realpaladin
Master Poster
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2007
- Messages
- 2,585
Found the BOLD button have you? Man, I can't wait till you discover what the other buttons do.
It is not unprecented.Or empirical evidence like the historically unprecedented melting of the cryosphere?
Which is not a problem.Or maybe you mean empirical evidence like ocean acidification?
This paper's results concerning average seawater salinity and acidity show that, on a global scale and over the time scales considered (hundreds of years), there would not be accentuated changes in either seawater salinity or acidity from the observed or hypothesized rises in atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
It is not unprecented.
Less Ice In Arctic Ocean 6000-7000 Years Ago (Geological Survey of Norway)
And Antarctica is not melting.
Revealed: Antarctic ice growing, not shrinking (The Australian)
Antarctic sea ice increasing: study (ABC News, Australia)
Satellites Show Overall Increases In Antarctic Sea Ice Cover (NASA)
Which is not a problem.
Modern-age buildup of CO2 and its effects on seawater acidity and salinity
(Geophysical Research Letters, Vol 33, no 10, May, 2006)
- Hugo A. Loáiciga
Professional societies represent a somewhat special case. Originally created to provide a means for communication within professions – organizing meetings and publishing journals – they also provided, in some instances, professional certification, and public outreach. The central offices of such societies were scattered throughout the US, and rarely located in Washington. Increasingly, however, such societies require impressive presences in Washington where they engage in interactions with the federal government. Of course, the nominal interaction involves lobbying for special advantage, but increasingly, the interaction consists in issuing policy and scientific statements on behalf of the society. Such statements, however, hardly represent independent representation of membership positions.
Your lack of understanding this basic concept only proves your lack of understanding of the real vs the virtual world. It is why so many natural scientists are computer illiterate.
My dismissal of the use of computer climate models for scientific conclusions, predictions and policy is based solely on computer science. The models are not a 100% perfect reproduction of the earth and all it contains in real time, therefore they cannot predict anything. I am just amazed at the lack of understanding people have with computer systems.
100% accuracy is required for relevant results. But weather models are tracking real time data and essentially just extrapolating basic weather movement, cloud cover, rain ect... Long term weather modeling is where it becomes laughable. Climate models are attempting to simulate the climate and give temperature projections 100 years from now. Total nonsense.
Nice strawman, I did no such thing.Wow. There you go again. You are attempting to move the goalposts of the discussion.
You made it very clear earlier in the thread that your beef with computer generated climate modeling was that it wasn't 100% accurate and therefore could not be trusted. You then started to insist that "empirical experimentation" was more reliable, but then it became apparent that you had painted yourself into a corner because it was pointed out to you that all such experimental science is also not 100% accurate.
But wasn't it you who pointed out the pretty suboptimal US temperature station measurements?Of course empirical experiments are more reliable because the "laboratory" AKA the real world is 100% REAL. As opposed to virtual experiments where the "laboratory" has nothing to do with reality.
Yes of course. Again, a REAL temperature still exists in the REAL world whether we measure it 100% correctly or not. My problem is not with empirical temperature measurements but accurately taking empirical temperature measurements. I prefer this than to using a virtual thermometer.But wasn't it you who pointed out the pretty suboptimal US temperature station measurements?
No, empirical evidence for anything but a recovery from the LIA.
Without the following you are simply speculating wildly
1 - empirical proof of the existence of the LIA
2 - empirical proof of the magnitude of the LIA
3 - empirical proof there would have been any recovery if nature had simply been left to take it's course
4 - empirical proof of the magnitude of the recovery from the LIA
The one thing you can be sure of is everything happened 100% REAL in the empirical experiment whether you did the experiment 100% correctly or understood it 100% or analyzed it 100% correctly or not.
Yes a tree falling will make a transmitted vibration of a frequency whether a human is there to hear / measure it or not. The sound of one hand clapping.If a tree falls in the wood, does it make a sound? What is the sound of one hand clapping?
Wood be nice. Even more fundamental is to at least know the accuracy of a measurement, however bad it might be. Any measurement without a solid error estimation is without scientific merit. And measuring local temperatures around airports is highly valuable for the aviation industry, but not so much for climate science.Yes of course. Again, a REAL temperature still exists in the REAL world whether we measure it 100% correctly or not. My problem is not with empirical temperature measurements but accurately taking empirical temperature measurements.
but all the graphs I have seen have shown 1998 to be the highest year in recent history.

Yes a tree falling will make a transmitted vibration of a frequency whether a human is there to hear / measure it or not. The sound of one hand clapping.
No I am saying that empirical experiments are performed in a 100% REAL environment, whether we understand the environment 100% or not. Virtual reality is not 100% REAL and never will be. You are simply trying to make excuses for the modelers.They were rhetorical questions. Read Athon's posts again. You are saying we can't ever know anything 100%. We can't. We will never have perfect knowledge of anything to do with science. Even 'nature' is never 100% certain of anything.
No I am saying that empirical experiments are performed in a 100% REAL environment, whether we understand the environment 100% or not. Virtual reality is not 100% REAL and never will be. You are simply trying to make excuses for the modelers.
My argument was never about our understanding of the environment but whether the REAL world is 100% REAL or not, it is - virtual reality is not.You just acknowledged, we will never have a 100% understanding of the environment. Get over it.