i agree that the researchers who deal with this stuff every day are a lot more in touch with the data than you or I are, but I also think you still fail to realize how skepticism is a vital part of science...and there are plenty of things to be skeptical about...all you have to have is common sense to be skeptical of people saying they understand exactly how a 4 billion year old planet works based on a tiny fraction of data
7/30/2007 6:20:01 PM
To Boone-tard:
7/30/2007 8:38:32 PM
hooksaw, way to be a bitch. Formulate your own lame insults, plz.And how many times do we have to say that that stupid bibliography of yours only demonstrates that researchers disagree on details regarding climate change, and not climate change as a whole? Is that something you're just not able to wrap your brain around?
7/30/2007 8:43:59 PM
^ Fuck you.
7/30/2007 8:52:14 PM
You're a 40 year-old liberal arts major whose primary hobby is yelling at people on the internet. What role is that, exactly?
7/30/2007 8:55:15 PM
^ I find it laughable that you ask me to "formulate" something--when, clearly, you have unquestioningly accepted the so-called consensus, which is just another word for groupthink, hook, line, and sinker. If the theories that you so desperately cling to concerning "global warming" are so sound, then why do you and others of your ilk get so bent the fuck out of shape when someone dares to question the "science" of those theories? And positing some relevant questions about the issue is all that I am doing. Concerning your "bibliography" comment, unless you have some type of brain damage, you should remember that I have posted numerous examples of highly qualified scientists and professionals other than those listed on the bibliography that mostly question the alarmism by many in the "global warming" debate--and the debate is growing. My main concern is more unnecessary and useless laws that will result in a power grab by a group I am not interested in giving any more power to. One more thing: I'm not going to get into my major--I chose it for the freedom to build my own curriculum. If you don't understand that or don't like it, I don't care--piss off. I can tell you this: I am a part of educating undergrads in the science, technology, and society field every day, and I guarantee that I am more qualified to speak about issues in this field than you are.
7/30/2007 9:37:46 PM
7/31/2007 12:21:25 AM
you make me wet, joeOh, and Twista, I think it's worth mentioning that in this last round of bullshit, YOU are the one who brought up Boonetard's career, so I don't think you really have a leg on which to stand to bitch about him insulting your career...[Edited on July 31, 2007 at 1:06 AM. Reason : ]
7/31/2007 1:05:34 AM
my only issue is that he has no idea what my career actually isalso he brought it up first]
7/31/2007 1:12:42 AM
^^ So explain how science is a religion again aaronburro?[Edited on July 31, 2007 at 1:16 AM. Reason : opps wrong thread. the OTHER thread aaronburro is in. ]
7/31/2007 1:16:10 AM
feel free to keep on trolling, neo...
7/31/2007 1:22:47 AM
^dude i would contribute to this thread, but you keep arguing with me trying to convince me that science is a religion like christianity. I don't want it to come to the same conclusion here.
7/31/2007 1:24:56 AM
this thread should have been locked several times already
7/31/2007 6:55:21 AM
...in Al Gore's lockbox, which he also invented
7/31/2007 9:25:16 AM
^^ Yeah, because the "global warming" loons don't like questions, am I right?
7/31/2007 3:44:24 PM
"global warming" is a government conspiracy
7/31/2007 4:50:57 PM
^^ pretty much, yeah. God help us if they actually had to provide scientific evidence for their claims and their claims actually had to stand up to GENUINE scientific scrutiny, not the "scrutiny" of GW circle-jerks and political gerry-mandering
7/31/2007 10:32:51 PM
Let's get back to the issue at hand...Currently most of th global warming debate is centered around the "Hockey Stick Graph."The controversy is described in painstaking detail on Wikipedia:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_stick_controversySo, does this graph covering the past 1000 years of temperature data prove global warming is a man-made phenomena? From the article it appears the answer is still largely unknown.Discuss.
7/31/2007 10:55:51 PM
7/31/2007 11:20:16 PM
yes. clearly looking at only data from the past 1000 years and in one hemisphere is really the best way to determine current global climate trends (both hemispheres) with respect to the entire history of the earth.]
7/31/2007 11:35:45 PM
^or better yet looking at the ~2 degree average temperature rise over the last 100 years...thats sure to give you a foolproof reading about a 4,000,000,000 year old planet
8/1/2007 1:06:20 AM
Run for your life. . .it's. . .it's. . .GLOBAL WARMING!!! Wait. . .that won't work.
8/1/2007 1:28:58 AM
8/1/2007 6:10:39 AM
So yeah, I didn't feel motivated enough to find this graph last night, so I settled for trying to get the discussion back on track. Sue me.This is what I'm concerned about:I believe that the two primary natural causes for temperature fluctuations are (1) solar variations (orbit distance and sunspots), and (2) volcanic eruptions. These two factors historically have been relatively accurate in predicting the mean temperature of the planet. In the past +100 years however the mean temperature has risen, while "natural factors" would suggest that the temperature should have actually fallen slightly.[Edited on August 1, 2007 at 7:17 AM. Reason : ef]
8/1/2007 7:16:15 AM
That's similar to one of the graphs in the article (that no one's going to read, apparently). I don't know what else you could ask for in a computer model, really.[Edited on August 1, 2007 at 8:01 AM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 8:01:33 AM
I don't understand this desire to know every climate detail for up to 4 billion years. We are not trying to predict anything for such a timescale. If anything using data before about 100,000 years is detrimental for predicting what will occur for the upcoming 100 years.
