As I've explained several times, the comments on the climate change thread are off-topic and will be deleted if continued. You're free to take it up with anyone else you like, including the administrators, if you feel this is unfair. — Xtrix
Where — Banno
It isn't. Logic sets it out clearly. People are confused. Especially those who try to do philosophy without an understanding of logic. — Banno
No, you said exactly what I quoted -- without context, without the quote function, without the mention function. It was irrelevant and off topic. — Xtrix
"A poster had suggested that climate change is simple and easily understood by referencing the laws of thermodynamics. That's not true. Factors as far flung as the present shape of the Earth's orbit are involved in predictions. The fact that the onset of another glacial period is due in the next few centuries is another issue compounding the complexity." — Tate
Making this comment:
We are in an ice age guys. Get yourself up to speed.
— Tate
Without quoting anyone or referencing anything, in the climate change thread, is irrelevant. When asked about it, you stated the following: — Xtrix
If an ice age is in the offing, the grenhouse effect could be just what the doctor ordered. — Agent Smith
I didn't mod the thread. I'm just trying to clarify what being 'on topic' means. There's some flexibility there but that's the general thrust of it. — Baden
For example, I could start an OP asking if Napoleon's invasion of Russia was his greatest strategic blunder. If you answer with general information about Napoleon that doesn't address that specific question, you are off-topic. — Baden
Were you addressing the focus of the OP? Because it is an argumentative OP that is specifically focused on the question I mentioned. Did you attempt to answer the broad or specific questions in the OP? — Baden
Like, how is Wikipedia wrong on this point, — boethius
The amount of anthropogenic greenhouse gases emitted into Earth's oceans and atmosphere is predicted to prevent the next glacial period for the next 500,000 years, — Ice age-Wikipedia
The topic question concerns whether it is too late to stop climate change — Baden
Apologies, can't seem to find one. However, in my defense, since climatologists claim global warming is a fact, they should be able to confirm/counter my claim; after all science is all about making accurate quantifiable predictions.
nowReplyOptions — Agent Smith
The amount of anthropogenic greenhouse gases emitted into Earth's oceans and atmosphere is predicted to prevent the next glacial period for the next 500,000 years, — Ice age-Wikipedia
If you want to discuss ice ages, and how climate change may impact the next ice age, fine -- that's a different topic. — Xtrix
where are the climatologists predicting reglaciation starting something in the next few centuries? — boethius
And if reglaciation is going to happen in the next few centuries, why worry about warming or stop CO2 emissions? — boethius
If we change the earths atmosphere composition even more, we can exit an ice-age significantly (lose all year-round ice in the arctic) or even completely. — boethius
You present yourself as "knowledgeable" about ice-ages ... but have not even bothered to read the second paragraph of the wikipedia entry "ice age": — boethius
The problem is that it's as irrelevant as stating any random fact about the climate. — Xtrix
For decades now, scientists have known, just from looking at the geological record, that the reglaciation should start sometime in the next few centuries. That means glaciers come back down and cover Chicago. It means the UK is under a sheet of ice. This was disturbing news when it was first discovered, and we now know quite a bit more about how it works, what the trigger is, and so forth.
We don't presently know if increased CO2 will cause us to miss the trigger, or if reglaciation will begin anyway. There are aspects of the question that we don't even know how to model right now.
No, it's not simple. — Tate
Climate change is easy to understand — boethius
Stating "we're in an ice age" in this context is still odd to me, and I fail to see the relevance. — Xtrix
CO2 levels have increased, not denying that. However, the spike in CO2 levels has been slower and less than expected for the rate and quantity of CO2 emissions. — Agent Smith
What is the relevance of this remark? — Xtrix
Hypothesis: Negative feedback loops aka the balance of nature. — Agent Smith
as in we are changing the climate from ice-age to not-ice age, — boethius
How do you know we've been in an ice-age as you say? — boethius
If their credible on the ice-age scientific facts you base your argument on ... why are they not credible on their opinions on climate change? — boethius
Maps of the territory (i.e. "intellect") cannot encompass the territory (i.e. "everything"), right? — 180 Proof
... I can't think of any greater, more endemic, abuse of intelligence than using intelligence to deny its own limits — 180 Proof
Words are used for communicating what is the case to someone that lacks the knowledge of what is the case — Harry Hindu