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  • File : 1316059316.gif-(19 KB, 460x287, TempChart[1].gif)
    19 KB Climate Change Denial = Creationism. Yes, this thread again. Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:01 No.3740003  
    Why is it that creationists are routinely and openly mocked by most of the online community (and rightly so), but at the same time climate change denialism is a widely accepted position? Both positions are using buffet science. They have no problem accepting all sorts of odd and counter-intuitive theories like relativity and quantum mechanics, based solely on their trust in the scientific consensus these theories have achieved, yet selectively deny other theories that have the same or higher levels of consensus.

    And, let me be clear, trusting scientific consensus is a good thing. I don’t think people usually realize how much weight an idea must carry before 90+% of experts, people who have dedicated their education, their careers, their lives, to one particular field of study, accept a theory as valid. When a theory has reached that level of acceptance among real experts, it means that we are as certain of it as we can be, with the evidence that is currently available.

    And I know I can’t be an expert in everything myself. There’s no way I could simultaneously understand the intricacies of mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, psychiatry, political science, economics, etc. No one can. That’s why I’ve decided to trust those who ARE experts in those fields. Note that I say I trust them, not that I have faith in them. This is an important distinction, because creationists are quick to accuse me of “putting just as much faith in science as they do God.” But, I can honestly say that I have absolutely no faith in science. Faith is blind acceptance without evidence, while trust must be earned with evidence. I TRUST science because I have seen it work over and over and over. It’s given me the tools I’m using to share these thoughts with you at this very moment.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:02 No.3740010
    >>3740003
    (cont)

    So, am I an expert in climate science? No. But, I know that 97% of climate scientists agree that man-made climate change is real*, and I’m inclined to believe them. These scientists have the education I lack, they’ve studied things I haven’t, they know things I don’t. These people have dedicated themselves to trying to understand the earth’s climate, and who am I, some asshole on the internet, to say I know better?

    Yet, every asshole on the internet, and in the media, seems to think they know better than these people, just as creationists seem to think that, despite their lack of education in the relevant fields, they are more qualified to interpret the evidence. With every other field of science they are content to trust expert opinion over that of political and religious commentators, but with evolution and climate change, exactly the opposite is true. They trust scientists, and the scientific method, with respect to every field of study, but when it comes to climate science, they are the expert and the scientists are fools.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:03 No.3740014
    >>3740010
    Sounds like you've been watching the colbert report.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:04 No.3740020
    >>3740003
    >>3740010
    (concluded)

    Let me put it this way; If you have a question about:

    astronomy, you ask an astronomer
    physics, you ask a physicist
    chemistry, you ask a chemist
    mathematics, you ask a mathematician
    cell biology, you ask a biologist
    trees, you ask a dendrologist
    evolution, you ask Ray Comfort?
    climatology, you ask Rush Limbaugh?


    TWO OF THESE THINGS ARE NOT LIKE THE OTHERS
    Now I’m sure a lot of people are going to jump in here and try to “disprove” global warming. Let me say upfront that unless you are going to somehow show that the consensus of the scientific community has changed over-night, I don’t really care what you have to say. I haven’t written any peer reviewed papers on climate change, but chances are neither have you. But, I choose to listen to the people who HAVE gotten the education, done the research, and written the papers, rather than news commentators. And most of the time so do you, but you seem set on picking on climate science, just as creationists pick on evolutionary science.

