an estimate of the magnitude of that effect on the climate. There are a number of reasons to believe that the effect is small.

      Solar intensity is increasing, and has increased over the last few decades, as we've been able to confirm directly with the satellites. Yes, but it hasn't increased that much, compared to the increase in forcing due to anthropogenic CO2.

      The Solar theory has enough merit to question the CO2 theory in my mind; at least for a few more years. Solar contributions are not a credible alternative to CO2 as far as explaining existing warming trends. They might become more important to future warming if solar intensity continues to increase.
    7. Re:Pedantry by hador_nyc · · Score: 1

      I'm not familiar with the deep ocean data or the Argosy project. Do you have references?
      I typed that wrong... http://www.argo.net/
      My mind is open, but I think solar makes more sense to explain the warming before the modern era. Solar explains the little ice age, along with the other warm periods in the last 2000 years or so. Also, the sulphates that you are referring to are primarily the product of volcanoes. Man makes a lot, but not a lot compared to that. That's why we had short temporary coolings after the recent eruptions; Mt. Pinatubo is a well documented example. They do not explain the cooling for the whole 30 years, there simply wasn't enough volcanism to explain that. Besides, it's gone up in the last few decades.
      As for the rest, I disagree with you. It's good enough for me to say that you've given me a few things to look at more closely.
      --
      - Mike
      Once you've lost your temper, you've lost the argument - Me
    8. Re:Pedantry by Ambitwistor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My mind is open, but I think solar makes more sense to explain the warming before the modern era. Solar probably does explain much of the climate changes over the last few thousand years, before the modern era. However, CO2 explains the warming in the modern era much better than solar possibly can; the solar variations just haven't been large enough.

      Also, the sulphates that you are referring to are primarily the product of volcanoes. Man makes a lot, but not a lot compared to that. No, that's not correct. Human particulate and aerosol emissions were easily large enough to produce the observed cooling mid-century. See, e.g., Meehl et al., J. Climate 17, 3721 (2004), for a comparison of models with various emissions included to observational data; the mid-century cooling is largely (but not wholly) attributable to anthropogenic pollution.

      Besides, it's gone up in the last few decades. What has gone up in the last few decades?

    9. Re:Pedantry by AJWM · · Score: 1

      CO2 definitely is not the sole cause. It is, however, the main cause of the warming in the 20th century, particularly in the last 40 years. See, for instance, Fig. SPM-2 in the IPCC AR4 SPM (PDF). At different points in history, different factors have been the primary drivers of climate change. Right now, it happens to be CO2, largely due to anthropogenic emissions since the Industrial Revolution.

      If you're basing that assertion on the IPCC report, then understand that you're basing it on a fundamentally flawed report. The IPCC was tasked by the UN with investigating human causes of global warming, not a broad investigation of global warming overall. When your task is to look for X, it's not surprising that you find X and not Y.

      --
      -- Alastair
    10. Re:Pedantry by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      That, frankly, is a silly rebuttal. The IPCC did no new science, but merely summarized findings of the scientific literature, which certainly does investigate both anthropogenic and natural contributions to climate change. Prominently in the IPCC summary of policymakers you can find comparisons of the relative contributions of anthropogenic and natural radiative forcings.

    11. Re:Pedantry by Sean0michael · · Score: 1

      I would like to say that, out of this entire /. discussion, this has been by far the best thread I have read. Not only is it informative, but you treat each other with respect, openly admitting that you want to look into more things or that you didn't understand something. If I could, I would mod you both +5 Gentlemen and Scholars. You are a rare pair here and I appreciate your civility while posting.

      --
      Funtime Candy Wow! - my plan for eventually conquering Japan.
    12. Re:Pedantry by schnipschnap · · Score: 1

      Yeah. But higher temperatures increase the rate of photosynthesis as well (maxing at 25 degrees Celsius, IIRC for most plants, and going down from there again).

    13. Re:Pedantry by happy*nix · · Score: 1

      I'm sick to death about hearing all the arguments about "Global Warming"

      Quite frankly I think that the enviromental movement are IDIOTS for putting all their efforts SOLELY on the "Global Warming" argument. It is absurd to argument for reall immediate chnage on what your models show will PROBABLLY" happen over the next 50 to 150+ years. NOBODY really cares.

      You want humanity, politicians, and corporations to take notice? to make change?
      A. shut up about "global warming" and future doom.
      B. talk about tha major cities around the globe where it is unhealthy to breathe the air. Show the lost productivity ($), the lost joy (sickness, pain), the loss of life (cancer, resiportory failure) that comes from sucking down all that carbon in the air.

      Most U.S. cities list that air quality index with the weather, and quip healpful advice like "90% chance of rain today, take your umbrella; It's going to be cold out so bundle up; The polution index is high so you migh want to wear a mask or avoid exercising outside;-)"
      People percieve the weather as someting to endure, not something to change.
      Pollution need not be endured and is still procieved as something that could be changed.
      WHY ARE WE ARGUING ABOUT THE WEATHER (Global warming) when we should be crying for breathable air.
      A scientist can create good charts, Al Gore can make a movie, we can show number from ice core samples and then argue that CO2 is causing weather change. A one hour trip out of or to a major city and any 8 year old will be able to understand that pollution is making the smell, taste and look bad.

      Good grief, its like arguing cigerates will weaken the enamal on you teath and lead to tooth decay and eventual starvation. BTW it also will most likely cause cancer and heart disease. On the average you will die 20+ years earlier. Oui, that tooth decay, that's what to worry about.
          Tobacco Company responce: "Our scientists show that sweets cause tooth decay. We believe that smokers advanced metabolism allows them to eat more sweets without gaining weight, thus inadvertntly leading to more tooth decay in smokers."

      Rant complete

      --
      Gone to my happy place.
    14. Re:Pedantry by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      I'm sick to death about hearing all the arguments about "Global Warming" Fine. Stop reading Slashdot threads about it.

      Quite frankly I think that the enviromental movement are IDIOTS for putting all their efforts SOLELY on the "Global Warming" argument. You obviously are unfamiliar with the environmental movement if you believe that they are only concerned with global warming.

      It is absurd to argument for reall immediate chnage on what your models show will PROBABLLY" happen over the next 50 to 150+ years. It is not absurd. CO2 stays in the atmosphere for centuries. If we want to change what will happen to the climate in 100 years, starting now is much, much easier than starting after the warming has continued.

      NOBODY really cares. Speak for yourself. This Slashdot thread, not to mention the discussion of global warming at high policy levels including Congressional testimony, proves otherwise.

      People percieve the weather as someting to endure, not something to change. Weather cannot be changed substantially. Climate can be; we already have changed the climate. That's what global warming is.

      WHY ARE WE ARGUING ABOUT THE WEATHER (Global warming) when we should be crying for breathable air. Global warming is climate, not weather, although it will influence the weather.

      Environmentalists "cry for" global warming, air pollution, water pollution, biodiversity, land conservation, energy conservation, and many other topics.

      Good grief, its like arguing cigerates will weaken the enamal on you teath and lead to tooth decay and eventual starvation. BTW it also will most likely cause cancer and heart disease. On the average you will die 20+ years earlier. Oui, that tooth decay, that's what to worry about. That's a stupid argument. Global warming is a longer term issue, but that doesn't mean it is unimportant. And, incidentally, pollution is not nearly as severe a problem as it once was. Smog is much better than in the 1960s, we no longer have rivers that are on fire like in Cleveland, etc.
  27. Red herrings by TapeCutter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Since science doesn't operate by consensus, any "consensus" is irrelevant."

    BULLSHIT! Peer-review is an integral part of science, without it everything deteriorates into "he said - she said" politics.

    Also the red herrings in TFA have been around for years and have been debunked ad-nauseam.

    For all those wondering about attribution please look at the latest IPCC SPM, it has a diagram that has been peer-reviewed and agreed apon by ALL the national science bodies on the planet. It includes such things a volcanos, solar variation, ect, most impotantly it also includes error bars. The reason this guy has picked on clouds as other so called "skeptics" have done before him is because NOBODY has a good model of cloud formation.

    "The short conclusion is, we have NO CLUE how the climate really works..."

    The alternative conclusion is that you were deliberately aiming for the +Funny mod that you recieved.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    1. Re:Red herrings by ivano · · Score: 1
      Correct. The GP post got it wrong. Maybe he was confusing democracy with consensus. Science isn't a democracy, but it is heavily based on consensus. That's why you get the line "scientists agree on".

      Science in the end are just a bunch of experts who have a good thorough knowledge of particular things. Expertise is the end result of science. But not all expertise is science, of course.

      Ciao

    2. Re:Red herrings by volkris · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Peer review and consensus aren't the same thing. They're barely related.

      Consensus is the process of finding a bunch of people who will attest to the same thing, while peer review is a process of criticism for an unproven idea.

    3. Re:Red herrings by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "Peer review and consensus aren't the same thing. They're barely related. Consensus is the process of finding a bunch of people who will attest to the same thing, while peer review is a process of criticism for an unproven idea."

      Nothing is "proven" in science, theories survive because they cannot be disproven.

      The more other scientists (ie: "a bunch of people") inspect a particular theory via peer-review (and peer-reviewed replication), the more confident science becomes that the theory is a predictive model of what has been observed in nature.

      There are (at least) two parts to a scientific consensus that any "buch of scientists" must arrive at...

      1. Agreement (ie:consensus) on the accuracy of the observations.

      2. Agreement (ie:consensus) on the techniques used to draw a conclusion.

      The most wonderous part of this method is that an inexperienced "nobody" like Albert can turn physics upside down with nothing more than three pages of unreferenced scribble and a powerfull imagination.

      There is much more to skeptcisim than simply saying "bullshit". Anyone who claims to be a skeptic should be appling the technique to their own ideas in the first instance, if a scientist can't manage that (and many can't) then they are practising psuedo-skepticism that will inevitably produce psuedo-science.

      BTW: I thought this site was for "nerds", I can't belive you have a 3 digit ID and nobody has explained this stuff yet. :-o

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    4. Re:Red herrings by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      PS: Getting 10 scientists to agree on anything that is even slightly "fuzzy" is difficult, just ask anyone in forensics. Getting 2500 scientists to agree on a twenty page report is both remarkable and by the very nature of scientific consensus (ie: established theory), it is also bound to be remarkably conservative.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    5. Re:Red herrings by volkris · · Score: 1

      Talk about scribbling...

      Now I don't know you, and I have no idea how you normally write, but you strike me as someone who likes to read their own meaning into things and then get all worked up over stuff people didn't say.

      You might want to watch that, that's all. What you wrote here was barely related to what I said, and what your previous comment wrote was barely related to that before.

    6. Re:Red herrings by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....That's why you get the line "scientists agree on"........

      Yes, even if there is evidence to the contrary. There are scientific FACTS, based on measurements and experiments. Then there is the interpretation of the meaning of these facts. Warming is indeed measured. What we cannot measure is the reason for this warming.

      --
      All theory is gray
    7. Re:Red herrings by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Either that or what you wrote was terribly misleading, consensus is an essential part of the scientific method, no?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    8. Re:Red herrings by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      In otherwords nobody has ever demonstrated "cause and effect" via the scientific method. The usefullness of science is it's proven ability to predict the future.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  28. What's missing in the discussion is science... by FuzzyDaddy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This discussion so far, and the article that prompted it, is a political debate dressed up as a scientific one. What our policies need to be guided by is a scientific debate, and what we, as citizens need, is also to follow the scientific debate.

    What is missing from this forum so far, and from the linked essay, is any link to the actual scientific paper in question. If we are to judge how significant this paper is, and what it means, shouldn't we be taking a look at it?

    The whole drama of hidden agendas, who profits from what, the desires of individuals to get attention and upset people of one political stripe or another, are in the end irrelevant to the questions of "Is human activity affecting the climate" and "What, if anything, do we need to be doing to protect our existence". The drama affects what we end up ACTUALLY doing, so may be very significant to the outcome of the next few hundred years of human history. But our individual responsibilities are to understand the science as best we can, even if we are not climatologists.

    Richard Feynmann used to bemoan the fact that reporters asking him about his work constantly tried to "dumb it down" so the average reader could understand it. His point was that, first of all, all the important stuff got lost in this process, and second, even if the "average" person couldn't follow it, there are huge numbers of scientists, engineers, and others who would be able to grasp the main points if they were actually presented.

    Given the nature of this forum (we're nerds, right?) I'd love to see the actual science... if only Mr. Calder, or any of the other writers on this subject would deign to show us the actual papers, rather than giving us their predigested interpretations.

    --
    It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
  29. Calling Bullshit on this. by mbkennel · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005 /07/the-lure-of-solar-forcing/

    http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2004 /12/recent-warming-but-no-trend-in-galactic-cosmic -rays/

    http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2006 /10/how-not-to-attribute-climate-change/

    The notion that professional climate scientists have ignored solar forcing in estimating climate sensitivity is 100% false, and by now repeating it is slander.

    By no means whatsoever have actual climatologists "forgotten" about the Sun since the earliest days of global warming studies in the 1960's and further. Of course popularizations ignore all the complexities but that's what they do.

    The fact remains that by the best known observations and theory there is no way to explain the current observations WITHOUT major to dominant human greenhouse gas forcing.

      There is no trend in solar activity observed or predicted which either explains recent past observations or will in any way nullify the clear and significant effect from greenhouse gas forcing. That depends on very predictable laws of physics, not statistical correlations.

    And if the Sun does happen to be in an upswing in output, then that will just make the climate change we are causing that much worse. Since the upper extremes of events and risks are the greatest danger, any uncertainty in solar forcing adds to the variance in future forecasts, and not the mean. This means that doing something about the thing we can do something about is ever more urgent.

    1. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The thing that shocks me, as a physicist, is how poisonous these debates are getting.

      "Sometimes even papers in highly respected journals fall into the same trap. Friis-Christensen and Lassen (Science, 1991) was a notorious paper that purported to link solar-cycle length (i.e. the time between sucessive sunspot maxima or minima) to surface temperatures that is still quoted widely."

      "Notorious" paper?! Why do the realclimate bloggers engage in this name-calling?

      Science is supposed to investigate the unknown in ambitious ways. Sometimes it turns out that your findings are wrong or misleading. But that should be expected to happen now and then. It's all part of our gradual increase in understanding. Of course you try to be as correct and complete as is practical, but if we only report findings that we think we understand very well, then our experiments will take ages to complete, and we'll have very little to report anyway.

      Better to be a little daring. And if something is wrong, it will surely be corrected sooner or later. That's part of the reason to have a scientific community anyway.

      Furthermore, they should welcome attempts to challenge or refine climate models. In physics, we spend a lot of time testing relativity, quantum mechanics, cosmological models, etc. to see if we can get them to fail. Nobody says "Oh, you can't trust him! He's a dark energy denier!"

      It is important to fight fraud, but this is best done by trying to reproduce results, not by casting aspersions on someone's character or motivations.

    2. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by Budenny · · Score: 1

      The argument here is not solar forcing.

      The argument is that the strength or weakness of solar radiation leads to cycles in the level of cloud cover, and that this in turn affects reflectivity of the earth, which in turns leads to variations in the rate of absorption from the sun.

      Look at it as a variation of the argument that the most important greenhouse gas is water vapor. The difference is, they have produced a plausible and experimentally verifiable non-human agency to account for why its concentration (in the form of clouds) may fluctuate cyclically, and they have tied it to previously verifiable fluctuations and coincidental temperature variations in the past.

      Its not at all what solar forcing in the models tries to take account of.

    3. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by quintesse · · Score: 1

      That must be your reading of the word "notorious", I read is as meaning "generally known and talked of" not as "widely and unfavorably known" (http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?va=notoriou s). Although even in the second meaning I still wouldn't see it as "name-calling".

    4. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by Trogre · · Score: 1

      The notion that professional climate scientists have ignored solar forcing in estimating climate sensitivity is 100% false, and by now repeating it is slander.

