OK, I'm new here, and I don't know your posting history or his. But you seem to be doing a lot of interpreting on just a couple of words from him
Not just a couple words. Multiple posts with different wording all claiming the same thing is not a couple words.
I dunno, maybe you expect him to say such things as "380ppm is unprecedented in all eternity" based on past experience with him, but I didn't see him making such overstatements in this thread.
I expected him to say what he meant. AFAIK, he did. What he said is a lie.
And to answer the question to the best of my knowledge: it's pretty significant. I'm not quite sure what you're saying here, that the rise to 380ppm is not because of us, but because of natural processes?
I am saying we cannot simply assume that it is likely to be significant like you might if it was "uncharted territory." The climate is likely to be similar to the last time, the time before that, the time before that, and so on.
That CO2 won't have the amount of climate forcing it is said to have?
It will likely have the same amount of forcing as last time. CapelDodger claimed there was no last time.
Why is this so hard to comprehend?
Just to be clear, he didn't use the word unprecedented, that was me.
Yes, I was responding to you. And to be clear, I didnt attribute it to neither him nor you.
And the type of very rapid introduction of a massive amount of CO2 as we're doing now, I think that could be validly described as moving us into uncharted territory.
Now I think that you may be making an assumption dangerously similar to his. What is the source for this assumptiuon?
I guess I missed where someone said or implied that the green house effect would run away or that earth would turn into Venus in this thread.
I did not attribute that to him, or you. It is one potential likely scenario that is often raised when one believes that CO2 was at unprecidented levels.
It is hard to imagine it happening when CO2 is not anywhere near unprecidented levels, however. That was my point.
Why can we not conclude any predictive power from models? Which models have been shown to be dangerously close to a "self-weighting strategy"?
They don't need to be shown to be. Until models are proven to be predictive, we must assume this. This is a central tenant in science.
As a simple example there are an infinite number of potentially correct string theory models. Only one, if any at all, can be correct. Only the models that prove themselves predictive could be considered potentially correct. Just like string theory where no predictions have been verified, the same is true of climate models where no predictions have been verified. There is an infinite number of climate models that would match a finite set of past data as well.
We would be guessing as to the correctness of any of these models because we do not have evidence to suggest that one should be prefered over another. We don't even know if ANY of the current models will prove predictive.
And why are you implying that the tests that are held in the past records are not exactly what is used to validate or falsify GCMs?
Past records can only be used to falsify. They cannot be used to "validate."
Or has it been shown that their methods of validation are in error?
If they are "validating" with prior samples, then they are in error. I do not think that the people involved in climate models are claiming that they have been validated. I think the media, as well as posters on forums and blogs, are likely to gloss over such issues or even incorrectly report it.