If you can't figure this out yourself can you honestly say you understand anything about climate science?
I did not ask you what I thought now did I?
i asked you what you thought, and it turns out that you are empty of teh ability to explain yourself. So instead of repeating this empty rhetoric, why not answer the question?
Why does the paper you presented matter to the discussion?
It does not say that solar radiation is 4x higher all of a sudden. It says that for some interactions in the atmosphere, the interactions are measured to be higher than the original estimate.
This does not mean that solar radiance has any less or more of a role.
You have not shown a difference in solar radiance.
You have shown a difference in the measurement of solar radiance.
This is just another of many issues affecting the reliability and resolution of GCM's.
Not really, that is just more rhetoric, the measures of solar radiance in the past are not very reliable.
there is no good historical link between solar radiance proxy levels and the measurement of global temperature across multiple measurements in the historical record.
therefore it does not cause a problem for global climate models.
the questions is:
Does it appear that the global temperatures are rising.
In many sources of measurement, and not just weather stations, it appears that it is.
the next question is:
What is causing this rise?
Now I do not ask that as an alarmist.
I ask because so far the most likely culprit is the green house gasses, the second most likely culprit is a lack of really dirty volcanoes over the last century.
The current increase in temperature is trivial.
No it is not, it is most significant rising trend since the end of the ice age, can you show me in the record of the last 8-7,000 years when it has risen as significantly?
I ask in seriousness.
When you look at the recent more reliable data
there are a lot of separate measures than converge on the rising temperature, what does you think is the more reliable.
Cite your source, and we can discuss it. there are multiple measures.
and take into account the primary forcing like CO2, H20 and solar radiation,
It could be solar radiation, but by many measures that does not seem to be the case.
have you actually looked at the proxy records for solar radiance?
What are they?
how much they've varied and how much we actually know about them, it's entirely possible the sun's variability is having a much more pronounced effect than we currently think.
Yes, it is possible, however until you demonstrate that we are left with the green house gasses and a lack of dirty volcanoes as the most likely.