      No it's not, I resent that!

      This is written, it's libel.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    5. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mbkennel needs to be swiftly killed.

      He is using the Microsoft technique to close down discussion (sue for slander), and selectively quotes RealClimate, which everyone knows is paid for by the Greenhouse Industry.

      You can't believe a word these people say. They have a vested interest in scaring everyone, and will get shriller as their tower of lies starts to collapse around them. Then they will go quiet for a year, and come back screaming about a new ice age.

      " ..there is no way to explain the current observations WITHOUT major to dominant human greenhouse gas forcing.." - what you mean is there is no way YOU want to explain current observations apart from CO2. How do you explain the fact that it hasn't got any hotter for the last embarrassing 8 years, in spite of all the CO2? This mechanism has just been postulated and managed to get published in spite of all you and your ilk could do to stop it. Now, if someone does some proper science on it, we will see if the Sun can do this all on it's own.

    6. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by cirby · · Score: 1

      You need a better source than Realclimate.

      For example, talk to some actual global warming scientists.

      I have, and I'm still stunned by the number of them who think that "insolation is a constant."

      At best, they tend to underestimate its effects, or assume (!) that it's not important.

      Meanwhile, they're busy trying to pretend the Medieval Warm Period didn't happen...

    7. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      For example, talk to some actual global warming scientists.
      I have, and I'm still stunned by the number of them who think that "insolation is a constant." Really? What fraction? Who?

      At best, they tend to underestimate its effects, or assume (!) that it's not important. Stott et al. found that climate models do underestimate its effects, but only by 15% to at most 30% (and more likely the former than the latter). Foukal et al. found that its effects have been measurable but not particularly important over the last century. It may become more important in the future, but it's hard to predict.
    8. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1
      Are there any Slashdotters in this article who aren't going to link to that same blog over and over again? Just curious.

      The fact remains that by the best known observations and theory there is no way to explain the current observations WITHOUT major to dominant human greenhouse gas forcing.

      This is completely, utterly false. There are tons of ways to explain it, and this article is proof of one. Heck, we only contribute less than 0.5% of gases in the atmosphere according to the actual measurements--most comes from two things, volcanoes and water vapor exchange on the oceans. The greenhouse gases theory is so weak and dependent on notions of correlation that climate scientists justify it by calling it "fingerprints," referring to the fact there is no direct evidence, only conclusions they're drawing from data they believe is correlative.

      The global warming alarmism is seeing the beginning of a backlash. In its place will, hopefully, be a more rational debate. Otherwise, we're going to get more yahoos predicting violent hurricane seasons and scaring everybody (Yeah, remember that? How 2006 was supposed to be packed with hurricanes because of global warming? What happened there?).
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    9. Re:Calling Bullshit on this. by skoaldipper · · Score: 0

      Heck, we only contribute less than 0.5% of gases in the atmosphere according to the actual measurements--most comes from two things, volcanoes and water vapor exchange on the oceans.
      Yep. It really is man's hubris to think we can affect anything on this great big biosphere in space. But that hasn't stopped him yet from trying, or thinking he already had.
      --
      I hope, when they die, cartoon characters have to answer for their sins.
  30. Of course we wrong on climate change... by flyingfsck · · Score: 0

    The whole purpose of the climate change charade is to make Joe Public amenable to nuclear power stations. To any scientist, it is glaringly obvious that we need to build more nuclear power stations, but the Chernobyl incident made it political suicide for any politician to propose more nuclear power. The climate change PR campaign is carefully orchestrated to change that and it seems to be working, even the sun is playing its part.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    1. Re:Of course we wrong on climate change... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      even the sun is playing it's part ... oh, that's good, the sun is now a bit-player orchestrated by the anti-nuclear lobby.

      To any scientist, it is glaringly obvious that you're not one of them.

      you are one funny fucking dude, dude

  31. The New Science of Dismissive Debate by NetSettler · · Score: 1

    At least the global warming skeptics have become "global warming is man made"-skeptics. During the 90ies, the dispute was about weither there actually was any warming going on at all.

    I don't know if this is better or worse, but I've certainly noticed this trend, too. It sounds at some level like progress, but I fear it actually hides a weird assumption on some people's part that if we didn't cause it, it's not up to us to fix it--that it will either fix itself or else that it can't be fixed because it's God's doing, not man's.

    These days people are looking for any reason to dismiss things because there's just too much to think about. It's like when person A writes a long email on a serious topic and person B responds "there's a typo in line 2 there." Whose turn is it to respond now? What passes for discourse these days is really more like a game of ping pong. It doesn't matter what you respond, it only matters that you did respond. Then it's back in the other person's court for action. (If you don't like sports analogies, perhaps you'd prefer a Petri net. But it works out to the same thing.)

    And when the debate is between someone who is using rationality and logic on one side and someone who is thinking superficially on the other side, it has a wierd kind of surreal sense to it--like something's wrong with the picture but you can't quite figure out what. The end result, though, seems to be a lulling of the public into non-action so that it doesn't perturb Big Business, which often just likes the status quo. But if inaction is the result, I'm not sure that's progress.

    --

    Kent M Pitman
    Philosopher, Technologist, Writer

    1. Re:The New Science of Dismissive Debate by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Actually, this can also be reversed to spur action. May businesses say they don't mind regulation, they just want it to be consistent and predicatable so that they may plan. There have been more and more businesses calling for national legislative action on GHG emissions because ad hoc state-by-state efforts make for a complex market. You could call them lazy, but not always opposed to change.
      -
      Rethink solar: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users -selling-solar.html

  32. Galileo Galilei by Anne+Honime · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just to nitpick, but Galileo Galilei wasn't the first nor the only one to describe heliocentrism - Nicolas Copernic was the forethinker of that system, and Galileo Galilei main discoveries (Saturn's rings, Jupiter's satellites, physics of the pendulum etc.) weren't in the line at his trial. Actually, most of the learned scholars of the time knew for a fact that heliocentrism gave far more accurate mathematicals results to build sailing tables.

    Galileo Galilei faced troubles because he wrote that helliocentrism was the physical TRUTH. He would have escaped any trial (and was offered a plea bargain as a matter of fact) had he accepted to write that heliocentrism was a mere hypothesis. But he refused and the rest is history. As to know why he was so stubborn, we now know there was a mix of self-pride, and insurance he received from high profile individuals among the Catholic Church that the Pope was considering adopting a progressive doctrine. That turned out to be deceptive. Basically, he was caught in the middle of a political fight, and sided with the wrong persons.

    1. Re:Galileo Galilei by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Galileo Galilei was the victim of religion. Religion is established by a human or group of humans who write down a doctrine they thought up themselves but claim to have received from some higher power. Non-critical followers of the religion "believe" that this doctrine is the truth, no matter what scientific evidence is brought up against it. Worse, when people insist the doctrine is not true, they proceed to use force against them.

      What is so dangerous about religion is that even today, many states reserve a place for it in their laws and politics.
      Religion should be only for the private life of citizens who can use it to their own advantage. Any referral to religion in laws, legal procedures, day-to-day politics etc is insane and should be banned.

    2. Re:Galileo Galilei by CptPicard · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Galileo Galilei faced troubles because he wrote that helliocentrism was the physical TRUTH. He would have escaped any trial (and was offered a plea bargain as a matter of fact) had he accepted to write that heliocentrism was a mere hypothesis

      History seems to be repeating itself. Galileo was essentially required to put a sticker on his book's cover saying that "heliocentrism is just a theory; one among many and needs to be considered critically because of this"...

      --
      I want to play Free Market with a drowning Libertarian.
    3. Re:Galileo Galilei by jbourj · · Score: 1

      Actually, most of the learned scholars of the time knew for a fact that heliocentrism gave far more accurate mathematicals results to build sailing tables.

      Just to nitpick, at the time of Galileo, heliocentrism had not yet achieved Kepler's simplicity and Copernicus' model had more epicycles than Ptolemy. It is not at all true that Copernican heliocentrism achieved objectively better tables (or even easier to calculate tables). Only the very rough picture was simpler (having planets orbit the sun avoids major epicycles)---but to get accurate tables, tons of minor epicycles needed to be added to correct for Copernicus' assumption that the sun was at the centre of the solar system, that planets orbited in circles, etc.

      And while you're description of the result of Galileo's trial as a 'plea bargain' isn't exactly wrong, it is important to remember that Galileo was permanently under house arrest in his villa in Arcetri until his death. And he wasn't formally forgiven until the 1990s. So it was a bit worse than a plea bargain.

    4. Re:Galileo Galilei by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      Galileo was the first to find physical evidence of heliocentrism - the fact that Jupiter had moons which clearly orbited Jupiter. It was this that made clear that heliocentrism was more than a mere mathematical tool, and led him into conflict with Rome. Revisionism cannot hide the fact that Galileo was right, and the Church was wrong.

    5. Re:Galileo Galilei by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "And he wasn't formally forgiven until the 1990s. So it was a bit worse than a plea bargain."

      They may have "forgiven him" 300yrs later, but they are still hanging on to his telescope in the vatican.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    6. Re:Galileo Galilei by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      And just to nitpick further, we know from Archimedes' Arenarius that Aristarchos proposed the heliocentric model a couple of thousand years ago.

      But Aristarchus of Samos produced writings of certain hypotheses in which it follows from the suppositions that the world is many times what is now claimed. For he supposes that the fixed stars and the sun remain motionless, while the earth revolves about the sun on the circumference of a circle which is placed on the middle road, but that the sphere of the fixed stars, which is placed about the same center as the sun, is so large in magnitude that the circle on which he supposes the earth to revolve has the sort of proportion to the distance of the fixed stars that the center of the sphere has to the surface.

      (Archimedes, Arenarius 1.4-5, tr. Mendell)

    7. Re:Galileo Galilei by ajpr · · Score: 1

      Just to nitpick, but Galileo Galilei wasn't the first nor the only one to describe heliocentrism - Nicolas Copernic was the forethinker of that system

      Actually it was this guy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristarchus_of_Samos

    8. Re:Galileo Galilei by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Further more, there were other scientists who's work could have supported Galileo's. Thus absolving the lack of evidence. However, Galileo being quite the egotist had essentially criticized his fellow scientists and stated their work to be wrong.

      Therefore there was not enough evidence to move it from theory to fact. Galileo essentially called everyone morons including the Pope who actually prior had been supportive of Galileo. Essentially, Galileo was refusing to allow his work to be peer reviewed. And the other articles of teh day that supported his work, Galileo had personally peer reviewed and called utterly and foolishly wrong.

      Ironically, centuries later history records this as the "Chuch repressing science" and is oft used as an example. When in truth, no such thing indeed occurred. Furthermore, if anything, it was ensuring due process of peer reviewed science. The catholic church has an understanding that if their interpretation does not equate to the real world then they must have mis-interpreted and their interpretation can be changed. Because obviously God's creation speaks more accurately than man's interpretation. However, for such a change to occur qualifying officially evidence must be provided. This is where Galileo failed...mainly to his ego.

      (ie: I think it's funny because this same thing happens in scientific circles quite often today)

    9. Re:Galileo Galilei by aminorex · · Score: 1

      If Aristotle had done the same, we might have avoided >1000 years of lost progress.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  33. Re:Eugenics anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    umm what book would that be? I've never read anything by Crichton. A simple bit of research in to the debunked science methods used brought up what I said.

  34. True Utopia Can Only Be Achieved.... by Lensar · · Score: 1

    ...when Slashdot has nothing but articles about Global Warming.

    What more could any of us need?

    I would never leave the house! (well...this is assuming I left it now)

  35. Re:one earth--we have only one economy, too. by haakondahl · · Score: 1
    This is an incomplete application of the precautionary principle--even though we haven't proven the whole process, shouldn't we go ahead and take action to prevent disaster?

    The problem is that even if the whole disaster scenario is valid, and even if we implement every mitigating measure, the result of our action will be very little positive impact on the environment, while simultaneously crippling the economy of the entire world.

    Kyoto is madness--it is a wealth transfer mechanism from DCs to LDCs, and as if that weren't enough, it won't even do what people think it will. For ruinous effort, we would get negligible return.

    If the parent followed his precautionary principle to its logical end, he would feel less comfortable with the prescriptions of the Global Warmingistas, he would be more enthusiastic about contrarian articles such as this, and he would be a more scientific thinker, not less.

    A more complete aplication of the precautionary principle would say--since we don't really know what's causing any of this, although we do have several priomising theories, we shouldn't go wrecking the world economy, without which, I assure you, no further progress will be made. On anything.

    --
    Don't trust anyone under thirty.
  36. try reading the science by grishknash · · Score: 1
    1. Re:try reading the science by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      No use linking to the IPCC. Their supported research isn't going to be released for several months.

      That's right--they released the conclusion first before the evidence.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
  37. Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cue the climate trolls, both pro and con.*sigh*It is impossible to have a serious discussion about climate change (or any environmental issue) these days. Personally, I more fault the environmental movement for allowing itself to be hijacked by anti-capitalism and anti-globalization movements. However, I don't discount the role of industry wanting to maximize short term profits for a few at any cost (including search for the probable truth). In a way, it doesn't matter. Any piece of science gets immediately picked up and stretched for all it's worth to further a particular agenda. For instance, "cosmic ray flux may influence terrestrial climate" becomes "Man-made global warming is a myth because the real culprit is cosmic rays!"

    Flat out, that's not what the science tells us. What science tells us is that climate is a complicated system with many inputs and feedbacks that we only crudely understand. Even so, we understand enough to know one significant input right now is anthropogenic CO2 emissions. How significant? That is the multi-trillion dollar question.

    See, the question is not yes/no. Our choices are not "We're destroying all life! Dismantle capitalism before it's too late!" vs "we're doing nothing! Burn more coal!" What we're really looking at here is a serious study of how much we're influencing the climate we depend on (climate scientists agree enough to be worried). Following from that, we seriously need to look at the risks and how best to manage them without tanking our economy.

    We have many choices and a lot will depend on the relative significance of our contributions to climate change. We NEED studies like this, not as a tool to discredit global warming, but as a way to refine our understanding to better understand what WE'RE doing, so we can more effectively do the cost/benefit analysis of various scenarios. Unfortunately, reasonable voices are being drowned out by trolls in the warring camps.

    1. Re:Here we go again by misanthrope101 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I follow the environmentalist movement, and even the left in general, a bit, and I'm not that familiar with these anticapitalists you speak of. They exist, certainly, but the idea that they run the left-wing is a bit exaggerated. One of my favorite lefty documentaries is The Corporation, and what's relevant here is that the charge usually voiced is that the film is anti-capitalism. Instead, it's actually anti-free-from-accountability-corporations, if you'll pardon an ugly hyphenation. Selling stuff at a profit isn't considered evil, ergo capitalism isn't considered evil. What's considered evil is the insualtion corporations enjoy from responsibility, or rather the insulation investors and businesspeople enjoy from responsibility for the decisions they made along the way to making a buck.

      Attacking the idea that multinational corporations should be given the legal status of human beings, but not the responsibilities of human beings, does not constitute an attack on capitalism. Many people are faulting the left for a position it doesn't generally have (with a few outright communist examples) because, let's face it, the message "we oppose them because they want shareholders to be held responsible for what they profit from" isn't going to sell as well as "they hate capitalism!" This is about as cogent a criticism as saying that Republican Senators who want to debate the Iraq war are trying to help the terrorists. It's an attempt to front-load the argument with the assumption that the criticis of corporate unaccountability actually want to attack capitalism itself.

  38. Or maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...a lot of us are mindful of all the previous The End Is Nigh type doomsday scenarios we've had to endure for decades (yes, I'm old...) and are applying a bit of healthy and justified scepticism of all claims (pro or con).

    There is a lot of seriously flawed science being thrown at us in relation to this issue, so much in fact that the good stuff is often hard to find. But worse is the fact that very few making the claims either way are worthy of respect: they are almost always arrogant and patronising, dismissing out-of-hand as ignorant any who dare question (not criticise, question) any claim they make.

