Ah. mhaze alleges corruption, but he hasn't the slightest shred of evidence to back his allegation up.
Colour me dreadfully unsurprised. Anyone else find it mildly entertaining how much time mhaze devotes to starting anti-science anti-GW threads, and how little time he devotes to providing evidence? All that emote-kid stuff, nothing concrete.
There are more authors and reivewers, they have just listed the lead ones by the looks of it.
Looks like it's time for the list again. I'll repeat varwoche's challenge: provide one peer reviewed study that opposes global warming to counter each one on the list. When you've done that, you can claim that global warming denial is a skeptical position. Until then, which is basically never, global warming denial is a conspiracy theory.
I'm not changing the subject. You're a climate woo, until you can produce an anti-global-warming paper, peer reviewed, to respond to every one on that list.
There are more authors and reivewers, they have just listed the lead ones by the looks of it.
mhaze said:Here are the review comments. These were put online only as the result of 2 year delay following a Freedom of Information process.
mhaze said:The whole point of consensus science is that they represent the view of the majority. Here are the rules of consensus science. No cherry-picking of favorite papers, no complaints about contradictions or ignored issues. Anyone who doesn't like what the majority says is a dangerous sceptic who should not be given any airtime.
Please note that under IPCC procedures authors are required to take account of all substantive review comments in both review rounds.
Thus responses to individual comments may be influenced by comments from other reviewers.
mhaze said:Here is the list of 170 authors and reviewers for the IPCC.
I'm not changing the subject. You're a climate woo, until you can produce an anti-global-warming paper, peer reviewed, to respond to every one on that list.
Corruption at IPCC? A published professor once told me he doesn't dread what fellow scientists will do to his data during peer review. It's what gets done with his data afterward that troubled him.
I saw a couple of headlines yesterday about an IPCC scientist refuting the accuracy of computer climate models.
Here's what he actually said on the Nature blog. Don't cherry-pick his quotes. Read his whole entry.
"I have often seen references to predictions of future climate by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), presumably through the IPCC assessments (the various chapters in the recently completed Working Group I Fourth Assessment report can be accessed through this listing). In fact, since the last report it is also often stated that the science is settled or done and now is the time for action.
"In fact there are no predictions by IPCC at all. And there never have been."
Here's his full blog entry:
http://blogs.nature.com/climatefeedback/2007/06/predictions_of_climate.html
Here's his homepage, last updated in 2003:
http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/trenberth.html
mhaze,
You can answer NA whenever a previous answer negates the question. Some may already be answered by you previously but I'll ask anyway.
(1) GW is not happening at all. True/false/Maybe
(2) GW is is a purely natural phenomenon. True/false/Maybe/NA
(3) GW is a human driven phenomenon. True/false/Maybe/NA
(4) People might be contributing some to GW. True/false/NA
You can explain your position (especially the maybes) but I want your opinion not evidence first. When you give that we can talk evidence all you want.
What's more fascinating is how AGW pseudo-skeptics citeassociate economics professors (McKitrick)oil industry businessmen (McIntyre) and marketing professors (Armstrong) rather than peer-reviewed studies by expert scientists, and on a skeptical forum no less.
Sure. Here you go. You do well to note explicitly the differences between science and politics, and between opinion and references or support for opinion.
1. Gw is not happening at all. False.
2. GW is a purely natural phenomenon. False.
3. GW is a human driven phenomenon. False.
4. People might be contributing some to GW. True.
I'm not changing the subject. You're a climate woo, until you can produce an anti-global-warming paper, peer reviewed, to respond to every one on that list.
At Science and Nature, such papers are commonly refused without review as being without interest. However, even when such papers are published, standards shift.
/snip
Normally, criticism of papers appears in the form of letters to the journal to which the original authors can respond immediately. However, in this case (and others) a flurry of hastily prepared papers appeared, claiming errors in our study, with our responses delayed months and longer. The delay permitted our paper to be commonly referred to as "discredited."
will read in entirety, got to work now.
Meanwhile I'll contribute this rather fascinating article about why not to believe "forecasts by scientists", that not being the same as forecasts by science.
"[The nickel-iron battery will put] the gasoline buggies…out of existence in no time."
Thomas Alva Edison 1910
"There is not the slightest indication that [nuclear] energy will ever be obtainable."
Albert Einstein 1932
"I think there is a world market for about five computers."
Thomas J. Watson, Chairman of IBM, 1943
"A few decades hence, energy may be free."
John von Neumann, Fermi Award-winning scientist, 1956
Examples of faulty expert climate forecasts are easy to find, but are perhaps less humorous:
"If present trends continue, the world will be about four degrees colder in 1990, but eleven degrees colder in the year 2000. This is about twice what it would take to put us into an ice age."
Kenneth Watt, UC Davis ecologist, Earth Day,
April 22, 1970 Swarthmore College speech