    *http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2010/06/04/1003187107.full.pdf
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:06 No.3740023
    >>3740014
    Not in years. Why? What he say?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:09 No.3740034
    >Climate Alarmism = Religion

    fix'd
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:09 No.3740038
    >>3740034
    >Evolution=Religion

    fix'd
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:10 No.3740041
    >>3740038
    GTFO of my /sci/
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:16 No.3740057
    >>3740034
    >Quantum mechanics = religion

    fix'd
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:22 No.3740087
    If you visit 20 doctors and 19 diagnose a blemish on your nose as cancer, suggesting a particular treatment. The other doctor diagnoses it as eczema and perscribes an ointment (much cheaper than the cancer treatment) made by a company he happens to own shares in. Who would you listen to?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:24 No.3740097
    >>3740087
    gimme the ointment, I'll try that first.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:26 No.3740110
    >>3740087
    Then you ask your friend, who happens to be an account, what you should do and he suggests you try the ointment.
    Why would you give equal weighting to the one doctor and account as you would the other 19 doctors when debating what you should do?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:28 No.3740121
    >>3740110
    Maybe the ointment works? If it doesn't, there's nothing stopping me from pursuing the cancer treatment, and then I can sue the other doctor for malpractice.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:29 No.3740123
    Regardless of what conclusions one comes to through their examination of the evidence on this issue, what concerns me most on this is the outright hostility that those who examine the issue skeptically and without predetermined notions frequently receive. We SHOULD be skeptical, when extraordinary claims are made, extraordinary evidence should be supplied, and the rational, methodical and skeptical interrogation, comparison and testing of this evidence should be encouraged by both sides, not scorned and met with derision not that dissimilar to that that early modern intellectuals were greeted with by religious bodies such as the Catholic Church.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:30 No.3740131
    >>3740087
    Get an exacto knife and a bottle of whiskey and cut that over-achieving tough guy zit off.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:31 No.3740135
    >>3740057
    Any belief in a unquestionable abstract future = religion
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:31 No.3740138
    >>3740121
    >Assuming the ointment doesn't make the cancer worse.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:33 No.3740156
    >>3740121
    i dont think you quite understand how malpractice works
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:34 No.3740157
    >>3740123
    >those who examine the issue skeptically
    typically don't have any expertise in climate science. There is a general consensus amongst those that actually do. And the controversy amongst them isn't whether anthropogenic climate change is real or not, it's whether it's going to be bad, or really bad.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:35 No.3740165
    >>2011
    >>extrapolating data to make future predictions
    ishyadt
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:37 No.3740175
    Maybe human activity has a hand in climate change, but could it also be related to that big thing in the sky that actually causes the heat? I think probably the giant fusion reactor in the sky has a bit more of an effect on heating the Earth than the human race ever could.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:38 No.3740182
    >>3740175
    that's been ruled out
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:39 No.3740189
         File1316061567.jpg-(62 KB, 936x622, Five year old boy working on a(...).jpg)
    62 KB
    >>3740175
    >Look at me I'm doing climate science!
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:39 No.3740192
    >>3740157
    Expertise is irrelevant to my statement that it is a good thing for the layman to skeptically investigate various issues in a methodical, scientific way.
    Also there is no such thing as a 'scientific' consensus. So I would recommend you never use that ignorant statement again if you wish to impart the illusion of even a basic knowledge of the scientific method.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:42 No.3740203
    >>3740189
    >>3740182
    I find it extremely hard to believe that less than two hundred years of industrialization could seriously affect noticeable climate change. Where's the beef?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:43 No.3740206
         File1316061785.jpg-(41 KB, 500x375, 2614769831_d5ee5bf083_o.jpg)
    41 KB
    >>3740189
    Well arn't you a cute little meteorologist!

    http://news.discovery.com/earth/meteorologists-as-climate-change-deniers.html
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:43 No.3740209
    >>3740192
    They layman is not qualified to investigate what he does not understand. Why should I trust his conclusions over those with someone who has degrees in the relevant field?