    Please try to forgive us for not jumping on your bandwagon, or any other right now.

    1. Re:Or maybe... by NetSettler · · Score: 1

      ...a lot of us ... are applying a bit of healthy and justified scepticism of all claims (pro or con).

      Nothing bad about being a bit distrusting, but to borrow a line from Reagan: distrust but verify.

      There's a difference between being skeptical of the answers and being skeptical of the questions.

      --

      Kent M Pitman
      Philosopher, Technologist, Writer

  39. Re: Genesis by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    > If global warming did not exist, leftists would have to invent it.

    No, leftists would have invented global cooling. Warming will turn more states red, but cooling would turn the blue.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  40. If volcanoes cause global cooling... by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

    then why does man made smoke cause global warming? http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1997/of97-262/of97-262.htm l It appears to me that if we remove the sulfur filters from coal fired power station smoke stacks, the earth will cool down again...

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    1. Re:If volcanoes cause global cooling... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      then why does man made smoke cause global warming? http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1997/of97-262/of97-262.htm l It appears to me that if we remove the sulfur filters from coal fired power station smoke stacks, the earth will cool down again...

      When you equip the coal fired power stations with 30,000 ft smokestacks, then you will be correct. Ozone high up is good. Ozone at ground level is bad. Particulates high up and low have differing results. Volcanos spew their ash much higher than our little man-made fires.

  41. Was he the editor for the relativity drive by noigmn · · Score: 1

    If so he must be right! Take that global warming!

    --
    Slashdot is powered by your submission.
  42. An Inconvenient Truth by mshurpik · · Score: 1

    I just watched Al Gore's movie tonight, so forgive me if I'm skeptical of this climate skeptic. Among Gore's claims:

    * Japan was hit with 10 typhoons in 2005. The previous record was seven.

    * Brazil was hit with a hurricane in 2005. The previous record in the South Atlantic was zero.

    * Atmospheric CO2 will reach 500 ppm in the next fifty years, up from 2-300 ppm in the past 600,000 years.

    I'm all for "alternative" science, but the thing is, it has to be science. I'm not sure that cosmic rays and precipitation account for the numerous cases of ice melt shown, by photo, in Gore's movie.

    It's hard to argue around Lake Chad in Africa disappearing completely. Cosmic rays did this? Should we also blame cosmic rays for sucking the life out of the Ural Sea in Russia?

    1. Re:An Inconvenient Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Ural Sea dried up because the rivers that fed it were siphoned off to irrigate crop production in Soviet Georgia. From the sixties on up there wasn't any water going into the sea. While this was man made, it wasn't because of global warming.

    2. Re:An Inconvenient Truth by Gena5m · · Score: 1

      And to cap it all, the name is not Ural Sea but Aral Sea. The lesson: don't watch Al Gore too much or you brain will start drying up. That bitter looser, self-proclaimed inventor (of Internet) chose the wrong winner this time. Again. If time machine is invented Al should be transported to Moscow, second half of Fifties to become Minister Of Irrigation in charge of pet project of Khruschev to divert Aral Sea water to grow wheat in prairies of Kazakhstan. That way he would be taken seriously on the state level (until 1964, sorry) and won't confuse those not totally brainwashed.

    3. Re:An Inconvenient Truth by mshurpik · · Score: 1

      >And to cap it all, the name is not Ural Sea but Aral Sea.

      Yeah, and the leader of the Mongolian Empire was Chingis Khan, not Ghenghis Khan.

      What does this have to do with cosmic rays again?

  43. Cyclic weather vs. Global warming by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 5, Informative

    The "we are headed towards an ice age" meme was due to the belief in cyclic weather, basically that the global temperature could be predicted by a Fourier series. You can always fit any measured data to a Fourier series, but here at least some of the coefficients had astronomical explanations.

    Global warming was also a concern 30 years ago, as the mechanisms were well known. There were actually people warning about global warming a 100 years ago. However, only recently computers have become fast enough, and measurements accurate enough, that you can actually quantify the risk.

    Interestingly enough, cyclic weather has until recently[1] been used to dismiss global warming, claiming that it was not man made but predicted by the coefficients in the Fourier series. Which does apparently conflict with the series predicting an ice age, but not really, as the series consist of overlapping cycles, and you can be on the way up on one of the short cycles, and on the way down one of the longer.

    [1] You still see references to it by laypeople on the net, but it is no longer used that way by scientists.

    1. Re:Cyclic weather vs. Global warming by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Who says it isn't a fourrier series and civilisation is one of its curves? I.e. it'll warm up until civilization breaks down, all industrial activity ceases, most humans die and there's noone left to continue the man-made emissions?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    2. Re:Cyclic weather vs. Global warming by XMLsucks · · Score: 2

      The measurements are not accurate enough --- that is one reason why global warming proponents have to *declare* that the debate is decided, rather than let the evidence speak for itself.

    3. Re:Cyclic weather vs. Global warming by SlideWRX · · Score: 1

      Global warming was also a concern 30 years ago, as the mechanisms were well known. Actually, Global *cooling* was a concern thirty years ago. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816, 944914,00.html
    4. Re:Cyclic weather vs. Global warming by Tophe · · Score: 1
      Yes, global cooling was a concern back then because of the aerosol, primarily sulfate, emissions. Since then we've cut back on aerosol emissions significantly while increasing CO2 emissions.

      A few scientists exclaimed that smoke and dust from human activities would cause a dangerous global cooling. Or would pollution warm the atmosphere? Theory and data were far too feeble to answer the question, and few people even tried to address it. Among these few, the uncertainties fueled vigorous debates, in particular over how adding aerosols might change the planet's cloud cover. Finally, in the late 1970s, powerful computers got to work on the stupefyingly complex calculations, helped by data from volcanic eruptions. It became clear that overall, human production of aerosols was cooling the atmosphere. Pollution was significantly delaying, and concealing, the coming of greenhouse effect warming. From "The Discovery of Global Warming" http://www.aip.org/history/climate/aerosol.htm See also http://www.wmconnolley.org.uk/sci/iceage/ponte.htm l and http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=94
    5. Re:Cyclic weather vs. Global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually SlideWRX is correct. I think his comment is worth more than a score 1.
      I'm at least old enough to remember the headlines of the time 30 years ago. I remember the panic and pressure to reduce particulate in the atmosphere or we would all be plunged into a global winter. Things were described as dire. Crops would fail. There would be mass starvation. Then it got warmer and the panic faded away. LOL

    6. Re:Cyclic weather vs. Global warming by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 1

      Actually, Global *cooling* was a concern thirty years ago.

      That's what the GP article said, and that what I repeated in my comment had you read it to the end. One concern doesn't preclude the other. Here is a 30 year old article from the same source about a Warming Earth?

      What have happened in the intermediate 30 years is that climate and climate changes has been an increasingly active field of research, and we know a hell of a lot more today than then. Yes, there is also still even more we don't know, but at least now we have a basic agreement on the direction of the curve.
  44. Re:one earth--we have only one economy, too. by iogan · · Score: 1

    The world economy will not be wrecked with reductions in CO2 levels and fossile fuel use. The economy of the US, is another question altogether. Frankly, from where I'm sitting, a US stuck in subsistence farming isn't such a bad looker. It would probably benefit the rest of the planet a lot more than any futile attempts to salvage the US economy at the cost of more environmental damage.

  45. Basically some simple questions raised by Budenny · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There is really no need for accusations about funding and so on. Just answer some simple questions:

    1) Why is East Antarctica cooling?

    2) Why has air temperature apparently stabilized?

    3) What caused the Medieval Warm Period?

    4) What caused the mini Ice Age of the 1700s?

    5) Why in the historical record do temperatures rise before CO2 rises?

    And that's not even getting into the Holocene....

    Well, maybe there is a simple explanation that results in it remaining plausible that the modern warm period is different from the Medieval being due wholly or mainly to CO2 emissions since what, 1850 or so, and not due to whatever caused the Medieval, and will not be followed by whatever caused the Mini Ice Age.

    No, it can only be stopped by our ceasing to emit CO2. Like they suddenly did in 1400...?

    Well, if there is a simple explanation along these lines, it would be very interesting to see someone write it down.

    1. Re:Basically some simple questions raised by JohnsonJohnson · · Score: 2, Informative

      Your questions are talking points from global warming deniers and they have long since been answered. Like the "debate" about evolution, and questions such as the evolution of flagella or the eye, they distract attention from real science and waste people's time answering ignoramuses who refuse to do a little research on their own. Since I've got some free time though, I'll bite.

      1) Why is East Antarctica cooling?

      The mean surface temperature of the entire globe can be increasing even if local areas are decreasing in temperature. You're confusing the average with the entire distribution.

      2) Why has air temperature apparently stabilized?

      What?

      3) What caused the Medieval Warm Period?

      Who knows exactly why, but as with Eastern Antarctica there is no evidence that the Medieval Warm Period extended to regions outside of the Northeastern Atlantic and Europe. In general though any changes in climate are the result of a variety of influences: solar irradiation, ocean circulation, changes in greenhouse gas concentrations, etc. Furthermore, for periods of a decade or two, large scale volcanic eruptions can affect climate over reasonably large areas of the globe.

      4) What caused the mini Ice Age of the 1700s?

      Same answer as 3, there are a variety of factors to consider.

      5) Why in the historical record do temperatures rise before CO2 rises?

      Because there are a variety of factors involved in a complex feedback loop, and it is not always the case that temperature changes precede greenhouse gas concentration changes. What is not in dispute though, is that current greenhouse gas levels have not been seen in half a million years and during that period the Earth's average temperature was 2-5 degrees Celsius greater than it is now. Admittedly, that's a correlation, not a proof of causation, but is reason for concern. Furthermore it's not in dispute that the majority of the observed increase in greenhouse gas levels is due to human activity, from agriculture to fossil fuel based energy production.

      Solar forcing, cloud formation, ocean and atmosphere interactions, and biosphere influences on global climate are all important areas of study. In general, over time as one question after another has been raised about the causes of climate change each of these has been offered as a reason not to worry, and ultimately after careful analysis found to be lacking in explanatory power. The oceans can't absorb all the CO2 (and we wouldn't want that because all the delicious fish would die and we'd be left with an ocean full of jellyfish), plant's can't absorb all the excess either (and switch to respiration in a CO2 rich environment further increasing the problem), careful analysis of solar irradiation data has largely ruled out sunspots as the major driver in current observed climate change and given the speculative nature of the research presented here (the experiment was performed under idealized conditions and the magnitude of the contribution of cloud seeding via cosmic ray flux in the actual atmosphere as opposed to a test tube is still an open question) it is too soon to decide that anthropogenic greenhouse gas formation is not problematic. In fact there are a host of reasons, such as the improving agreement between observed phenomena such as; decreasing glaciation, thawing of the permafrost, and shifts in such climatic phenomena as the monsoon, and predictions based on extrapolations of increased greenhouse gas levels to believe that greenhouse gas concentration changes are the primary driver of current observed climate change. Not the only driving force in the climate system, just the most important one right now.

      Also, things like the Medieval Warming, Little Ice Age and so on are largely the result of concentrating on the European climate record and become less significant when the sparser Asian climate record is also considered. The lack of good records of the climate of the tropics mid

    2. Re:Basically some simple questions raised by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Your questions are talking points from global warming deniers and they have long since been answered.


      It's interesting that you criticize the poster for asking these questions and describe them as long-ago debunked. But then in your answers, you respond with "Who knows exactly why" or "See #3" (which says "Who knows exactly why") or "there are a variety of factors to consider." You even say "Admittedly, that's a correlation, not a proof of causation, but is reason for concern."

      Then, having not sufficiently answered a single question, you have the gall to end with:

      But it gets tiresome to listen to global warming skeptics, as opposed to skeptical scientists, most of whom know better than to bring up these long resolved questions, bring up the same fallacies time after time.


      You yourself were unable to answer these supposedly long-resolved fallaces, so perhaps these questions are more challenging to your premise than you're willing to admit, which makes them worth repeating in discussions such as these.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    3. Re:Basically some simple questions raised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe that was modded up. This is known stuff, the only people who are asking these questions are those who aren't listening to the answers.

      >1) Why is East Antarctica cooling?

      It isn't. Note the posts above mentioning such things as a 5C temperature increase in the antarctic peninsula and total collapse of various ice shelves.

      >2) Why has air temperature apparently stabilized?

      It hasn't. It's going up, up, up.

      >3) What caused the Medieval Warm Period?

      The 41k-year Milankovich cycle hit its peak around 1000AD, after which the Earth started to slowly cool again. We're scheduled for another ice age, bottoming out in 20k years or so.

      >4) What caused the mini Ice Age of the 1700s?

      Short-term decrease in solar activity (as recorded in sunspot counts) coinciding with volcanic eruptions.

      >5) Why in the historical record do temperatures rise before CO2 rises?

      Not that they always do that, but it's a simple positive feedback loop. Temperature rise releases CO2, which increases the temperature. No matter which one goes up "first" or why, the other is going to go up too. Human activities are releasing huge quantities of CO2, which has kick-started this feedback loop. The physics of this have been well known since the 19th century.

    4. Re:Basically some simple questions raised by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Most of those situations were localized phemonena. You can have an average warming and some places still get colder. A warming earth will result in changes in circulation patterns. There are some suggestions that Europe will get colder because an average warming will slow down the North Atlantic currents that warm Europe.

    5. Re:Basically some simple questions raised by aminorex · · Score: 1

      1 - because it's a landlocked polar environment, and winds have declined.

      2 - because the current feedback systems are dumping most of that energy in the ocean instead.

      3 - the north atlantic current.

      4 - the maunder minimum.

      5 - because increasing temperatures result in higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations, which in turns leads to increasing temperatures.

      and no, there is no simple explanation for any climatic evolution. for an isolated effect, perhaps, but not for the net result.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    6. Re:Basically some simple questions raised by JohnsonJohnson · · Score: 1

      It's interesting that you criticize the poster for asking these questions and describe them as long-ago debunked. But then in your answers, you respond with "Who knows exactly why"

      There's a difference between knowing exactly why something occured and knowing the general conditions involved. As an analogy consider the way places like CNBC cover the stock market. Pundits often offer a laundry list of reasons why the stock market prices changed the way they did on any particular day, but fundamentally have no idea what each market participant who actually made a trade, which is what actually causes a change in the price level of the stock market, was thinking when they made the trade. So they don't really know exactly why the price moved, but they know what the mechanism was. Similarly, without a global network of sensors of some kind, or even a historical record covering the globe, no one can know exactly what was going on in the Earth's climatic system during the Medieval Warm Period or Little Ice Age. One can posit theories, about changes in ocean currents, volcanic activity etc. but no one will ever be exactly sure and no theory has such overwhelming support as to be most likely.

      You yourself were unable to answer these supposedly long-resolved fallaces, so perhaps these questions are more challenging to your premise than you're willing to admit

      There's a difference between answering a question and answering a question to the interlocuter's satisfaction. For example a friend of mine who is a global warming skeptic once asked "if the climate models are so great then I want them to tell me what the temperature is going to be on June 19th of this year". Of course the answer is, no one knows because it not only depends on the climate now, but on what happens between now and June 19th including unpredictable events such as volcanic eruptions, an El Nino or La Nina event, or even a major meteor strike. What can be offered as an answer is a probabilistic range of temperatures conditional on events, so no one know exactly what the temperature is going to be on June 19th but they have a pretty good idea of what's likely. Similarly, no one knows exactly what happened in the past when there was an insufficient record of information to make precise predictions, but they have an idea of what is likely. Again, to say because one doesn't know exactly what caused the Medieval Warm Period, doesn't mean global warming is debunked, anymore than not knowing the exact evolutionary path of the formation of the flagellum falsifies evolution. And to continue to insist for an exact answer is to pass from useful inquiry to pedantic sophistry.

