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Thread: Climategate!
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12-06-2009, 07:40 PM #1
I did read that last link you posted and all I could find is misrepresentation and misinterpretation of the actual data.
I did not see any discussion on how the data was averaged and why it should represent 'global' temperature.
And no, the links were not pointing to NOAA, but to a private blog with a name which leads me to believe it's biased. The graphs may have been taken from NOAA, but constructing a narrative from cherry picked data is not what I call science.
Here's the website you want to reference NCDC: * National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) *
When you have looked at not only the October data for US, but all other months we can start having a discussion on what happens with the climate in US. And before I'd discuss global you will have to have looked at data from the whole globe, not just 2% of it.
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12-06-2009, 08:07 PM #2
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why is it that any data i show you is a misrepresentation without fail and yours is perfect? i see a trend of 25 years or so in the charts. this amount of time is significant. also when you look at your data and learn that the mid evil warming data is dismissed and not included, is that not a misrepresentation of the facts also. along with the fact that over the weekend NASA has said that some of the data they are going to release shows a opposite of the global warming data that has been put out for public consumption....
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12-06-2009, 08:26 PM #3
I did not say the data is misrepresentation, I said the article surrounding it is. As to why it is, if you would like my guess that would be because you are looking for a narrative that fits your already made opinion.
So far you are not very critical in picking your sources, which doesn't give me much hope about how critical you are about the data analysis. That is once we get to discuss that, if we ever do. It's not me who is setting the pace for the discussion, it's the failure to meet the most basic criteria of objectivity and rigor to even start a data based discussion.
I think you're slightly confused, so far I have not showed you any data, or narrative based on it. If I have please point me to it because I will have to bring that to the doctor as evidence that I'm loosing my memory.
I see many trends and a small signal to noise ratio. You are the one drawing conclusions and so far I just pointed out that they are wild extrapolations of the graphs you are showing. Your insistence that your conclusions are valid, despite me pointing out the most obvious holes seems to indicate that you either don't understand the issue at all, don't want to do the work to understand it, or are just not interested in understanding it perhaps because it may turn out the other way. I'd give you the benefit of the doubt and throw out the possibility that you are intentionally doing it despite understanding the issues.
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12-06-2009, 08:38 PM #4
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well then, show me the facts as you see them. instead of just saying no, no, no to everybody that disagrees with you. you have pointed to several so called facts on this issue, but now you say you have not. make up my mind. either say whats on your mind or say nothing at all if it is not helpful to the conversation. i said a few posts back i wanted to learn. you are not a very good tutor with no, no, no, i am right and you are wrong mentality.
the ball is in your court, now show me the facts...
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12-06-2009, 11:39 PM #5
Actually global temperature change occurs on timescales of minutes as well. Studying all this does not come anywhere close to junk science. It is indeed possible to collect data and form fairly realistic models capable of predicting future temperature. I don't think you've missed these advances in technology, you simply don't recognize them. That's called the weather forecast and is very very important for the world as you know it, far beyond the triviality of whether you have to pick an umbrella or a sweater. Of course predictions further in the future are harder, but attempting them is not automatically junk science.
No I do not have a degree in any of these disciplines. I have plenty of advanced degrees from several institutions, and I have had to conduct research, write a thesis and defend it for every single one of them, but that is completely irrelevant. If somebody's degree would be enough to convince you about something you haven't learned much earning your degree. I have enough experience with science that when I read a well written paper on a subject I'm not expert on, I can get an idea what is the problem, what are the methods utilized to solving it and how rigorous that is.
Since you earned a degree in science you should know that science is modeling taking measurements and putting down numbers is not science, the actual work is analyzing the meaning of these and making a simplified model that captures just enough of the most important phenomena to describe your observations correctly with the precision you have available. I don't understand why you are so quick to brush off a discussion of the actual science and prefer to resort to conspiracy theories and politics as arguments.
Opinions are fine, but for some reason I had the impression that these threads are supposed to go a bit beyond of 'I just like global warming' and 'I don't like it'.