    No such thing as consesus? Really? 97% isn't good enough for you? Yeah, I guess that quantum and relativity stuff is BS too.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:44 No.3740213
    >>3740203
    >>I find it really hard to believe that 200 years of industrialization has had any noticeable impact on our oceans
    Meanwhile, in the real world, hard data says otherwise.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:45 No.3740218
    >>3740203
    >I find it very hard to believe that features as complex as eyes could evolve naturally. Where's the beef?
    >> GayEmoBetch !.pCLIFaWNg 09/15/11(Thu)00:45 No.3740220
         File1316061955.jpg-(36 KB, 180x200, 1280960288092.jpg)
    36 KB
    Solution to global warming
    >LFTR
    Solution to space colony energy gen.
    >LFTR
    Solution to peak oil
    >LFTR
    >Solution to unemployment
    >LFTR
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:47 No.3740224
    >>3740220
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molten_salt_reactor#Disadvantages
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:50 No.3740237
    >>3740209
    That is what I am saying, the layman should investigate so he DOES understand, and should not be discouraged from doing so by ignorant individuals who know nothing of the scientific method.
    I did not say anyone should trust anyone elses conclusions, conclusions are not to be trusted unless they can be reached repeatedly through controlled experiment or thorough non-falsifiable evidence points to them. And yes, there is no such thing as a consensus in science, there are no authorities, and majority opinion does not matter. FACTS and evidence matter, and frankly I do not see why you choose to participate in a discussion on a science board when you have demonstrated thorough ignorance on what science is and what exactly the scientific method entails.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:50 No.3740238
    >>3740003
    Okay, OP, I like your points, but why did the institute of physics denounce climate science as 'a disgrace to the name of science'? Why then did the royal society of chemists speak out that they backed the institutes position on climate science?

    You want to know about physics, ask a physicist you say? Physicists tell me that the earth is going to go into a period of cooling that will completely override any possible anthropogenic effects short of nuclear winter. I trust physicists a lot more than I trust climate 'scientists', after all it was physicists who lead to those innovations you mention, not climate scientists.

    You want to know about statistics, ask a statistician you say? Statisticians tell me that climate science data is statistically invalid, and that no (scientific) conclusions can be drawn from it, any conclusions are at best guesswork according to 97% of statisticians. Statisticians have done a lot more good than climate scientists, and I trust their views of statistics a lot more than those of climate scientists.

    You want to know about political agendas, ask a politician you say? Political agenda throughout the Western world is strongly enforced by climate change, politicians fund the science, as long as it keeps saying what they want it to say.

    You want to know about history, ask a historian you say? History shows that the greatest advancements of humanity come from times of fear, war drives progress more than any other aggregate, war getting too mundane? Maybe the earth catching fire would scare people.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:51 No.3740240
    >>3740192
    >Expertise is irrelevant to my statement

    >Makes claims only those with expertise in that field of study could reasonably make
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:51 No.3740241
    >>3740220
    Solution to people
    >LFTR
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:53 No.3740248
    >>3740238
    >>implying
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:54 No.3740250
    >>3740240
    What claims might those be, oh mighty greentexter?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:54 No.3740251
    >>3740213
    Where is this hard data that you mention? All I've seen in this thread is climatologist circle jerking.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)00:54 No.3740253
    >>3740238
    >why did the institute of physics denounce climate science as 'a disgrace to the name of science'?
    It didn't.

    > Physicists tell me that the earth...
    Which Physicists?

    >Statisticians tell me that climate science data is statistically invalid
    Which statisticians?

    Sources or they didn't happen.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:00 No.3740265
    >>3740237
    >the layman should investigate
    But if the "layman" isn't doing his own primary research or demonstrating in an academic journal why he's come to the conclusion that the majority of scientists are wrong, why should anyone who's not insane give a fuck what he thinks???
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:00 No.3740266
    >>3740251
    >>doesn't know how to use Google
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:03 No.3740270
    >>3740266
    OP made this thread because he wants to prove anthropogenic climate change is a reality, so again, I ask. Where's the beef?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:03 No.3740271
    >>3740265
    I never said anyone should care what he thinks.
    You attempt to create strawmen that are directly contradictory to a statement you chose to quote, and you argue against people using the scientific method to come to a logically based intellectually valid conclussion. Why are you here and not on some board of zealotry or pseudo-science?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:04 No.3740276
    >>3740238
    Still waiting on those sources. I'm especially curious about that first one.