  46. Overly Critical Guy by mshurpik · · Score: 0

    I hope you realize that Overly Critical Guy, the submitter of this article, is a troll. Overly Critical Guy? Give me a break. Naming trolls by their personalities is as old as Slashdot itself.

    Once there was a user on this board named "Unterderbrucke." In German, that means, Under the Bridge. Who lives under the bridge? Trolls.

    Get a grip. I don't blame the users here, we are doomed to whatever stories the editors choose to post. But the editors here are mad stupid.

    1. Re:Overly Critical Guy by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Your momma.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
  47. What about the Sahara? by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

    Please explain the following:

    http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/06/06 17_020618_croc.html
    ************
    The desert crocodiles have adapted to the changing environment in northern Africa; 8,000 to 10,000 years ago, what is now desert was probably lush savannah and grasslands. Today the Sahara is hot and arid, the land sandy, rainfall minimal, and vegetation sparse.

    "The extension of range almost certainly reflects climatic changes," said Ross. "We know that even in Roman times, the Sahara was much wetter and greener than it is now. As these places slowly dried up, remnant populations became isolated from the other crocodiles on the continent. How these populations adapted to the changing conditions is most interesting."
    ***************
    Ok so what happened here? Imagine if today the Sahara was drying up. The media and politicians would be saying the world end is near and everything is going to dry up and be burnt like a twig. Yet here we are 10,000 years later still alive...

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    1. Re:What about the Sahara? by kickedfortrolling · · Score: 1

      Good point,

      I personally feel theres an arrogance about assuming

      a) We can cause climate change
      b) We can do anything to stop it

      and for every claim of oil money funding people who dont fall in line, i think we shouldnt underestimate the power of band-wagons in society.. Just because alot of people think something is bad, doesnt mean it is.

      to those who believe in mans influence of climate change, please try to remember, we arent all under the corporate thumb, we just feel like we're being told not to sail too close to the the edge of the earth

      --
      --AlexC
      Just because I dont agree with climate change doesnt make me a troll
    2. Re:What about the Sahara? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Ok so what happened here? Imagine if today the Sahara was drying up. The media and politicians would be saying the world end is near and everything is going to dry up and be burnt like a twig. Yet here we are 10,000 years later still alive...

      ...except for the millions of people who have died from starvation because of the desertification of Africa. Few people claim the human race as a whole is going to end--but continuing global warming is going to create a great deal of death. Why not minimize that now if we can?

  48. Reduce greenhouse gas levels without damaging... by iogan · · Score: 1, Informative

    ... your precious economy? Easy, stop eating cows. Kill all the ones you have now and eat them, but don't make new ones. The farmland you can reclaim will yield ten times as much food and whatever you have left over that doesn't need to be used for growing food can be used for growing for instance industrial hemp, which can then be used as fuel for heating houses. Oil can be extracted from the plants which mixed with gasoline (20/80 in normal cars without any modifications) can run cars, reducing your addiction to foreign oil (or domestic, if you live in a country whose oil production still surpasses demand).

  49. Just a little nitpicking here... by ConanG · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The Copernican model didn't offer very good astronomical predictions compared to the most sophisticated Ptolemaic models. When Galileo saw Venus go through complete phases (full -> new -> full), it pretty much convinced anyone conversant in astronomy that geocentrism was wrong. Why? Because in a geocentric system Venus can't go through all the phases; only half the phases depending on whether it's inside or outside the Sun's orbit.

    Still, Ptolemaic models with their fancy epicycles within epicycles within epicycles gave better results. It wasn't until Kepler came along and put the planets on elliptical paths that the Ptolemaic models were finally thrown out.

    1. Re:Just a little nitpicking here... by Herr+Ziffer · · Score: 1

      Thank you Conan and Anne for inserting some knowledge into what has become a bit of a myth about the superiority of the heliocentric model. I would only add that in the end Copernicus was also forced to add epicycles into his model in order to achieve the level of accuracy that Ptolemy had. The Copernican model, in truth, was simpler at the cost of accuracy -- hardly a good model for science, really. I'm not sure why people think they can pull good lessons from bad history.

  50. Are You a Climate Scientist? by logicnazi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you read the research papers in climate science? If you answered no to both these questions then you shouldn't be trying to weigh the evidence yourself based on what you read in newspapers.

    In any scientific discipline, and particularly complex ones like climate science, it is easy to select evidence (even honestly) to make almost anything appear to be the right explanation. The reason the scientific process works is because it doesn't just let each theory get up and give a stump speech but demands to know how it can answer tough questions and fit consistently with our other knowledge. The question is not, 'would cosmic rays make for a good hypothesis on the basis of our inexpert knowledge,' but 'given the vast body of knowledge scientists have is it plausible that cosmic rays explain climate variation.'

    Thankfully, climate scientists have not only already addressed this question but even written lay explanations about it. You can find plenty of other discussions about cosmic rays over on realclimate.org and they point out that there is considerable reason to discredit the cosmic ray explanation for global warming.

    What disgusts me about this whole buisness is that whenever something like this comes up a bunch of people who can't be bothered to actually read the journal articles but think they are entitled to second guess the people who have pipe up and complain about how global warming is just a dogma. Like any topic you have a choice. You can either choose to learn enough about the subject to intelligently weigh the evidence, which in this case would mean keeping up with the actual scientific papers not just media summaries, or you can count on experts to analyze that evidence for you and reach your conclusion on the authority of those experts.

    Look it's simple really. Either you can read the scientific papers yourself and argue with the other experts about the evidence or you can argue about which experts are more credible. If you are debating the matter here you are doing the later. So do you really expect anyone to believe that the handful of climate change deniers are more credible than all experts who find the evidence for global warming compelling? If the positions were reversed and it was the deniers who were claiming it was global warming would you believe?

    The worst part of all this is that these very idiots who claim that climate science is just some dogma pose a real threat to important dissent in the climate science community. While we may be sure of the vague outlines of human caused climate change there are many issues that still require vigorous scientific debate but if this debate is jumped on by skeptics as proof that global warming is a fraud then responsible scientists will be more reluctant to publicly express such disagreements.

    --

    If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    1. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by Budenny · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Was this meant to be an explanation of what exactly caused the Medieval Warm Period? And what caused the Mini Ice Age? And what the contribution of man-made CO2 was in either case? And why the East Antarctic is cooling? And why air temperatures seem to have stabilised? Not to mention what the Wegman report showed about the statistical inadequacies of the Hockey Stick?

      Telling everyone to shut up and listen to their betters is not going to make this stuff go away.

    2. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by Ignis+Flatus · · Score: 1

      you know, the problem i have with you is that you are not a climate scientist, therefore i can't trust anything you just said to be true.

    3. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by argStyopa · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree. Scientists are the only ones who should be allowed to comment. Because scientists are never wrong, never 'shade' their information to fit a conclusion, and never EVER have political biases themselves.

      - Adolf Eichmann.

      --
      -Styopa
    4. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The worst part of all this is that these very idiots who claim that climate science is just some dogma pose a real threat to important dissent in the climate science community.

      It only gets treated as dogma because (on the other side of the coin) some treat it as a religion. If you "offend" that religion by doing something "against" it (eg: Not recycling) you get treated the same way any other hardcore religious fanatic treats an infidel: as, well, an infidel.

      If it weren't for the nutballs on both sides of the issue it would be so much easier... so much easier...

      An example from realclimate.org of exactly what I'm speaking of:

      "Hockey-stick bashing and solar-explains-all advocacy are favorite activities of the denialist camp" from "Fraser Institute fires off a damp squib".

      a) Denialist camp. This is so-very-much recognized as a religious phrase. No grey area recognition, black-or-white-we're-right-you're-wrong thinking is exactly what religion is all about.

      b) Hockey-stick bashing and solar-explains-all advocacy. ie: Their ideas are just advocating the wrong thing and must be insulted at all opportunities. Religion at it's best.

      A true scientific rebuttal would use phrases such as "The paper's assertion that X is the reasoning behind Y is false/incorrect/has issues because it has been shown that Z in fact causes Y [see footnote 1]".

      However, a usual religious battle goes like this "The denialist camp did a bunch more bible-burning this weekend when they did their usual 'intelligent design isn't real' activities yesterday. It's a common accusation against the science of intelligent design that 'it doesn't exist'. The attempts by that institute to throw dirt on the truth is against reality." You'd be surprised, but I used a lot of words and similar sentences from that article writing that.

      This is why we don't trust certain "climate scientists", because they speak with their hearts, rather than their minds.

      So, no, I won't read those "papers" any more than I plan to read the bible. I want truth, not opinions based on feelings.

    5. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sound you heard was the parent posters point flying over your head...

    6. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Thankfully, climate scientists have not only already addressed this question but even written lay explanations [realclimate.org] about it. You can find plenty of other discussions about cosmic rays over on realclimate.org [realclimate.org] and they point out that there is considerable reason to discredit the cosmic ray explanation for global warming.

      What disgusts me about this whole buisness is that whenever something like this comes up a bunch of people who can't be bothered to actually read the journal articles but think they are entitled to second guess the people who have pipe up and complain about how global warming is just a dogma. Like any topic you have a choice. You can either choose to learn enough about the subject to intelligently weigh the evidence, which in this case would mean keeping up with the actual scientific papers not just media summaries, or you can count on experts to analyze that evidence for you and reach your conclusion on the authority of those experts.


      Um, but they could be gasp wrong or atleast underestimating comsic rays actual importance. Quick what's the difference between comsic rays and radition that we get from the sun? That the average slashdoter or slashdot troll can understand. You know what really disgusts me? That to be objective, I have to throw out our entire current research everything done after say 1950 and go back later to find non-political leaning sources. If climate research is so inexact that your average citizen can't understand it and keep current, we shouldn't depend on it for any political movements to change society. Ie. Climate Scientists could become your high priests that your lay population aren't allowed to know why just follow their directives on the future. Um, we live in a republic. If the science can't be reduced to sound bites, it'll be ignored by a large fraction of voters. Um, it doesn't take much sound bites to arguee it out in the media. The problem is that I've tried. It's too freaking difficult to stay remotely current with this topic. I've labeled the entire climate studying field as politically loaded and unusable for any of their output. I try for the long term sustain what resources we have and keep on doing what we've always done. The climate scientists need to dump the GW religious folks and start releasing information that the average voter/industry can use like weather or usable long term climate models. Until they can do that, I don't want to hear from them again. This is worse than evolution vs ID.

    7. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, isn't this interesting... the GP says:

      whenever something like this comes up a bunch of people who can't be bothered to actually read the journal articles but think they are entitled to second guess the people who have pipe up and complain

      and you rebut with:

      Scientists are the only ones who should be allowed to comment.

      The funny thing is, your statement has *absolutely nothing to do* with what the GP stated. And the GP is right: people who argue from a position of ignorance should, in fact, remove themselves from the debate, because they are only adding more noise to the already nearly drowned-out signal. That doesn't mean "exclude all non-scientists". It means "exclude ignorance", and I fail to see what is wrong with that.

    8. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should explore RealClimate. They specifically discuss the Medieval Warm Period, the Little Ice Age, Antarctic Climate, and the supposed problems with the Hockey Stick Graph.

      But, hey, god forbid you should actually do your own research.

    9. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by Ignis+Flatus · · Score: 1

      nah, i understood him perfectly. i just chose to be dismissive because he was being dismissive.

      anyhoo, the truth is, "climate science" is a pretty foggy term. you can be a "climate" scientist if you are a geologist, chemist, physicist, statistician, mathematician, computer scientist, etc. the problem is big and complex and draws from several disciplines, and i don't care how smart you are, you can't be an expert in all of them. and what do you know? /. is full of people like that, scientifical types. we've got lots of diverse knowledge floating around here and for some dipshit to come in and try to buffalo people into thinking they've got no right to chime in on the debate is just more silly hubris.

    10. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      I said (sarcastically): Scientists are the only ones who should be allowed to comment.

      You said: your statement has *absolutely nothing to do* with what the GP stated.

      The GP:So do you really expect anyone to believe that the handful of climate change deniers are more credible than all experts who find the evidence for global warming compelling?

      Who didn't read the comment?

      --
      -Styopa
    11. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by logicnazi · · Score: 1

      So what I said broke down the situation into two cases.

      1) You want to argue about the merits of the evidence, e.g., does anthropogenic global warming explain things like the (supposed) medieval warm period. In this case you really should actually know what the evidence is before you start arguing. You don't have to be a scientist but if you can't be bothered to actually read through the evidence they are using to make their argument it's just foolish to think you know enough to respond.

      2) You want to leave interpreting the evidence to the experts and argue about which of them are more credible. In this case it's perfectly reasonable to comment without actually having read the papers but you are trying to establish that the few climate change deniers are more credible than the vast majority of scientists who accept the consensus view. So sure you should be allowed to make the point but it's just a dumb one.

      Some positions just don't have good arguments. If you pick an incorrect position like arguing the earth is flat or that UFOs make crop circles it isn't my fault that you won't be able to make a compelling case it's yours because you picked a ridiculous position. The position that the vast majority of climate change researchers is less credible than the doubters just happens to be one of those positions.

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    12. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by logicnazi · · Score: 1

      Actually all the journal articles I've seen in the climate science field seem perfectly normal scientific articles. Of course getting through even one journal article is *very* difficult if not impossible for your average person much less keeping up with the subject.

      So yes it is impossible for the average citizen to keep abreast of climate science because reports in the mass media necessarily leave out the real details and they don't have the time or expertise to read the real arguments. You can spout off whatever high minded ideas you want about republics and the people it doesn't change the fact that some aspects of the world just ARE complex and require lots of training and study to comprehend.

      The facts about global warming aren't going to go away just because the evidence for it can't be compellingly conveyed in a sound bite.

      What I'm saying is that people need to either get off their asses and really learn climate science (very very unlikely) or admit that they don't know enough to debate the issue themselves and instead just figure out whose opinions to trust. It's a lot like going to the doctor. It's only an idiot who refuses to get surgery when their doctor tells them they have a malignant growth because they read some article in newsweek. A smart individual gets a second or third opinion and asks doctors they trust whether it really is a tumor and then takes action based on the expert advice. All I'm saying is we should do the same with the climate as we would do with our own bodies.

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    13. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by logicnazi · · Score: 1

      THESE AREN'T THE FUCKING PAPERS. Those are still just lay explanations I cited as evidence that this is hardly an unconsidered topic in climate science. If you read the actual articles published in journals you will find responses of exactly the form you give, points based on reason and argument not authority. Besides, you yourself are saying what sort of language is used shouldn't matter only who has the better argument should matter.

      Bringing up ID is a perfect example. Do you think that ID is a better theory than evolution because of the tone to the discussions? If so there really isn't much point continuing the discussion but if not then you admit that this tone also characterizes people who actually have the evidence and arguments on their side but can't convey them to the public because it is too technical.

      The scientific papers (things published in nature, climate science journals etc..) are there if you want to read them and they just give the argument and evidence. If you can't understand them or don't have the time to read them you can't blame the scientists for not giving you the real arguments.

      --

      If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:

    14. Re:Are You a Climate Scientist? by kabocox · · Score: 1

      What I'm saying is that people need to either get off their asses and really learn climate science (very very unlikely) or admit that they don't know enough to debate the issue themselves and instead just figure out whose opinions to trust. It's a lot like going to the doctor. It's only an idiot who refuses to get surgery when their doctor tells them they have a malignant growth because they read some article in newsweek. A smart individual gets a second or third opinion and asks doctors they trust whether it really is a tumor and then takes action based on the expert advice. All I'm saying is we should do the same with the climate as we would do with our own bodies.

