Hey, cool - Ben is doing some SCIENCE. Let's check it out!
Hmmm, Ben has plotted a graph. Nice! But wait a minute - what's that? No error bars? No confidence interval? Oh dear, Ben. In SCIENCE, a measurement without error bars or CIs is worthless. You did know that, didn't you? Whoops. Ben's first effort fails.
But wait - Ben has more! Look, three data sets, all showing REMARKABLY SIMILAR
TM results. The variability here should give us at least some kind of an indication of the sort of errors involved, right?
Errr... no. In fact, two of those lines are based on almost identical input data (RSS and UAH only differ in the last year or two where UAH have moved to the AQUA satellite, RSS are still using NOAA satellites). Because they are based on the same input data, the fact that these two show similar trends doesn't really teach us anything.
And even worse, the third line (GISS) doesn't measure the same thing as the satellites; the satellites measure the lower troposphere temperature and the GISS product is an estimate of the near-surface air temperature. But these are still about the same, that's good isn't it? Not really, because under AGW theory, these two measurements should be different, with the lower troposphere having a higher trend. Of course, it is possible that these differences are contained within the error bars... but of course, we don't know that, because BEN DIDN'T PLOT ANY. Did I mention that?
So far, Ben's SCIENCE is not really holding up too good. But since I have decided to unilaterally declare it INTERNATIONAL BE NICE TO BEN day, let's pretend there are CIs, and they are small enough not to include "no effect", and large enough to cover the expected difference between the satellites and GISS.
That it was predicted FAR in advance by physics, matches that physics, and has no other valid explanation is why we have consensus that there is an "A" in AGW.
Ah... wonderful. The age old argument-from-ignorance. "I can't think of any other explanation, therefore it MUST be god - oops sorry - CO2".
Problem with that Ben. I've already shown you articles from the peer reviewed literature which show an alternative mechanism - the Hurst phenomenon in the hydrological cycle - which appears quite capable of producing trends of this magnitude. (cf. "Naturally Trendy", Cohn and Lins 2005, Rybski et al, Koutsoyiannis et al etc. etc.)
I seem to remember Ben's educated response to this. Ah yes - "That hasn't got a snowballs chance in hell of being right" - that's what you said, wasn't it Ben? Well, of course, we all have our preferred theory, and I can see you prefer the CO2 explanation. That as it may be, even though you prefer the CO2 explanation, it is quite incorrect to argue that there are no other possible physical explanations, when there clearly are valid alternatives documented in the scientific literature.
Sorry Ben. I've got to grade you with an F on this one. But since it is be nice to Ben day, I'll bump it up to an E.