    In the meantime, here. Have an Institute of Physic publication that says climate models have, if anything, underestimated the amount of climate change.

    http://www.iop.org/publications/iop/2007/file_44083.pdf

    “If anything, they are at
    the upper end of the band, indicating that the
    prediction may be underestimating rather than
    overestimating temperature change”
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:08 No.3740288
    >>3740276
    Not the same poster but I believe he was referring to these.

    http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/memo/climatedata/uc3902.htm

    http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/memo/climatedata/uc4202.htm
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:09 No.3740295
    >>3740271
    >people using the scientific method
    how exactly do you use a scientific methodology if you're not a researcher in the field of climatology?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:09 No.3740296
    >>3740288
    Soo.... just more quote mining about "climate gate?"
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:15 No.3740326
    what if rick perry becomes president
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:22 No.3740350
    >>3740295
    The same way you would any issue, by examining the available evidence. By starting this search without any preconceived notions or non-evidence based conclussions. By checking that there is independ confirmation of the facts. By viewing debates on the evidence by knowledgeable proponents of all points of view. Not falling for arguments from 'authorites'; in science there are no authorities. Examining more than one hypothesis, not accepting the first that you come across and agree with, then cherry picking evidence to support it and ignoring evidence that goes against it.
    Also, using Occams razor, ensuring every link in a chain argument works and being weary and skeptical if one finds evidence contained within a packaging of fallacy, such as Ad hominem, arguments from authority, argument from adverse consequences, appeals to ignorance, observational selection and etc. etc.
    Frightening that you need to be told this really.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:30 No.3740384
    >>3740350
    But why should he bother? Someone more qualified has already done the work, and his conclusions are more likely to be flawed due to his lack of education.

    You seem to want to challenge expert opinion just for the sake of being anti-authority.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:34 No.3740396
    >>3740384
    That is true, we should let others do the work and mindlessly accept what we're told, never questioning anything or educating ones self at all. Let others make up our minds for us.

    >You seem to want to challenge expert opinion just for the sake of being anti-authority.

    And you seem to want to argue against the scientific method, all that it stands for and skepticism as a whole in favor of apathy, ignorance and blind acceptance.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:39 No.3740410
    >>3740296
    It was a fairly significant scandal, and it pretty well answers OP's question ("why... climate change denialism is a widely accepted position?"). Its a bit unfair to refer to climate science in the same vein as other sciences with all the politics surrounding it, especially after climate gate.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:43 No.3740420
    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1364682697000011

    Can't find the full paper, but here's a news article that seems to be talking about it.

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/warrenmeyer/2011/08/25/did-cloud-just-rain-on-the-global-warming-parade/
    2/

    And here is the counter argument.

    http://www.geo.umass.edu/faculty/bradley/sun2002.pdf
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:44 No.3740421
    >>3740396
    Science is a self questioning and self correcting processes. Scientists submit their papers to review by their peers, compete for funding, constantly try to out-do each-other and make some new discovery that will leave their colleagues in the dust. Science is not a single authority which declares this and that true, which is what makes it that much more impressive when a theory reaches the level of conseus that evolution or anthropological climate change have.

    Our hypothetical layman is free to investigate all he wants, but unless he has an education in the relevant field, no one is going to take him seriously, and rightly so.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:46 No.3740427
    >>3740410
    It was a fairly significant scandal
    >No it wasn't. It was a single quote in an email that was taken out of context by the media. All parties involved have been cleared of any wrongdoing multiple times.

    http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2011/08/24/case-closed-climategate-was-manufactured/\

    "We found no basis to conclude that the [Climategate] emails were evidence of research misconduct or that they pointed to such evidence."