      That'd me what I do as well, but you forgot about those that don't trust most doctors and would go to a faith healer or alt. medicine doctor and trust them. Or would rather just go without any medical treatment because they'll die whenever God wills it. My mother-in-law will get 4-5 opinions for various doctors and won't trust or believe any of them. The doctors will say somehting like "its all in your head" and she'll get really ticked and find another doctor. The problem with the global climate is that "its all in their head" as long as they can't explain it to the average person. I'm sorry, but I've not seen enough material that really would force me to change my behavior. It's all been PR rants from various groups. That's the problem. The actual climate scientists get drowned out. I want to listen to their abstract and if I don't want to take their advice then I'll go about my business. Problem is that you have several sides that will throw up or popularize alot of abstracts so its not really worth it any more to pay attention. I have several fields that I keep an eye towards; its just far too much effort filtering the BS out from the climate debate so I ignore all of it.

  51. Reducing CO2 emissions by CSLarsen · · Score: 1

    An economist gives an interesting view on the cost versus effect of reducing CO2 emissions: http://www.ted.com/tedtalks/tedtalksplayer.cfm?key =b_lomborg

    --
    Claiming to be pedantic on Slashdot is asking for trouble
  52. Funny by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Non-critical followers of the religion "believe" that this doctrine is the truth, no matter what scientific evidence is brought up against it. Worse, when people insist the doctrine is not true, they proceed to use force against them.

    Funny, you just described dogmatic believers in communism/socialism/liberalism/conservatism/libert arianism/global warming/string theory/kibology/bigfoot/socialized healthcare/anarchism/(insert your favorite belief system here). What you're faulting is not a behavior unique to religion, but is something that can be categorized as something bad all on it's own. Namely the behavior of destroying those who disagree with you instead of just trying to prove them wrong. As a good example, Edison did it to Tesla, and at no point was religion involved. People do it in politics everyday.

    I know, I know, don't feed the trolls...

    --
    Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
    Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    1. Re:Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The difference between religion and most other dogmas is that religion is based on often centuries or millenniums old write-ups that have non-discussible status.
      When it is "written in the bible" is is taken to be true, disregarding the fact that the bible is just an old book like any old book. When an old scientific book mentions that the earth is the center of the universe, a new article may just prove that this is false and we be done with it. But with religious books this is different, because many followers of a religion (not only the very fanatic ones) take everything written in their book of religion as the truth even when evidence is put up against it.

    2. Re:Funny by TapeCutter · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Namely the behavior of destroying those who disagree with you instead of just trying to prove them wrong. As a good example, Edison did it to Tesla, and at no point was religion involved. People do it in politics everyday"

      I think what you are describing is the definition of politics! The scientific method is demonstratably the best tool known to man for weeding dogma and politics out of any predictive theory. As for who's name is remebered, often that's just politics. :)

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    3. Re:Funny by Rocketship+Underpant · · Score: 1

      Just to nitpick, beliefs that are based on non-violence by definition -- e.g. liberalism (libertarianism), pacifism, some definitions of anarchism -- cannot be categorized as behaviours intend on destroying dissenters. Likewise, non-political and non-dogmatic beliefs (like belief in Bigfoot) require no such intent.

      It's quite true, though; most political doctrines are simply competing systems of using force against people. Most people in this world have never come to a life-and-let-life realization, and most never will.

      --
      He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
    4. Re:Funny by psiclops · · Score: 1

      no they don't go out in search of evidence against it, and any such 'evidence' they encounter that would shatter it may be deemed false evidence, all evidence that comes from it is right. this is not unique to religion, everybody does this with their belief system. when it is "written in a scientific journal" it is taken to be true.

      --
      i spent five minutes thinking and all i got was this crappy sig
    5. Re:Funny by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      Just to nitpick, beliefs that are based on non-violence by definition -- e.g. liberalism (libertarianism),

      By destroy I did not mean necessarily the use of force. Destroying someone could also refer to ad hominem attack or such. And as far as "liberals" not using violence... I've personally been physically assaulted by "liberals" based on my beliefs and have witnessed several other such assaults. The idea that liberalism is based on non-violence is laughable. Heck, liberal leaders in the US this last election cycle announced they'd lead riots in the streets if the Republicans retained control of Congress. I've had liberal speakers at my campus announce what we should do to David Duke. Alec Baldwin screamed about pulling people who's politics he disagreed with and their families out of their homes and stoning them to death. And don't forget that the founding fathers of the United States were considered at the forefront of "liberal thought" and they sure the hell favored violence as a solution. :)

      The idea that libertarianism (my own favorite dogmatic belief system) is based on non-violence is even more hilarious. Try taking a libertarian's stuff and see how "non-violent" they get. :)

      And I guess instead of saying Bigfoot I coulda said "Holocaust Denial", but I was trying to illustrate absurdity via absurdity (hence my reference to kibology...)

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    6. Re:Funny by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      The scientific method is demonstratably the best tool known to man for weeding dogma and politics out of any predictive theory.

      Are you trying to be funny?

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    7. Re:Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      everybody does this with their belief system
      Not everyone's belief system is based on the false concepts of "truth" and "order".
    8. Re:Funny by Gryphn · · Score: 1

      when it is "written in a scientific journal" it is taken to be true.

      Actually, "when it is written in a scientific journal", makes it publicly available to anyone interested in either verifying or refuting "what is written".
      --
      Fantasy and superstition should be used for entertainment purposes only.
    9. Re:Funny by Dean+Hougen · · Score: 1

      when it is "written in a scientific journal" it is taken to be true.
      You've never actually read a scientific journal, have you?

      Those of us who make a living reading and writing articles in scientific journals are very skeptical of what gets published. Those of us who make a living teaching others to read and write articles in scientific journals teach our students to be very skeptical of what gets published. Articles in scientific journals are the least trustworthy sources of information, except for all others.

      Dean
    10. Re:Funny by psiclops · · Score: 1

      the methods of most doctrines are publicly available to their followers. that doesn't mean everyone goes out and tests them.

      --
      i spent five minutes thinking and all i got was this crappy sig
    11. Re:Funny by psiclops · · Score: 1

      there are people that read the bible/qur'an/crowley/leary and are skeptical of what it says too.
      some people read things and blindly accept them, some people don't.

      --
      i spent five minutes thinking and all i got was this crappy sig
  53. Cult of CO2 by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    One must also ask, and this is something I rarely see in the general debate : "What about all the nitrogen?"

    Even back in 1994 the global warming potential of fertilizers were known :

    "In wet soils, denitrifying bacteria convert nitrate to nitrous oxide and gaseous nitrogen. The former is a greenhouse gas that has an energy reflectivity per mole 180-fold higher than that of carbon dioxide."

    I came across the notion in an MIT courseware video lecture (16 or 17 I think)

    On a slightly different tack nitrogen's role in reducing carbon fixing was documented in 1996
      and thus warning against adding nitrogen to the ecosystem because it reduces the ability to fix the dreaded carbon, ignoring N's own contribution.

    Yet here we have Nasa saying that carbon fixing is nitrogen limited and we should add more nitrogen to the system.

    Not that all modern thinking is pro-nitrogen.

    Add into the mix the world's estimated 1,300,000,000 cattle belching out 400 litres of methane each per day : 520,000,000,000 litres

    Here's more on methane

    Methane is responsible for nearly as much global warming as all other non-CO2 greenhouse gases put together. Methane is 21 times more powerful a greenhouse gas than CO2. While atmospheric concentrations of CO2 have risen by about 31% since pre-industrial times, methane concentrations have more than doubled. Whereas human sources of CO2 amount to just 3% of natural emissions, human sources produce one and a half times as much methane as all natural sources. In fact, the effect of our methane emissions may be compounded as methane-induced warming in turn stimulates microbial decay of organic matter in wetlands--the primary natural source of methane.

    and more

    What conclusions?
    My conclusion is that reducing one's carbon footprint will not suffice. The way to fix more nitrogen is to grow more pulses and legumes which is good because you're going to need something to replace the cows you're eating now. Stop pouring nitrogen on to the fields and start eating more organic produce.

    As we've been saying for a while : "think globally, act locally"

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    1. Re:Cult of CO2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:Cult of CO2 by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      I shall have to watch the MIT lectures again, they had some interesting stuff concerning it but I cant remember what it was.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    3. Re:Cult of CO2 by Ambitwistor · · Score: 1

      "What about all the nitrogen?" Nitrogen contributes as a GHG, but it's much smaller than the CO2 contribution. If you look at the latest IPCC summary, you'll find that the radiative forcing of CO2 is about 1.66 W/m^2, whereas the forcing of N2O is only about 0.16 W/m^2.

      The carbon fixing role of nitrogen is a different matter, though. I am not too familiar with that. However, I do know that the terrestrial carbon cycle (which is mostly where the nitrogen carbon-fixing effects come in) is not as significant as the oceanic carbon cycle as far as CO2 sinking is concerned.

      Methane is responsible for nearly as much global warming as all other non-CO2 greenhouse gases put together. Methane is 21 times more powerful a greenhouse gas than CO2. While atmospheric concentrations of CO2 have risen by about 31% since pre-industrial times, methane concentrations have more than doubled. That may be, but when you look at the actual amounts of CO2 vs. methane that have been added to the atmosphere (which is what is relevant to temperature change), anthropogenic CO2 dominates methane increases. Methane isn't insignificant, but it still doesn't outweigh CO2. (Total methane radiative forcing is estimated at about 0.48 W/m^2.)
  54. Buy Fox shares now! by giafly · · Score: 1

    Fox must want a favor in the USA because News International (Fox) is the owner of this paper. Possibly they plan a take-over!

    No you can't trust me but, hey, advice on Slashdot might be a better bet than all those pump-and-dump share scams clogging your in-box.

    --
    Reduce, reuse, cycle
  55. The question shuld be,,, by meglon · · Score: 1

    Climate change/global warming has become the same as the evolution debate.... a handful of people understanding what the evidence shows, and the masses listening to people who don't have a clue, but have some form of plan to gain power/make money off argueing.

    Both sides agree that it is happening, although they still disagree a bit about what the effect will be (as someone mentioned, climate models are not all that accurate). Ultimately, the question shouldn't be: Is man causing, or accelerating climate change? The question should be: What can we do to mitigate the negatives of climate change?

    It's a far harder question to answer, and is a lot less likely to be answered before it's too late with the continued bickering.

    --
    Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
  56. Re:one earth--we have only one economy, too. by heinousjay · · Score: 1

    Your optimism is excessive, particularly if you think the stability of the world wouldn't be insanely affected by the collapse of the US. The ties are too strong now to let any big player go down.

    I almost wish it would happen just so I could point at you and laugh.

    --
    Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  57. Re:one earth--we have only one economy, too. by iogan · · Score: 1

    The US is the reason for most of the instability of the world. I promise we would be better off without them. Not the parts of our economy that deal with the US, granted, but I believe they would be easily assimilated into the rest of the economy.

  58. Soylent Green is Cows! by DaleCooperFBI · · Score: 1

    I used to talk about land use when asked about being a vegetarian(x acres of land can feed y times as many people as cows etc). However, I recently heard a radio program(I think it was on a "Forum with Michael Krasny"
    http://www.kqed.org/programs/program-landing.jsp?p rogID=RD19) where they were discussing "factory farms". One of the guests who was somehow involved in the raising of cattle remarked that the raising of cattle was a far more efficient use of land for food production than growing crops, because they feed cows not with grain etc, but with OTHER COWS!
    It's the kind of "creative problem-solving" I would expect from Mr. Burns.
    I also seem to recall hearing that cow canibalism is what's causing "Mad Cow" disease.

    Maybe the same "geniuses" will figure out how to increase the fat/oil content of cows(or some other animal)
    and use that to reduce our dependance on foreign oil. Better living through canibalism!

    (curls up into a fetal ball screaming "Futuuurrre!!!...Futuuurrre!!!...Futuurrre!!!...")

    1. Re:Soylent Green is Cows! by ScentCone · · Score: 0, Troll

      I also seem to recall hearing that cow canibalism is what's causing "Mad Cow" disease.

      You're recalling incorrectly.

      "Mad Cow" disease (along with its other variants, like the kind we get naturally, or the type that shows up in wild hoofstock like deer and elk) is caused by prions. These occur naturally. When an infected cow's neural material makes its way into the feed of other cows, there is a chance that the other cow could wind up with the disease. Just like there is a chance of a cow sick from a virus or bacterial infection passing it along to other cattle. You're confusing the cause of a disease with one of the means by which it's spread. Two totally different things.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    2. Re:Soylent Green is Cows! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You're confusing the cause of a disease with one of the means by which it's spread.

      The "cause" of avian flu isn't infected birds. It is a virus. However, people consider the infecting agents and the "cause" as the same thing. Apparently, you are agreeing with someone in a violent manner because you do not like how much of the world uses some words. Mad Cow Disease would not have even been named or ever made it in the news if feeding cows to other cows didn't happen. Prions would exist without this practice, but the term "mad cow disease" would never have been coined. So, to be as pedantic as you, the cause of "mad cow disease" was not actually the prions (poor innocent strings of protien), but the practice of feeding cows to other cows, resulting in the spread of an otherwise difficult to spread disease.

    3. Re:Soylent Green is Cows! by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Apparently, you are agreeing with someone in a violent manner

      I'll confess that I don't know what this means.

      But no matter what it means, there's really no mechanism on a discussion board for "violence" to even enter into it. So, right there, I kind of have to wonder about your take on things.

      Regardless, prions are the cause of mad cow disease. Always have been, always will be. People did see the syndrome, rarely, long before it cropped up in slightly more tiny numbers in the last several decades. It's not like it was seen, but not named until it was seen ever so slightly more often. On the other hand, our entire culture is reaching such depths of science illiteracy, that it is in no way pedantic to get people to actually embrace the differences between causation and correlation, or disease and symptom, or dangerous protein strands and greater proximity TO then. The version of the prions that impact elk and deer are quite common in some wild herds in the midwest, and those deer do not eat each other. They get it from living in proximity to each other, and encountering each other's droppings, wounds, etc.

      Every school kid should understand the difference between causes and vectors. If we use your approach, we'd be teaching people that say gay sex causes AIDS (as opposed to HIV, which actually causes it). Just how badly do you underestimate other people's intellect? Do you want people to not understand the underlying cause of problems that might impact them, their society, their economy, etc? If you're ever wondering why people complain about elitist academic types, there you have it, right there.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Soylent Green is Cows! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      But no matter what it means, there's really no mechanism on a discussion board for "violence" to even enter into it. So, right there, I kind of have to wonder about your take on things.

      Well, there is "I think you are right" and "I think you are wrong" followed by how you think the person is right. That is a conflict. Are you a native English speaker? One of the definitions of "violence" is "rough or immoderate vehemence, as of feeling or language." You agreed with him and had no point in direct contradiction, yet you used rough language in your agreement. That is violent agreement. It is not physical violence. There are more definitions to the word than just that.

      If you are a native English speaker, then you would know this, and thus would lead me to believe that you purposefully misconstruing everything that anyone says that you do not like. You take the worst possible meaning, and attack it, even if, as you directly state here, that position does not make sense.

      You assume my use of the word "violence" to be one of the definitions that makes no sense, then declare I'm making no sense. But, if you were actually wanting to have a conversation, you'd have thought about the other definitions that do make sense.

      Regardless, prions are the cause of mad cow disease.

      And what is the cause of the outbreaks? Is it because prions spontaneously form in cows? Or is it that the disease would not exist without the practice of feeding cow parts to other cows? If it is the latter, then the disease would not exist without the practice. Thus, the cause of the spread of the disease is cownabilism. In common speech, that means that feeding cows to other cows causes the disease.

      I understand you do not like that. However, it is a valid description. Just like you can't not define "violence" to whatever you like best, you can not define that the spread of diseases defines the diseases.

    5. Re:Soylent Green is Cows! by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      That is violent agreement. It is not physical violence. There are more definitions to the word than just that.

