How is this registering among Floridians? Denial, for one. — Bitter Crank
Well, people should understand the difference with weather and climate.The odd thing about this analogy is that you seem to have it the wrong way round. The permawarmers acknowledge that every few years, the temperature will go down for a bit but overall, the long term trend is steadily or unsteadily upwards. And the permafrosties are always saying it's going down or is about to go down, and the reason for it going up is not the reason that has been theorised for 100 years, burning fossil fuels raising CO2 in the atmosphere, but random woo and the hot air of climate scientists. — unenlightened
The poor will lose everything and wander toward Minnesota. — frank
Science is all about repeatability, — Marchesk
Shows 3 year global trend of dropping temperatures. — King in the Desert
Look at the primary source, the IPCC assessment report:
https://archive.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/far/wg_I/ipcc_far_wg_I_chapter_05.pdf — King in the Desert
1. it predicts that we should have experienced an 15-18 degree C increase in global temperatures by now.
look at the global temperatures now, last winter, we were only 0.1 degree above the global mean.
that is not just a wrong prediction, you are not even in the same ballpark. — King in the Desert
2. It predicts that rainforest would have lost 20% of its precipitation and would shrink due to climate change
completely false, precipitation is increasing. Again they are off not by a little, but by an order of magnitude. — King in the Desert
Other intellectual disciplines and traditions may be of interest going forward. Human extinction and the topic of eschatology, or the end of the world, is something that has been discussed in various academic disciplines, as you might expect. In theology it has been widely discussed, while it also appears in literary theory as an interesting element to creative writing and in psychology during the 1980s as a phenomenon related to the threat of nuclear war. The field of psychology seems to be particularly relevant going forward.
That is a highly controversial statement. Which epistemological principle requires repeatability specifically? — Echarmion
an inevitable near- term social collapse due to climate change. — Abstract
Methodological naturalism.
The main issue in this thread isn't with climate change predictions, it's with societal collapse predictions, which are not scientific, even if the reasons for predicting a collapse are scientific.
Consider the analogy with predictions about future automation displacing a large percentage of jobs. The studies about current technology might be sound, but prediction about how the technology will be applied and how workers and employers will adapt are not well understood. — Marchesk
I suspect that good responses to the article would deal with its 'theory of adaptation' and possible socio-economic organisational strategies that might work irrespective of the doomy-gloomy plausibilities. — fdrake
What does methodological naturalism have to do with repeatability? — Echarmion
And I don't see how you go from "social processes are not well understood" to "therefore predictions about social processes are unscientific" — Echarmion
So please, if you want to put this research in bin with the Mayan Apocalypse and Millenium Bug, do so, but politely leave it out of the thread (personal opinion, not moderator opinion). — fdrake
The fact is, there are numerous threats to the environment coming from all sorts of sources. — Bitter Crank
Dr Jem Bendell is a Professor of Sustainability Leadership and Founder of the Institute for Leadership and Sustainability (IFLAS) at the University of Cumbria (UK).
He focuses on leadership and communications for social change, as well as approaches that may help humanity face climate-induced disruption.
A graduate of the University of Cambridge, he had twenty years of experience in sustainable business and finance, as a researcher, educator, facilitator, advisor, & entrepreneur, having lived & worked in six countries. Clients for his strategy development included international corporations, UN agencies and international NGOs. The World Economic Forum (WEF) recognised Professor Bendell as a Young Global Leader for his work on sustainable business alliances. With over 100 publications, including four books and five UN reports, he regularly appeared in international media on topics of sustainable business and finance, as well as currency innovation. His TEDx talk is the most watched online speech on complementary currencies. In 2012 Professor Bendell co-authored the WEF report on the Sharing Economy. Previously he helped create innovative alliances, including the Marine Stewardship Council, to endorse sustainable fisheries and The Finance Innovation Lab, to promote sustainable finance. In 2007 he wrote a report for WWF on the responsibility of luxury brands, which appeared in over 50 newspapers and magazines worldwide, and inspired a number of entrepreneurs to create businesses in the luxury sector.
From the CV there given, I would say this guy is a career communications person. When he states as his academic career "twenty years of experience in sustainable business and finance", then has gotten into the very trendy Davos circles on the WEF and gives TedX talks, yep, no wonder can he write something that will shock and awe ordinary people. Likely because he has been giving talks to people all his life and obviously and knows what sells.Just to be clear, this not some way out nut job cherry picking statistics to make a radical fruitcake conspiracy theory. This is an expert in the field. — unenlightened
none of them can bring civilization crashing down in 30 minutes. — Jake
I think some of you are entrenched in a certain view and that keeps you from studying the document mentioned in the OP with an open mind. — frank
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