I didn't ever claim I'm a good tutor, in fact I already knew for a fact I'm not a very good one.
The only way to learn actually is to go and read the actual research publications. TexasBob already had a post with dozens of references in research journals. Read those and the ones that they refer to and especially the ones that reference them for rebuttal purposes. Then you'll start getting an idea where the actual disagreement between scientists are. It usually boils down to disagreement over something that has to be estimated and so different people will have different estimate leading to different results.
As a first step start doubting everything you read. For example when somebody tells you 'global' usually they mean 'local'. Global happens when you take all locals together, so 'local' is important but on itself is pretty much meaningless.
Second when you see a statement that a measurement of something means that something else is equal to that you have to examine this claim closely. For example sticking out a thermometer in front of your house will tell you the average temperature of about five cubic inches of air over the last half a minute. If you believe that you just measured the temperature of your country or your city you are in big trouble.
When you are not closely familiar with something read the research and the conclusions of people who are experts in the field. As I said earlier especially useful are dissents, because they usually distill the core of the argument.
The thing is that I don't feel the need to take side A or side B so that I can fit in somebody's model of friends and enemies. I am interested in figuring out what the correct answer is, or the best approximation to it.
Oh, and the journals Nature and Science are pretty good place to start. They're sort of the newspapers of the scientific community, so anything that's big news gets there. Being targeted to a broader audience the papers are written in much more accessible language, but the lack of space limits the rigor. The essense of any observations and models are correct though, and the additional technicalities can be found in more specialized journals.
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12-07-2009, 12:31 AM #6
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Thanked: 259gugi, without quoting your entire last post. i will respond as best i can.
i have read science journals from both sides. i only see one side that seems to scream we are in immediate danger. the other side says wait and let us do more research. this to me seems the most logical thing to do, to be sure of each and every step we take without scaring people into ones belief of their "science" and dismissing all others work.
some of the proposals from the "global warming" side will do great harm to our economy and may not do any good for the planet. trying to stop all of our so called green house gasses has not to me been proven to be factually the best way to go. even china who now has agreed to the treaty, says that if any, even the least bit of downturn with their economy, will result in them doing away with the agreement in whole.. so are we in this to help ourselves as mankind or line our pockets with gold?
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12-07-2009, 12:49 AM #7
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Thanked: 431You know that gold is king.
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12-07-2009, 02:57 AM #8
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Thanked: 151I am moving to a third world country, at least there the taxation for climate isn't hypocritical and does not claim to be based on junk science. Besides I think we should bankrupt the US for the sake of junk science climate change conspiracy. Plus we can make GE richer in the process. GLobal warming is a term used solely for the purpose of getting research grants. Not to actually describe a proven phenomenon.
Some people you just have to look at and pity, because in the end they just are clueless. But, they will type till their keyboards give out about junk, untested data that they call science.
Besides, we should all learn to live in a sustainable 8X10ft plywood box with one hanging fluorescent light bulb. That my friends is sustainable and we should not have to pay too many carbon credits to do that. And we should not own vehicles or have animals because they produce CO2, this way we can stop global warming. We should all become vegetarians.
IN a few years, I am going to buy ocean property that is covered underwater by the warming, that way when I live forever and everyone else dies form heat exhaustion, the polar ice caps will re-freeze eventually and I can build my box on the beach!
BTW we scientists use the "Scientific Method". Its not called the "Scientific Model" which the warming conspiracy uses to scare us all into heat exhaustion.
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12-07-2009, 06:02 AM #9
I was just about to go for everything else, but as you all have heard about single issue voters, this is my issue.
I've made my mind now, I'm going anti-global warming, or is it pro-global warming? It don't matter, just tell me which is the one that comes with meat, or actually better get some ribeye going on the bbq and invite me over.
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treydampier (12-07-2009)
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12-06-2009, 09:40 PM #10
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Thanked: 143We have gone through Alice's looking glass. Everything is now backwards...
The Fiction Of Climate Science - Forbes.com.