      I would challenge you to find more than one out of a thousand native English speakers that would ever use the word "violent" in that context. With close to 40 years of regular English conversation and extensive reading, I think I can comfortably say that I've never come across anyone constructively using it that way. I have, though, come across plenty of people who toss out words like "violent" or "fascist" or similarly loaded words as part of an indignant (but weak) bit of rhetoric. It usually betrays a certain awareness on the part of the person using it that they are on thin ice, debate-wise.

      attack it, even if, as you directly state here, that position does not make sense

      People who use an ambiguous, or particularly nonsensical twist of language while trying to make a point that is only semi-related to an ill-conceived, or outright wrong position on something... they need "attacking" (to use your word) because otherwise the semantics of the conversation will get in the way of seeing their basic wrongness.

      And what is the cause of the outbreaks? Is it because prions spontaneously form in cows? Or is it that the disease would not exist without the practice of feeding cow parts to other cows? If it is the latter, then the disease would not exist without the practice. Thus, the cause of the spread of the disease is cownabilism. In common speech, that means that feeding cows to other cows causes the disease.

      Except, as already pointed out, the disease was known and observed before that practice, and even after that practice, its frequency is very low. And the variants of the same disease that are found in the wild (among other hoofed animals) show up in occasionally dense clusters, and even across large swaths of a given region's population of that species. The cause of the disease is the cause of the disease (the prion). Those factors that may or may not influence the speed or long-term impact of the disease are just that: modifiers to the vectors that spread (not cause) or mitigate the disease's effects in a population. I'm mystified that you can't (or don't think that other people can) handle the distinction between things that cause a disease, and things that cause the disease's spread to de/accelerate. You're asserting that "common speech" conflates those two things (which is another way of saying that that's a "common person's" understanding), even as you suggest that, sometimes, you'd personally make the distinction. How spectacularly condescending of you. And how odd that you'd want to bash someone (especially on a tech/science-oriented web site!) for making the distinction and for encouraging discourse that keeps causality in mind.

      A disease is a disease. The spread of it is the spread of it. They are two separate things, and to pretend that you wisely know the difference, but that "common people" can't be expected to sort it out or grapple with the difference - that's the most shallow, and empty flavor of arrogance.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  59. In-depth analysis. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is research that has been going on for more than 10 years, there was a documentary in 1997 made by a Japanese professor who first noticed the correlation.

    The whole issue is that the earth's climate is regulated by the formation of low-altitude clouds for cooling earth - reflecting UV rays away - and high-altitude clouds - reflecting heat back to earth - causing a green-house effect.
    Gamma-radiation donates the necessary energy to have condensation of water vapor on dust particles at lower altitudes; this energy is not necessary at higher altitudes to have formation of water droplets; thus causing a green house effect.
    The japanese researcher found out that here is an almost perfect correlation between temperature variation and gamma-radiation.

    The major issue he noticed is that the solar wind shields the earth from this gamma-radiation, thus causing a drop low-altitude clouds, thus causing global warming. He then looked into the fluctuation of the sun's electro-magnetic field, which propels the solar wind, and found out that the period of these fluctuations correlates with the 11 year cycle when the electromagnetic poles of the sun switch. The alarming factor is that the diameter of this electro-magnetic field is growing steadily in the last 60 years, since these measurements began. If this continues this might trigger a huge green-house effect, causing the poles to melt and the ocean levels to rise worldwide.

    A little bit off-topic maybe - but funny anyhow. I saw in another documentary that the CO2 levels where everyone is speaking about are caused 25% by industrial actitivy and car exhausts, 25% by natural fluctuations of the density in the ozone layer and 50% by gastro-intestinal and anal gasses from all the mammals on earth, which are mostly cows and we humans.

    --

    I always post anonymous; spambots are getting too smart nowadays.

  60. Yeah, right. Cosmic rays. by nagora · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Go and watch any sunset in Europe. Count the number of contrails that spread out into cloud.

    Cosmic rays? BullSHIT!

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  61. Re:one earth--we have only one economy, too. by alexgieg · · Score: 1

    Sure! Because a world where China is the sole superpower is undoubtedly A Better Place(tm).

    --
    Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
  62. Has anybody asked the Earth Simulator? by exist99 · · Score: 1

    The TSUBAME Grid Cluster was created in 2002. It is still in the top 20 of top500.org's report. An incredible machine. It has been modeling the earth since its inception. I have never found much data which it has produced, have you?

  63. Nir J. Shaviv by Ignis+Flatus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here's a nice "Cosmic Rays and Climate Change for Dummies" article that has pretty pictures and graphs. At least give it a read before dismissing this. I found it compelling.

    http://www.sciencebits.com/ice-ages

    more on the climate debate: http://www.sciencebits.com/ClimateDebate/

    Shaviv's personal site: http://www.phys.huji.ac.il/~shaviv/

    1. Re:Nir J. Shaviv by Budenny · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Thanks, very nice convincing article, and the dialogue is very good. Particularly liked the realclimate reference.

  64. ~Accurate != ~Usefull by TapeCutter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "The measurements are not accurate..."

    Agreed, and that is why NASA should drop the "man on Mars" crap and refocus on our own biosphere.

    "...enough --- that is one reason why global warming proponents have to *declare* that the debate is decided, rather than let the evidence speak for itself."

    This is a totally assinine assumption on your part, "not accurate" != "not usefull".

    As for "evidence speaking for itself" please refer to figure SPM-2(PDF warning) in the 2007 IPCC SPM.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  65. Rubish. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    You refer to people that you know, or have anough reasons to assume, that they know what they are talking about.

    That is not reference to authority.

    That is refering to authoritative knowledge, which is completely different.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Rubish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sir, are an idiot.

      I have studied idiots for a long time and I can definitively and with authority say you are one. That is not conjecture nor is it an appeal to authority.

      You just described the appeal to authority fallacy and then said using it wasn't an appeal to authority.

      This is part of the problem ... people today think, hey I heard from person 1 whom I trust that x is true. Therefore I will become a proponent of x because 1 said so and I think they are authoritative.

      This is done without ever analyzing the data or the situation for themselves and this is an appeal to authority. If they are incapable they should keep their ideas to themselves in a scientific discussion.

      People need to learn that "shut the hell up when you don't really know jack" is the more appropriate response. You just aren't really that smart and your opinion isn't really all that special.

    2. Re:Rubish. by smilerz · · Score: 1

      In science there is no such thing as trusting the guy that you think knows the most. Something is either right or its wrong and only study and experimentation can answer that question. And you are wrong - what you are describing is absolutely reference to authority and its a logical fallacy.

      --
      My Blog
  66. Calling Bullshit on RealClimate.org by sycodon · · Score: 0, Troll

    RealClimate.org is nothing more than DailyKos for the science community.

    Everything on it is politized and there is no hint of an open discussion, just a wide belief in an open and shut case from the dooomsday advocates.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:Calling Bullshit on RealClimate.org by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Ha! Modded up by a "denier" and modded down by an "alarmist".

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  67. but why those fkers by cheekyboy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Why did they arrest him? What did it gain them?

    More whores or virgins? more book sales?

    Common, what did it gain them.... bigger dicks?

    Do those sort of people still exist today in the corporate world, knocking down good decent people for their own career gains?

    Is the church a fraud that has billions of gold hidden in the vatican or hidden alien treasures? Are they really the one true original
    one world government neocons? Is the church like the ORI from stargate?

    This is the basic human fundamental fight.... individualism vs collectivsm.... the bee hive vs the wasps....

    Just let it be, do both, dont kill each other... and lets see how colonizes mars/moon first.... Communists or Capitalists.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:but why those fkers by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      This is the basic human fundamental fight.... individualism vs collectivsm.... the bee hive vs the wasps....

      Kinda funny to learn that ants evolved from wasps, eh?

      Also, who gave you the idea that bees are a collective? Better go watch "Life in the Undergrowth".

  68. what an annoying article by Alien+Perspective · · Score: 1

    so I click through to the article, hoping to see an interesting technical discussion of cosmic-ray fluxes, ionization, and climactic effects.

    But what I get is a long ideological/political rant, wrapping up with a "BUY MY NEW BOOK!!!1!" bit of crap.

    Sheesh. Talk about false advertising.

    #1. Yes, ionization can cause clound condensation. It's been known since the 20's, or even earlier. Try looking up "cloud chamber". The fact that some Danish guy set up a little cloud-chamber in his basement is NOT major news! You can buy little kits for doing this stuff for $100 or so. It's a high-school science project, fercryinoutloud!

    #2. The question is whether ionization is the DOMINANT mechanism, or a small contributor, for meterological cloud formation. And the linked article doesn't even begin to address this.

    #3. Yes, there are correlations between weather and cosmic-ray fluxes. There were underground experiments in central italy (more or less directly east of Rome) that showed a correlation between cosmic-ray flux and the weather two weeks later in Venice (much further north). Wow! Cosmic-rays cause that? No they don't, both are affected by the average temperature of the atmosphere, with the two-week lag coming from the way seasonal changes differ from south to north.

    #4. There's a fair amount of fluctuation in the SOLAR cosmic-ray flux, the stuff that causes auroral activity. But those are low-energy particles, and stop rather high up in the atmosphere (the ionosphere), well above any clouds or other weather. They do produce 14C (via (p,n) reactions on atmospheric 14N), so the various 14C dendrochronology studies gives some relevant data about long-term variations. But in any case, if the SOLAR cosmic-ray fluxes where driving the Earth's weather, you'd see a VERY strong 11-year cycle. You don't.

    #5. The higher-energy cosmic-rays that penetrate to the toposphere and below are known to be extra-solar origin (they're amazingly isotropic), but their exact source is not known with any great certainty. What can be said with great certainty, as a result of decades of measurement, is that the flux of these high-energy cosmic-rays is constant, once you take into account the varying attenuation effects from the atmosphere (with its thickness changing with temperature and pressure).

    Whatever is (or isn't) causing global warming, it isn't the cosmic-rays. Those that wish to place the blame on cosmic-rays are either ignorant, disingenuous, or both.

    1. Re:what an annoying article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, it is not the Solar cosmic rays (if they're solar, they cannot be cosmic can they?), but the galactic cosmic rays.

      "The question is whether ionization is the DOMINANT mechanism, or a small contributor, for meterological cloud formation."

      Indeed. Over land it should not be dominant because there is plenty of dust and other stuff to serve as cloud condensation nuclei. Over oceans, it is a different story. There, cloud condensation nuclei are not abudant and they serve as a bottleneck (simple google for images of "ship tracks" to see that this is the case.

      "you'd see a VERY strong 11-year cycle."
      Actually, you wont. This is because Earth's finite heat capacity. You should expect to see, and you indeed see very small temperature variations (of order 0.1C synchronized with the solar cycle.

      "these high-energy cosmic-rays is constant"

      Nope, they aren't. Over the solar cycle they (i.e., at energies relevant to penetrate the troposphere) vary by about a few %. As for longer time scales, they vary too. For example, already in the early 80's it was understood that the cosmic ray flux over the past few million years is higher by about several 10's of % from the average over the last billion years. This is because of inconsistencies obtained between potassium based exposure age of meteorites and other exposure ages (using shorter lived radioactive isotopes).

  69. Credentials by Comboman · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I for one refuse to comment on this subject until Michael Crichton tells me what is right!

    Well, you are slightly better off getting your science information from an author with doctorate in medicine than politian with a bachelor of arts degree (though in fairness, he did invent the internet).

    --
    Support Right To Repair Legislation.
    1. Re:Credentials by skoaldipper · · Score: 0

      Say what??? I did not know Crichton directed Westworld (with Yul Brynner). Holy smokes; one of my all time favorite movies. I don't care what /. says anyways, this Crichton feller is a genius! GENIUS I TELL YA!!!! I would like to subscribe to his newsletter, if he has one.

      --
      I hope, when they die, cartoon characters have to answer for their sins.
  70. You've had this debunked before by benhocking · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why are you posting it again?

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  71. deniers=racist by oldwarrior · · Score: 0

    to call them deniers, not skeptical scientists is ignorant of how science works and maybe even a tad racist. The JOB of every scientist is to doubt, question, and attempt to disprove theories and hypotheses. This is how science works. They are still going after quantum theory and all of the numerous atomic and molecular models - not to "debunk" them but to refine them or in some cases replace them with better (more complete) science. When we stop thinking, science rusts.

    --
    If it were done when 'tis done, then t'were well it were done quickly... MacBeth
    1. Re:deniers=racist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how is this racist?

  72. Study Climate Change on your Laptop by HoneyBeeSpace · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    If you'd like to do some of the experiments discussed in the article yourself, the EdGCM project has wrapped a NASA global climate model (GCM) in a GUI (OS X and Win). You can add CO2 and/or turn the sun down by a few percent (to measure solar effects) all with a checkbox and a slider. Supercomputers and advanced FORTRAN programmers are no longer necessary to run your own GCM.

    Disclaimer: I'm the project developer.

  73. Re:~Accurate != ~Usefull by JWW · · Score: 1

    Agreed, and that is why NASA should drop the "man on Mars" crap and refocus on our own biosphere.

    You know, I really fail to understand why we can't do both. The Earth facing missions really aren't that expensive in comparison.

  74. Original Sin Redux by asterion · · Score: 1

    It's SLANDER to question your position? "Of course" you "ignore the complexities"? "No way" to explain this except your opinion? And even if it's not our fault, it's still our fault?

    Face it, you are a religious zealot. Blind, reflexive faith in these computer models (which can't even explain the 100k year glaciation cycles, or little ice ages) is pathetic, as is your willful denial when other explanations are put forth. Highly unconvincing.

    News flash: the Earth is going to get either hotter or colder, as it has done in cycles for eons. I'm not buying this new Original Sin doctrine from you or your friends at realclimate .org any more than I did from Jimmy Swaggert.

  75. Magnetic fields by Machtyn · · Score: 1

    Ok, so I'm utterly late on this one... and this comment is likely never to see the light of day. Oh, well

    Has anyone ever proposed a correlation between the changing magnetic fields to that of this supposed global warming (or climate change as they like to call it when it gets cold in the northern hemisphere.)

    I'm not saying there isn't a climate change happening, but it seems to me that if the northern ice caps are receding, but the southern ice cap is expanding... this might have something to do with the earth's magnetic field preparing for a magnetic flip.

    1. Re:Magnetic fields by ScrewTivo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've been asking that same question for some time. In the NOVA documentary about this it appeared that the diameter of the magnetic ring at the poles was increasing. The photos seemed to look just like the ozone hole. I wish I could get two similar photos and overlay them.

      There is also plenty of history in the fossil record to determine what happened during the past magnetic flips, but I have not read anything about what happened to the climate at those times.

    2. Re:Magnetic fields by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There shouldn't be a large effect, if at all. The reason is that the terrestrial magnetic field imposes a cutoff at a few GeV (to at most about 10 GeV at the equator). On the other hand, the atmosphere ANYWAY blocks these energies, such that it is the higher energy cosmic rays which ionize the troposphere. In otherwords, even if you swich off the terrestrial magnetic field you will not get a large increase in the cosmic ray flux and only a small climatic effect.

  76. Realclimate does not refute anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article does not refute anything.

    It expends a significant part lampooning the fact that similar claims have been published before, in a journal of the same name, or even the same journal (gasp! woot! haha!), before admitting that it 'may be of interest'.

    Then it goes on to say that 'to prove the effect, a number of unknown and missing pieces need to be filled in, and as these have not been researched, the conclusion cannot be drawn'.

    Which is a fair point, and I agree that no proof has been made.

    But my point, which I would empathically assert is equally fair and demand to make, is - if these pieces are MISSING and UNKNOWN, why are we in the course of changing the entire global political, economic and social systems and the daily life of every person in the world based on pure speculation about them?

    IFF you don't mind, I will do everything I can to stop that until such knowledge exists.

    1. Re:Realclimate does not refute anything by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "The article does not refute anything."

      Actually I agree, see my post below answering the same critisim.

      "But my point, which I would empathically assert is equally fair and demand to make, is - if these pieces are MISSING and UNKNOWN, why are we in the course of changing the entire global political, economic and social systems and the daily life of every person in the world based on pure speculation about them?"

