Simonjester wrote:
the two views you express in these posts seem contradictory to me, "we should accept the theory because global warming scientists came to a conclusion and formed a consensus"... but what science does is the opposite... "it challenges accepted truths"... this makes global warming theory's seem to have more in common with religion big business and politics than science???
Science is experimentation and discovery through observed, repeatable circumstances.
Religion is the denial of observation through faith.
Science is a tool I can use to understand how things work
in the way we best understand now. Science doesn't (or rather, shouldn't), be proclaiming facts - because facts require perfect knowledge, and perfect knowledge is something we'll never have. It's insulting that people are looking for "ironclad proof" (whatever that is) or some factual basis - they are wanting something that when the field works at its best can never (and should never) provide.
Science seems to offer the exact opposite of religion, big business or politics - it is open for anyone to try to learn about (and I mean quite literally open, the information is accessible, even if it's difficult to understand) - religion, big business and politics are shadowy, strange and enigmatic (to be polite). Science adjusts its view when it's mistaken.
Your comparison is fatally simplistic and, if I may be so bold, deliberately ignorant (or polemic, depending on intent).
There's not some mystical acceptance of everything scientists write about or decide - but a combination of experimentation, decades of research, countless publications and a variety of findings in a variety of fields. Honestly, and I mean this, I think people who deny climate change is happening have more in common with religious fanatics than anyone else here.
We can debate man's role until the cows come home - and there's no "fact" to be found since we'll never (in my view) perfectly understand a situation without retrospect. But given the choices of apathy leading to destruction, or action leading to (at best) more efficient resource allocation, less pollution, a more aware and resource conservative population and a cleaner way to live with our Earth or (at worst) battered pride. Well, I know where I'm headed.
As an aside, I find it maddening that people seem to have the arrogance to assume that their "refutations" haven't been thought of or discarded by a relatively well trained an open field. Nothing in science matters unless its provable, replicable, shared and critiqued - and that's a rare set of criteria. If people have legitimate questions these (in all likelihood) have been answered, just look around.
To take this thinking to the extreme - I've seen people watch a comedian's take on Global Warming over NASA's, and really I have to wonder, are people only looking for what they want to see? Or what's happening?
So yes, there's always room for debate, unfortunately many people think all debaters are equal. They aren't. They can't be, and the ignorant should always be challenged when they assert their views without research or understanding (which is precisely the problem here). Somebody discussed gravity as observable and empirical (nothing is ever empirical, that's just what we always aim for, by the way) - the greenhouse effect is absolutely observable and completely tested in many, MANY studies from a range of different people, places, backgrounds and biases. The only thing we are unsure of is what the rate of change will be (which can't be predicted accurately because human activity is unpredictable) and what, exactly, is man's role in all of this (in which case my personal opinion is to be conservative, assume we're being destructive - which we constantly are in our environment - and improve).
What do you think would happen to a climate scientist who had unequivocal proof that the theory of global warming was incorrect?
Do you think the other climate scientists would embrace him and his ideas?
1. No one can tell the future, kthnxbai.
2. I think quite a few would be skeptical and challenge his views (as they should), but in realising they were mistaken have trouble transitioning, but move on.