8/1/2007 11:02:53 AM
^^^ I have posted numerous links in this thread about the possible effects of the sun and volcanoes, among others, on "global warming." But the left-wing nutballs don't want to hear it--get used to it. If the moonbats had their way, this thread would be locked. And they would also silence any dissent from their alarmist template in the larger "global warming" discussion--so much for tolerance.
8/1/2007 11:21:24 AM
8/1/2007 11:25:43 AM
Because that far back the Earth was a different place geologically speaking. So it'd be pointless.
8/1/2007 11:27:54 AM
again you prove your lack of understanding about science in general...i mean you guys are basically saying that in order to understand how something works, less data is better and its "pointless" to try and acquire or analyze older data for the same system...get a clue
8/1/2007 11:29:24 AM
8/1/2007 11:33:58 AM
^^ Less data, no debate--yep, that's what they want.^ Yeah, right. [Edited on August 1, 2007 at 11:36 AM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 11:35:16 AM
8/1/2007 11:36:23 AM
8/1/2007 11:41:14 AM
Last I read ice cores go back 250,000 years. Why is it relevant, though?I'm not exactly sure what understanding of climate change we'd gain from knowing this.[Edited on August 1, 2007 at 11:43 AM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 11:42:43 AM
to put it simply, more data = better understanding of how something workshow can you claim certain data is irrelevant when that data is necessary to show longer term trends? how can you even notice and predict long term trends if you don't have good long term data? how can you assume that whatever short term changes you see arent part of a long term trend if you claim the long term data is irrelevant???
8/1/2007 11:48:30 AM
But to what end? Was it some mysterious undiscovered force that heated the earth millions of years ago?"Natural cycles" and "long-term trends" aren't forces. We have a very good understanding of what's heat the earth today. Greenhouse gases might have heated the earth millions of years ago, they might not have. Does it affect anything?(and don't we already know this, anyway?)[Edited on August 1, 2007 at 12:19 PM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 12:16:01 PM
8/1/2007 12:19:14 PM
It matters in so far as we need to know whether or not greenhouse gases can cause climate change. Our current data's shown that.Is it really necessary to know about the effects of greenhouse gases while the earth was forming?
8/1/2007 12:29:26 PM
why do you seem to dismiss long term data on the earth as not being important? there are cycles on earth that last waaaaaay longer than 100 years...how are you just going to say they're not really relevant and old data isnt relevant because we think we understand whats happening right now? seems like with a system as complex as the earth you'd want as much information as possible when attempting to understand certain aspects of how the earth functionsoverall it seems like you're arguing that less data will give better answers, which is just completely absurdi mean shit you teach history...its obvious you understand the importance of history and the "...doomed to repeat the same mistakes" philosophy...so why basically say the history of the earth is irrelevant?]
8/1/2007 12:35:39 PM
^^ Um. . .The Geological Society of America, among others, thinks long-term data are important. They seem to think that the North Atlantic Oscillation has had a great deal to do with storms in the Atlantic, which may help to put the effect of greenhouse gasses in perspective--I guess you didn't get the bulletin. Records of prehistoric hurricanes on the South Carolina coast based on micropaleontological and sedimentological evidence, with comparison to other Atlantic Coast records
8/1/2007 12:39:48 PM
I'm not arguing that less data = better results.I'm saying that long term (as in millions of years) isn't really that relevant. Why is it relevant?HAY GUYZWATS GOIN ON HERE??BETTER SEE WHAT WAS HAPPENING 2 BILLION YEARS AGO[Edited on August 1, 2007 at 12:58 PM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 12:57:53 PM
8/1/2007 12:59:48 PM
So just to get a timeline down, how many years before present are we talking about. I know of ice cores, which can go back this far:Are you saying it's relevant to go back even further? Why?^ And you've already admitted that that's a retarded analogy. [Edited on August 1, 2007 at 1:03 PM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 1:02:35 PM
8/1/2007 1:04:52 PM
HAY, GUYZ, YOU DON'T AGREE WITH ME, SO YOU MUST BE RETARDS!
8/1/2007 1:07:34 PM
More data is always better. At best, it increases the statistical probability that observed trends and correlations are in fact accurate. Period.Back to the debate:
8/1/2007 1:09:20 PM
8/1/2007 1:12:22 PM
^^ 'Cause you're above it all, right? Don't lump me in with the right-wing kooks--I'm an independent. And from my experience, it's overwhelmingly left-wing nutballs that are trying to silence people--about "global warming" and many other issues.[Edited on August 1, 2007 at 1:16 PM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 1:16:42 PM
Like jew lies.And furthermore, Tree. What's the point of this argument. More data = goodBut are you somehow implying that our understanding of climate change is currently too limited to act on?[Edited on August 1, 2007 at 1:21 PM. Reason : .]
8/1/2007 1:19:22 PM