      No argument here either, extrodinary claims require extrordinary eveidence and all that...

      "IFF you don't mind, I will do everything I can to stop that until such knowledge exists"

      I find it extrodinary that 2500 scientists can agree on a single 20 page report, you might find figure SPM-2 informative.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  77. Blow me down you land lubber: It's hamster farts by LucidBeast · · Score: 1

    Ban pet hamsters. Those annoying little critters.

  78. I'll cite this one by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Funny

    the next time my boss looks suspiciously at me when I blame the server outage on sunspot activity.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  79. Politics and science by cryptoguy · · Score: 1

    This is more about politics than science. And that is a really bad thing.

    We need a way to fund scientific research that removes the political influence. And politicians need to stay out of the discussion.

    If more of the liberal politicians were driving "green" vehicles, living in "green" homes, limiting their air travel, etc, then their hand-wringing about global warming would at least appear a little less hypocritical.

  80. Heresy by WED+Fan · · Score: 1

    While it is possible that he is wrong, it wouldn't be the first time one guy turned out to be right over the establishment, anyone remember a man a long time ago called Galileo Galilei.

    You are comparing this nut job to Galileo? He says man isn't causing global warming. When the Bible...err, our Socialist masters...our politician (hey, don't we believe politicians lie?)...alright then, our Oscar nominated actors (hey, one of them is a politician and none of them are scientists)...a whole bunch of people say, (that's good, nobody could possibly disagree with "a whole bunch of people", after all, they have numbers on their side), how dare you side with a guy who disagrees with out cult...err, religion...beliefs...our whole bunch of people?

    psst, you mentioned our socialist masters, they won't like it. People might see through their anti-capitalist plot.

    You know what, forget I said anything. Now, where is that Don't Submit button?

    --
    Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
  81. News Flash by Zero_DgZ · · Score: 1

    News Flash: Scientists believe that the cause of warming on our planet may, possibly, sort of potentially have something to do with the bloody SUN. Film at eleven...

  82. non-event by belg4mit · · Score: 1

    Assuming this lone gunmen actually has more insight than the rest of the establishment--possible
    but not frickin' likely since he mistakenly believes that cooler local temperatures (CA cold snap)
    are in conflict with our notions of global warming--this single aspect is not really enough to go
    once way or another. There are still a number of variables in current climate models with unclear
    implications i.e; aerosols. This is one of the reasons that you get "wide" ranges of possible average
    global temperature increases. Maybe the cosmos really is cooking us, but then its also possible
    that global dimming offset that.

    --
    Were that I say, pancakes?
  83. OK, once again with feeling by benhocking · · Score: 3, Informative

    (1) As I said the first time you posted this exact same diatribe - which media are we not hearing this from?
    (2) We have proxies. Those proxies can be checked against more recent data to help determine margins of error. No, proxies are not perfect, but they do allow us to gather remarkable information back 800,000 years.
    (3) Yes, the Earth's magnetic field is decreasing. And, no, you're not a genius for "figuring out" that it might be related to climate change. There are lots of electrical engineers who no doubt know far more about climate science than you. If you disagree, you should publish a journal article in a peer-reviewed journal. Don't give me any conspiracy theory on that, either.
    (4) Jupitor [sic] is not experiencing the "same" climate change as Earth. Jupiter takes a lot longer to go around the sun than Earth, so it's natural variations are also longer. According to your link, "We're sorry, but there is no SPACE.com Web page that matches your entry." If you're going to keep posting stuff that has been debunked, as least refresh your link list.
    (5) Mars is also not experiencing the "same" climate change on Earth. Read the one link you posted (for this bullet) that actually works. It's experiencing climate change - which it should when it goes from summer to fall to winter to spring (which takes about a year and a half of Earth time). Of course, if Mars is experiencing the exact same climate change, then that kind of shoots down #3, right?
    (6) And who is responsible for these livestock? Methane is an important factor. However, C13/C12 ratios (as well as simple math) determine that the vast majority of increase in CO2 in the atmosphere is due to fossil fuels. Luckily, methane has a much shorter "life span" in the atmosphere than CO2. Even so, why would it reduce our need to take action otherwise? Also, you realize that this "point" contradicts #4 and 5, right?
    (7) Just like last time you posted this drivel and had it debunked, you stopped numbering at this point. Why can't you actually create new arguments?
    (8) Just because slow climate change in the past was natural does not mean that the fast climate change now is natural. Just because cancer kills you, it doesn't mean that a bullet won't kill you as well. Do you understand your logical fallacy about bringing up past climate change? The basic science is:
    (a) We've increased the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere from the range of about 180-280 ppmv (over the last 800,000 years, where 180 ppmv = ice age) to over 380 ppmv.
    (b) CO2 absorbs infrared radiation.
    (c) Absorbing infrared radiation leads to an increased thermal equilibrium point.
    No fancy computer simulations are required to understand this basic science. As for cosmic rays, sounds like a BOFH excuse to me.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
    1. Re:OK, once again with feeling by DarenN · · Score: 1

      Can we all stop using the fear phrase "Global Warming", and refer to it as "Doom, Doom, Doom". Then put the research (not the FUD) back in the correct boxes, "Climatology" and "Atmospheric Studies".

      There IS a real trend at the moment that any work at all that contradicts "Doom, Doom, Doom" has trouble getting funding, and trouble getting published. The same phenomenon prevented odd results from being published in fusion research... the establishment can be hard to crack.

      My question is: Does anyone _seriously_ believe that we can continue to produce so much CO2 and not affect the ecology of the planet over the short to medium term? While I'm one of those that believes that the majority of the temperature variations are not anthropogenic, I do believe that a lot of the climate change IS anthropogenic. I also believe that if you removed humans tomorrow, the plant would have re-asserted a natural balance fairly quickly, by geological or evolutionary terms.
      So essentially, the advice seems to be "Don't shit on your own doorstep". Seems fair to me!

      I'd prefer much less biased and sensationalist coverage of both the problem and the proposed solutions. Not necessarily here on /. I'm not an idiot, but specifically in the scientific community.

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
  84. Re:Eugenics anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is interesting that you will not address my rebuttal to your claims that race is just a mere social concept and has no genetic implications.

    Do you believe evolution does not exist? Do you even know what eugenics is?

  85. A Truly Inconvenient Truth by DBett · · Score: 1

    To the extent this theory is correct (and it does correctly account for several observed events - while conventional "Global Warming" theory does not) it will be a real inconvenient truth for many who have invested in the current consensus.

    Maybe the lesson is not to treat a scientific theory like religion.

    1. Re:A Truly Inconvenient Truth by Fleeced · · Score: 1
      This idea was covered in Lomborg's Skeptical Environmentalist. Whilst it seems true that it was a factor in global warming, there is still a very obvious correlation between carbon emissions and global warming since the 1970's. In other words: there is more than one cause of global warming.

      BTW, to everybody on this list who dismisses peoples views on the basis that they are "climate change skeptics" - or with the even more emotive (and frankly, offensive) "climate change deniers" - I would like to point out the difference between environmental skeptics (those who think there's nothing wrong) and skeptical environmentalists (those who believe there is, but are skeptical of the proposed solutions and of the motivations behind them).

      I recommend people read Lomborg's book. He makes a good case, and does so largely with the same IPCC figures used by other environmentalists (and whatever you say about Bjorn Lomborg, he IS still an environmentalist).

  86. Antartica by wytcld · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Why is east Antarctica getting colder?" It makes no sense at all if carbon dioxide is driving global warming.


    One of the co-authors of that study is a friend of mine. He's bemused by how the press has gotten the data's implications entirely wrong. An average increase in global temperatures results - according to all models - in some local average decreases. The overall patterns change.

    Consider the question some must be asking, "Why is there record snow in Mexico, New York now if our winters are warming?" It's because the Great Lakes are warmer than usual because of the unusually warm December and January, so there's more evaporation now that cold winds are finally blowing across, and that becomes snow. Global warming means as a planetary average it snows less (because it's more often rain instead). But locally it may be that Mexico, New York is in for a string of nasty winters.

    It's similar effects we're seeing in Antarctica, where local regions have more snow buildup, or more cold, even though on the large scale major ice shelves are breaking off for the first time in tens of thousands of years.
    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    1. Re:Antartica by finarfinjge · · Score: 1

      "It's because the Great Lakes are warmer than usual because of the unusually warm December and January,"

      Actually, http://ice-glaces.ec.gc.ca/prods/WIS58CT/200702051 80000_WIS58CT_0002968329.gifThis shows that the great lakes are currently freezing over. They do this in the winter to some degree or another. Hence the surface water temperature is 4 degrees celsius or lower. Almost certainly 0 degrees celsius. To be clear, the water temperature is NOT warmer. Also note that Lake Erie is now completely frozen over. While you are at the Environment Canada web site, I encourage you to look at the "past weather" data. In particular, plot up temperature data for the last 50 years or so. Note that from 1950 to about 1975, most sites will show a decrease. To really appreciate the trend, plot either the 12 month or 60 month running average. As those of us who are old farts will remember, in the 1970's this data was used as evidence that a new ice age was coming.

      Cheers
      JE

    2. Re:Antartica by skoaldipper · · Score: 0

      As those of us who are old farts will remember, in the 1970's this data was used as evidence that a new ice age was coming.
      Yep, sure do. Now be a good lad and pull my finger will ya.
      --
      I hope, when they die, cartoon characters have to answer for their sins.
  87. Re:~Accurate != ~Usefull by kabocox · · Score: 1

    Agreed, and that is why NASA should drop the "man on Mars" crap and refocus on our own biosphere.

    I'm kinda different. I think all that biosphere monitoring crap should be spun off just to NOAA and let NASA work at 2 main things, looking at stars and near solar objects, and working at getting there. If we want to look at Earth and use that for weather/climate predication, that should be done and budgeted under NOAA instead of NASA so NOAAs budget could be raised while NASAs is lowered.

  88. No no no... dinosaur flatulence! by Colonel+Angus · · Score: 1

    It can't be hamster farts... because it's dinosaur farts!

    During the hearing, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) -- one of the 87 percent of congressional Republicans who do not believe in man-made global warming -- questioned the authors of the [IPCC] report about a period of dramatic climate change that occured 55 million years ago. "We don't know what those other cycles were caused by in the past. Could be dinosaur flatulence, you know, or who knows?'
  89. Nothing new and quite improbable... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is nothing new. ANYTHING that causes ionization of atoms/molecules in the atmosphere will cause a quick "spurt" of condensation nuclei (CN) which ultimately leads to cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) (and ultimately allows one to find "invisible jets"..ahem..). But most of those sources are few and highly unlikely to happen to influence the planet. The real answer is that we still don't understand the chemistry behind sulfate-CN formation which happens ALOT. Past experiments from Andrew Horn (of Britain, JACS, PCCP) and Kulmula (Science,sp?) of Finland partially prove the calculations given by Ianni and Bandy (America, J. Physc. Chem, Theochem) that it is simply sulfur chemistry. Gas phase sulfur chemistry that we still don't understand fully....yet....

  90. Way to Misrepresent by Mateorabi · · Score: 1
    Dude, way to completely misrepresent their arguments. The lag you refer to is due to CO2 indeed being a feedback on the order of 1000s of years to other (unspecified) sources of temperature rise. (And being a + feedback, it amplifies the primary factor.) But what we are dealing with today is a rapid rise in CO2 on the order of 100s to 10s of years demonstrably caused by man, not temperature rise. On this timescale, CO2 is indeed a forcing. All else equal (and on this timescale it is) CO2 effecting temp (at least for first-order effects) comes straight out of basic physics and has been known since late 1800s.


    Also, the BIG point left out by the original poster: it doesn't matter to the current debate if cosmic rays can alter the Earth's climate since the level of cosmic rays has been measured as constant over the period in dispute.

    --
    "You saved 1968." - Ms. Valerie Pringle to the crew of Apollo 8

  91. I Can't Believe Slashdot Posted This by pln2bz · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The Slashdot crew must not be aware that what these studies propose is that *charged particles* can affect cloud formation! Ghasp! Had they known this, then they surely wouldn't have allowed this one to get through ...

    That would suggest a link between charged particles moving through outer space and weather here on Earth. That would actually lend support to the general ideas proposed by Electric Universe theorists that weather has electrical components. Yikes!

    EU theorists argue that the energies inherent to the cosmic rays are in some cases so large that they could not be accounted for even with the result of the annihilation of matter and antimatter. In order to accelerate particles to this extent, it's necessary to subject the charged particles to some sort of sustained electric field. In the EU view, all stars have their own electric fields with their own "solar winds" accelerating away from them as a result of these fields. Cosmic rays that hit the Earth are in fact nothing more than the solar winds of foreign stars that are larger than our own Sun. The energies imparted to those charged particles are enough to overtake our own solar wind such that they reach the Earth. In their view, it's conceivable that cosmic rays can potentially act as a mechanism for distributing energy across the universe in the absence of filamentary plasmas.

    It's very interesting to observe in real time how astrophysicists are going to deal with this heretical view and these heretical experimental results. Traditional astrophysicists suddenly find themselves in the difficult position of having to apply their space models, which they've created by imagining what the universe *should* be like and which consistently fail to explain their own telescope observations in a rational way, to a real-world problem that has real consequences for all of us. The traditional views of astrophysicists that the Earth is largely an isolated body whose weather is unaffected by the plasma phenomenon that surrounds it has now been challenged by a peer reviewed study that alleges that charged particles from foreign stars can affect weather here on Earth. What about the other planets? Might cosmic rays be affecting *their* weather too? And what about all of those experiments where people are inducing rain by pumping ions into the atmosphere? Shouldn't we be taking a closer look at those now too?

    My guess is that these new findings will be completely ignored or possibly slandered as if there's no tomorrow. To accept that cloud formation and global warming might have electrical components is going to be just far too much for the mainstream. But it should make for an entertaining show.

    --
    "A man cannot begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows." --Epictetus, 1st Century A.D.
  92. Hidden assumption by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    Was this meant to be an explanation of what exactly caused the Medieval Warm Period? And what caused the Mini Ice Age? And what the contribution of man-made CO2 was in either case? And why the East Antarctic is cooling? And why air temperatures seem to have stabilised? Not to mention what the Wegman report showed about the statistical inadequacies of the Hockey Stick?


    The hidden assumption in your questions is that any one of those raise substantial doubts about the effect of human-generated gases on climate change. This seems common in non-science discussions, and I think it's because we all watch legal dramas and understand the importance of "reasonable doubt" in murder trials. It doesn't work that way in science though--it's more like "a preponderance of the evidence," a legal standard that non-lawyers are not as familiar with.

    To answer your specific questions:
    - The "Medieval Warm Period" and "Mini Ice Age" could have been caused by any number of factors, which could still today be acting. The anthropogenic theory states that man-made greenhouse gases are an additional factor that is having a new effect, not that it is the only factor, or that it has replaced other factors.
    - Regional effects such as relative cooling or warming will occur regardless of forcings because of the chaotic mixing of the atmosphere. No theory of climate change predicts increasing uniformity or smoothness in weather.
    - The infamous Mann et al. "hockey stick" has been subjected to much study, disproof, and criticism, just like Darwin's "The Origin of Species." Both debunking efforts have discovered errors, but at the cost of ignoring the enormous amounts of other research and proof presented in non-famous papers.
    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  93. Ice cubes in our ocean by eckman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    From the article:
    "The best measurements of global air temperatures come from American weather satellites, and they show wobbles but no overall change since 1999."

    Ice in a glass of water will cause the water to stabilize right around the freezing point. Even if you slowly heat it, the temperature will remain around freezing...that is until the last of the ice melts.

    It's logical to think that the same is happening in the oceans. The ice is helping keep the oceans at a fairly constant temperature and the oceans are absorbing the extra heat from the atmosphere.

    The problem is that it looks like the oceans' ice is melting at an alarming rate.

