a_unique_person
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning
So, are you saying I should follow your dogma, even though the evidence hasn't convinced me yet?
I think it's a little more than dogma. He has evidence to back up his claims.
So, are you saying I should follow your dogma, even though the evidence hasn't convinced me yet?
So, are you saying I should follow your dogma, even though the evidence hasn't convinced me yet?
The increasing denialist focus on climate models never being perfect smells very much like the anti-evolutionist focus on transition species and "missing links".Follow whatever you wish. I see little difference between the 'Global Warming has not been proved to be caused by humans' stance and the Discovery Institute's 'Evolution has not been proved' stance.
- distort findings of others (http://munews.missouri.edu/NewsBureauSingleNews.cfm?newsid=9842)
- The fact that the interior ice sheet is growing is a predicted consequence of global climate warming.
Mark one up to the models.
But you know that this given example is a coin toss, right?
No, it's not.
It's not a simple heads/tails alternative at all. The modelling of the different responses to warming in the coastal/inner regions is more complex than that.
- The fact that the interior ice sheet is growing is a predicted consequence of global climate warming.
That is a coin toss and the type of "proof" that psychics use - counting small numbers of selected hits on binary (or better) events and leaving out the misses.
And you can point to the misses and prove the agreement here is coincidental. So far the models trend temperature and percipitiation correctly. What are the misses?
And you can point to the misses and prove the agreement here is coincidental. So far the models trend temperature and percipitiation correctly. What are the misses?
And you can point to the misses and prove the agreement here is coincidental. So far the models trend temperature and percipitiation correctly. What are the misses?
Our overall assessment
Coupled models have evolved and improved significantly since the SAR. In general, they provide credible simulations of climate, at least down to sub-continental scales and over temporal scales from seasonal to decadal. The varying sets of strengths and weaknesses that models display lead us to conclude that no single model can be considered “best” and it is important to utilise results from a range of coupled models. We consider coupled models, as a class, to be suitable tools to provide useful projections of future climates.
I'm not saying you should do anything. Do what you like. Sack the Vatican, take the veil, whatever. Dogma has nothing to do with my opinion, unless you regard thermodynamics or quantum theory as dogmas.So, are you saying I should follow your dogma, even though the evidence hasn't convinced me yet?
No, since there's an option of the ice-mass staying the same, equivalent to the coin landing on its edge - which is not what the idiom implies.But you know that this given example is a coin toss, right?
The given example was:
That is a coin toss and the type of "proof" that psychics use - counting small numbers of selected hits on binary (or better) events and leaving out the misses.
I think we need to be careful making such easily countered statements of efficacy as that falls into the hands of those who would cast unwarranted doubts on the level of research and understanding in this area. Best leave those types of niaive statements to the skeptics leaving them easily countered.
No, since there's an option of the ice-mass staying the same, equivalent to the coin landing on its edge - which is not what the idiom implies.
The pertinent example was kevin's - that the example cite highlights an intention to mislead. Which it does.
You are arguing semantics here and distorted semantics at that. Shermer only seems to be talking about global warming and human CO2 emissions. To extrapolate that into "no environmental skepticism" as in none at all is just silly....I'm glad Shermer decided that the preponderance of evidence indicates global warming, which has been evident from the preponderance of evidence for quite some time. It's also nice to see a public demonstration of a skeptic's changing his mind.
However, the final statement is troubling.
This does skepticism a great disservice. No, environmental skepticism remains not only tenable but necessary, and the same applies to all sciences. As Richard Feynman wrote "[It] is imperative in science to doubt; it is absolutely necessary, for progress in science, to have uncertainty as a fundamental part of your inner nature.".....
It has certainly led to a diversion of effort on this thread.Don't take my word for it, go and read the academic evaluations of these models- see my link. To say "look it predicted the ice sheet would get thicker" or "look it didn't predict the ice sheet would get thicker" is extremely niaive.
I thought skeptics would see that quite plainly.
You are arguing semantics here and distorted semantics at that. Shermer only seems to be talking about global warming and human CO2 emissions. To extrapolate that into "no environmental skepticism" as in none at all is just silly.
And doubt is good but at some point one has to work with overwhelming evidence. You call it preponderance. That's fine for most things and maybe for the details of just about everything. But at some point with some things, preponderance becomes overwhelming.