    "There is no specific evidence that [Mann] falsified or fabricated any data and no evidence that his actions amounted to research misconduct."
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)01:50 No.3740440
    >>3740421
    Again, consensus is irrelevant and there is no such thing as a scientific consensus.
    Again as I've stated MULTIPLE times, I have never once said anyone should care what this hypothetical layman thinks, my original statement simply advocated individuals to investigate this and other issues in a logical scientific manner, and I condemned the ignorant derision such investigation frequently receives from proponents of either side.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:02 No.3740480
    >>3740427
    >being the biggest target of the people who want to deny the Earth is warming up.

    I can't read any further than this, I'm sure its been cleared up or whatever, I don't really care about the whole debate (hence not being up to date on it) but seriously? Do you honestly listen to anything someone who writes in this manner has to say? He's blatantly insulting anyone who disagrees with him here. As I said I don't pay much attention to the debate, but I do know that its between those who don't agree that the driving factor of climate change is anthropogenic and those who do, not those who 'want to deny the Earth is warming up' and those who actually form opinions. This is the worst strawman argument I've ever seen in my life.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:03 No.3740486
         File1316066637.jpg-(23 KB, 500x375, special stupid.jpg)
    23 KB
    >>3740003
    >Faith is blind acceptance without evidence, while trust must be earned with evidence
    wut, it's funny because the word faith literally means trust.

    I don't think there really is climate change denial. Many people, such as myself, understand that the the human race is just beginning to scratch the complex understandings of the global climate. While looking at raw data out of context some portions of the world temperatures have risen slightly in the last 20 years. However as it stands we have absolutely no idea why, so these people don't support expensive sweeping legislation to somehow instantly stop production of greenhouse gases and are immediately called climate change denialists.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:09 No.3740505
    like ADD/ADHD, this is a scam by a now-major industry based on lies and deception (like the graph OP is using) and the paying-off of scientists/doctors in order to get people to buy a product they otherwise wouldn't, ie get people addicted to dopaminergic stimulants or pay out the dick for solar panels even though making solar panels is a horrible, horrible process environmentally.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:11 No.3740516
    Like any good cause it's polluted by people who want to make money and lie to do so. It's not the scientists or their research that are the problem. It's the .-sucking marketers who make shoddy products that are "eco-friendly" which are often not
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:15 No.3740531
    >>3740486
    >faith literally means trust
    I don't think you get words
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:20 No.3740547
         File1316067611.jpg-(26 KB, 400x300, ayn-rand.jpg)
    26 KB
    Who need Science when you can have

    FREEDOM, LIBERTY!!!
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:21 No.3740552
    >>3740505
    >paying-off of scientists/doctors in order to get people to buy a product
    You mean like tobacco companies paying off doctors to deny that cigarette smoking caused cancer?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:22 No.3740555
    >>3740486
    Creationists use this same argument: Ignore all of the predictive modeling and decades of research so you can say scientists don't have a good enough picture to make conclusions. Someone thinking "Scientists are lairs", or "Scientists don't know enough yet" both have the same outcome, and the later is easier to convince people of. It's called the pissing in the well strategy.
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:24 No.3740561
    >>3740552
    yes, a lot like that
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)02:33 No.3740602
    >>3740547
    Don't be bringin' yer Ayn Rand shit 'round HERE, laddy-buck, the world be a depressin' enough place already without THAT harridan!
    >> Krakengineer !!5XY+x7grkpt 09/15/11(Thu)03:48 No.3740784
    >>3740602
    It is relevant. Libertarians tend to be climate change denialists. An unregulated free market only works the way they want it too in a fantasy world where there are no externalities. An externality is a cost paid by more than just the consumer and provider. Environmental damage is such a cost.
    >> !!BJiYgff8zf2 09/15/11(Thu)03:50 No.3740791
    Consensus != reality

    I'm sure the Catholic Church had a consensus on the existence of angels and demons. Does that make it fact?
    >> Anonymous 09/15/11(Thu)03:54 No.3740803
    >>3740791
    >Catholic Church
    >science



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