    1. Re:Ice cubes in our ocean by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      Actually the statement from that article is meaningless since 7 years is not an adequate span to see a trend, however 1999 had a lower temperature than 2006 http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate/research/2006 /ann/glob_jan-dec-error-bar_pg.gif and the slope is steeper that the 1970 to 2006 trend.
      --
      Solar power: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users -selling-solar.html

  94. Boiling the frogs ? by smoker2 · · Score: 1

    I posted some thoughts a while back, but my comments festered without either response or modding (in either direction). So, can some one please explain to me how we, the human race, can continue to use energy and *not* raise the global temperature ?

    Every device we use, adds a little bit of heat to the global system. We don't have 100% efficient devices, so every machine, engine, and electronic device adds to the system. We also have millions of miles on nice black roads, nice heat absorbing concrete and roof tiles. You could say, for instance, that if a house is not well insulated, then a certain amount of heat is lost to the atmosphere. We regard that as bad, because it is not efficient, or in real terms, we are wasting energy. But that seems to be where the problem is summed up - it's an issue of wasting a precious resource. I have never heard of any calculations that go further and attempt to quantify what effect all that lost heat has on the climate system. And don't say "it's insignificant", because it can't be. It is cumulative because it can't escape (due to CO2) and that old problem of conservation of energy says it can't just disappear.

    And not only are we gradually, but inexorably raising the global temperature, we are also adding CO2 which helps to keep it trapped. Even if we got rid of all man made sources of CO2, it still wouldn't be enough, because we still keep adding heat. We would need to go to a much lower level of CO2 in the atmosphere, just to try and break even and stop the climate warming.

    I can't accept that this isn't a cause for concern. Nature hasn't stopped all the natural heat producing processes, so the *normal* background heating is still there. All our stuff is over and above that. I am clearly not a scientist, but this issue appears to be the elephant in the room.

    So, is it worth calculating the actual calorific value of all the wasted heat that we let escape and have come to regard as acceptable ?
    I mean a Calorie is a unit of heat defined as the quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1 degree centigrade at atmospheric pressure. So we must be able to get some kind of idea what size the problem is. How much heating has occurred over the last 200 years, specifically caused by waste ?

    There is a saying, "The brighter it burns, the shorter it lives". That says a lot about western societies, and their lust for energy.

    In my last post, I mentioned the sight of the Northern Hemisphere as seen from space at night. The amount of light is incredible. And I know they don't give off a massive amount of heat, but they do give off *some", and this has been going on generation (oops pun) after generation, and the dots are starting to join up into large sheets of light. This is without the *dark* heat produced by every man made energy consuming machine. Mankind seems to be in a desperate race towards using all the energy we can get our grubby little mitts on. We pay lip service by trying to be efficient and not pollute, but we're really just trying to find new and interesting things to burn.

    This is not a rant, I genuinely would like to understand this unwillingness to address the real problem. And it's not valid to say "we need these machines, what can you do" because I *need* a cigarette/large whiskey/12 pints . Doesn't mean it's good for me.

    BTW, I do practice what I preach. I have no heating in my rooms, other than - a)the cooker which is only on when cooking, b)the water heater, which is manually turned on when I want some hot water and c)my media server, which runs all the time (it's only a sempron running at 1750 Mhz). Oh yeah, I have a couple of fluorescent lights too. If I feel cold, I *do* something. If it's nighttime, I go to bed, still get to watch the tv (on the computer) read a book, whatever. I realise I couldn't expect someone in Winnipeg to adhere to my standards, but there are things we can all do. Reduce seems to be the Cinderella of Reduce, Re-use and Recycle.

  95. Real trend? by benhocking · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There IS a real trend at the moment that any work at all that contradicts "Doom, Doom, Doom" has trouble getting funding, and trouble getting published. The same phenomenon prevented odd results from being published in fusion research... the establishment can be hard to crack.

    Really? Any evidence to back that up? I can cite counter-examples. Lindzen, for example, has no problems getting funding (his most recent article cites 3 sources - NSF, DOE, and NASA), whereas scientists who are more cautionary are having trouble (see recent /. article). Without evidence, it's your claim that's FUD, not sober reports such as the recent IPCC.

    I'm glad that you're in favor of reducing our impact on the climate regardless of your personal belief on the strengths of anthropogenic global warming, but I do recommend that you read some climatology journals and try to get first hand information. I suggest that perhaps your current source of information is quite filtered and biased.

    I'd prefer much less biased and sensationalist coverage of both the problem and the proposed solutions. Not necessarily here on /. I'm not an idiot, but specifically in the scientific community.

    Are you aware of biased or sensationalist coverage in the scientific community? The press has problems with accuracy, of course, but I'm not aware of any problems in the scientific community itself. (No more than with other fields, that is. No community is perfect.)

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  96. Antartica-Schmartica by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Global warming means as a planetary average it snows less (because it's more often rain instead). But locally it may be that Mexico, New York is in for a string of nasty winters.

    It's similar effects we're seeing in Antarctica, where local regions have more snow buildup, or more cold, even though on the large scale major ice shelves are breaking off for the first time in tens of thousands of years."

            Yeah sure, you have it all figured out because-

    1) global weather and artic/antartic ice conditions have been observed/recorded for "tens of
          thousands of years" using precise scientific instrumentation and methodology
    2) the very obivous fact that you not not included solar radiation variation, sun magnetic
          and earth magnetic activity over time along with volcanism and some method of factoring
          in global weather and its affects of solar ray absorption, co2 or a host of other
          variables makes your argument more pure since we dont need all of that other stuff right?

          What makes your argument stupid is how you argue for an overall warming trend ala global warming and then present localized cold weather as some sort of definitive proof, simply foolish and utterly unscientific. So now you argue that since NY state is getting hammered with snow, like that has never happened before, it must be GW.

          You belong on that other /. story where they are now calling for giant mirrors or objects in the atmosphere, painting our roofs and introducing sulfur to reverse the trend.

          Yeah thats exactly what the earth needs, dumbasses. Not in my lifetime.

  97. about your misuse of logical fallacies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is not a fallacy to cite an expert's opinion on a study of climatology if that expert is an expert in climatology. It is an "appeal to authority" to cite George Bush's opinion on the study of climatology. Or Bill Clinton's for that matter (although he is much more likely to have informed himself on the matter.)

    Citing Al Gore is a little trickier. He's not a climatologist, so you could not ask his opinion on the science of behind the study. But you could ask him what he has learned from experts regarding it.

  98. big projection... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's part of the problem with the scientific community today - they don't do that any more (if they ever did) - they merely say "this does not align with everyone else, so go take a hike".


    I'm sure your exhaustive study of the scientific community's flat refusal (without any factual basis) to consider anything not in line with the currently accepted models of the world is going to be included in a followup post to this statement?

    Otherwise, you are only assuming the scientific community behaves just like you. I doubt that.

    1. Re:big projection... by Dean+Hougen · · Score: 1

      That's part of the problem with the scientific community today - they don't do that any more (if they ever did) - they merely say "this does not align with everyone else, so go take a hike".


      I'm sure your exhaustive study of the scientific community's flat refusal (without any factual basis) to consider anything not in line with the currently accepted models of the world is going to be included in a followup post to this statement?

      Otherwise, you are only assuming the scientific community behaves just like you. I doubt that.
      Clearly the GP is doing nothing here except acting as an anti-science troll, as I'm sure you realize. He seems to make a habit of this.

      Dean
  99. Re:~Accurate != ~Usefull by sbate · · Score: 1

    95% is not good enough I am still not 100% convinced. I think that More Apocalyptic and hysterical thought is needed

    --
    Added Pressly: "Oh, and by the way, milk is nothing but liquid meat."
  100. SUV! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    My SUV puts out more heat than all those wimpy cosmic rays. The New York times said so!

  101. Re:cult of global warI for one would. by Dean+Hougen · · Score: 1

    I for one would. I would invest an amount that won't hurt too badly if lost. This way I could be right no matter what happens. If he fails, my decision was right to limit my investment and thus my loss. If he happens to succeed, however unlikely it may be, I get rich.
    Goodday,
    My name is Joseph kamara, a 39years old Sierra-Leonine. I was before now the chief personal driver to a very rich diamond and gold merchant who lately became actively involved in partisan politics. I came to know of your contact through an acquintance here in Ghana. When I expressed to him a desire to come to your country to invest. Although, he did not say very much about your country but he gave to me your country's website to checkout and I located your contact. I have strong desire to make you my first contact person in your country.

    Coming to what prompted this letter to you. I have in the custody of the security vault of Barclays bank, Ghana, $25million USD in cash and some family valuables which are contained in an electronically sealed strong metallic trunk boxes. I want to bring them to you for safe keeping ...
  102. Re:~Accurate != ~Usefull by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    I don't have a problem with doing both, but trading research for joy rides is kinda silly.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  103. evil boogey-men by TapeCutter · · Score: 3, Informative

    "I think he meant serious, peer reviewed investigation"

    Have a look again, RC is attacking a PRESS RELEASE similar to the PRESS RELEASE that is TFA. If this guy (or anyone else) publishes a paper on cosmic rays and climate I am sure it will be treated with more respect.

    "In case the writers didn't know - environmentalists are also widely regarded..."

    Perhaps RC contributors are also evil boogey-men "environmentalists" in their spare time, but they are climatoligists first and foremost. The guy who started the blog is the hockey stick guy and has been a lead authour in the IPCC reports, many of the contribitors also have a long list of current peer-reviewed publications under their belt, there is a bio for all of them on the site and (unlike psuedo-skeptical sites there is a prominent list of "other opinions. OTOH: The guy in TFA is a journalist who's claim to fame is that he was once the editor of New Scientst.

    Having said that I doubt it will slow you from dogmatically defending a psuedo-skeptical press release in the face of overwhelming contra-evidence.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  104. Re:one earth--we have only one economy, too. by heinousjay · · Score: 1

    Considering the world is currently more stable now than it has ever been in history, your position is interesting, if unenlightened.

    --
    Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  105. Sunspots by johnrpenner · · Score: 0

    The weather conditions which have shown such irregularities through the
    years, particularly recent years, do have something to do with conditions
    in the heavens... When these irregularities are observed we must take
    very strongly into consideration a phenomenon of which little account
    is usually taken, although it is constantly spoken of.
    I mean the phenomenon of sunspots.

    But now there are also electric currents in the universe; for when we
    generate wireless electric currents on the earth we are only imitating
    what is also present in some way in the universe. Suppose a current from
    the universe is present, let's say, here in Switzerland, where we have a
    certain temperature. If a current of this kind comes in such a way that
    it brings warmth with it, the temperature here rises a little. Thus the
    warmth on earth is also redistributed by currents from the universe.
    They too influence the weather.

    In addition, however, you must consider that such electromagnetic currents
    in the universe are also influenced by the sunspots. Wherever the sun has
    spots, there are the currents which affect the weather. These particular
    influences are of great importance.

    (The Evolution of the Earth and Man and The Influence of the Stars)

  106. A truly "inconvenient" Inconvenient Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    If we accept that humans are the major cause of global warming (and quite a few other environmental problems) then we must also accept that the real issue is that there are too many humans. If you reduced the human population of the planet to that of, say, the 1200's (450M) http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/worldhis.html you'd eliminate most of the problems associated with humans. But, of course, nobody wants or is willing to do that. So, we keep procreating like bunnies and complain when things go awry.

    The world population is projected to grow from 6 billion in 1999 to 9 billion by 2042, an increase of 50 percent that will require 43 years. http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/world.html

    Human population growth is the real culprit and nations seem unwilling to accept that. Nations have too much at stake economically and politically. Nope, must be the boogey man of technology. And the US is, at the moment, at the head of that pack. So, the US is the "beast".

    Calls for "carbon footprint" taxes, if enacted, ought to include a tax on EVERY human head. Rich and poor alike. They are ALL contributing to the unsustainable human population growth, overuse of resources, and ultimately the destruction of the environment.

  107. "Blame the humans for everything" by Livius · · Score: 1

    There is a subtle point that is being overlooked. Climate change revisionists (who should all be jailed for conspiracy to commit genocide of the human race) have gone from denying climate change, which is no longer credible, to denying humans are the cause of climate change.

    The non-sequitur implication being, human behaviour, even stupid behaviour, does not need to change.

    But on one level it does not matter if catastrophic climate change is caused by pollution or by cosmic rays, it will still kill us. It means massive ecological dislocation, terrible human suffering, and a major setback for, if not the end of, civilization.

    And we can't just turn off cosmic rays, so if that's the real cause, we better get moving on whatever ecological remediation we can do.

    1. Re:"Blame the humans for everything" by cbacba · · Score: 1

      well - it's been far hotter gobally than now and it's been far colder than now. This is both before and after humans developed some technology. Climates change! What's more it's going to be hotter than now in the future and it's going to be far colder than now in the future and it will be happening after the human race is no longer around and probably be happening prior to its ultimate demise as well.

      You're welcome to believe that the dust mite on the tail of the dog is in control of the direction the dog is traveling in but you'll have to accept the fact that we're laughing our heads off at your foolishness. human caused global warming is pretty close to that scenario.

      As for changing minds - just remember it's the same people preaching global warming catastrophe now that were preaching coming ice age disaster 30 some odd years ago. They suggested putting lamp black on the glaciers to melt them back then. In theory such efforts might could work at melting them but I'm not sure we are big and powerful enough to pull off such a massive effort. Of course, if we are undergoing global warming at present, melting the glaciers would have been an extremely stupid idea to have done 30 years ago - and according to them back then - we only had 10 years to do something about it - just like today - they say - 'we don't know 100% fer sure but we positive we only have 10 years to do something about it'

      My guess is, they were right 30 years ago and wrong today. We seem to be coming off a mini ice age that's lasted the past 400 years or so which implies things are heating up. Personally, I think having more growing seasons and warmer temperatures tend to facilitate rather than hinder human life. Ice ages tend to be rather hard on all terrain life forms. Also, since ice ages tend to last for thousands and thousands of years, and that most of earth's existance seems to be in colder climatic conditions, and since we're over due for the next one - historically speaking - I'm not that worried about some presumption of things getting slightly warmer. What is really scary is the demise of the human race caused by leftist idiology and gross stupidity. Now that is a real waste!

      Look on the brighter side! If it warms up another 5 to 7 degrees, the brits might be able to grow wine grapes again and put those snotty frogs and their overpriced wino juice in their place.

  108. Cosmic Rays and clouds by bbamboo · · Score: 1

    Cosmic rays nucleating clouds was the basis for the Wilson cloud chamber, the first way we visualized cosmic rays. THis is nothing new, and it's something that every school child can do. Having said that, it's also something physicists have taken into account when doing climate modeling. I made a cloud chamber as a kid ( dry ice, alcohol, coffee can and black velvet) and these tracks are certainly real and only a tiny part of the story. Unless we have a supernova in the neighborhood, this cosmic ray nucleated cloud formation won't change anything much as the flux variation is in a range that hasn't changed for a very long time. Greenhouse gasses are changeing and unless we prevent the release of methane clathrates from the cold mud, our civilization won't be around for the climate change luddites to enjoy their illgotten riches.

  109. Why Worry? by JrOldPhart · · Score: 1

    If the Temp increase is caused by pollution due to green house gasses from human pollution then the temp rise will eventually will kill off enough people that the emissions will decrease, causing a decrease in emissions, and thus a new balance. So... There are only two things to worry about: 1. Are the non-out-gassers right? 2. Are the Out-gassers right? If the non-out-gassers are right there is nothing to worry about. If the out-gassers are right, there are only two things to worry about: 1. Will my family live through it? 2. Will my family die? If your family will live through it there is nothing to worry about. If your family will die, there are only two things to worry about: 1. Will we go to heaven 2. Will we go to hell If you go to heaven there is nothing to worry about. If you go to hell you will be so busy shaking hands with friends you won't have time to worry. So why worry?

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    Nothing is foolproof, fools are too ingenious. - Murphy