Humans evolved in Africa, near Kenya. So humans should be able to tolerate temperatures which are close to the temperatures found in Kenya. — Agree to Disagree
This is why humans can tolerate heat better than they can tolerate cold. — Agree to Disagree
You'd have to be an idiot to think he believed the election was stolen. This is a recurring strategy he uses: "If I win I'm great, if I lose it was rigged against me." It's the sore loser strategy and we all remember it from childhood -- but Trump never outgrew it. — GRWelsh
For me there are no "facts" that are beyond dispute.
— Agree to Disagree
'Everyone has a right to their own opinions, but not to their own facts' ~ Daniel Patrick Moynihan. — Quixodian
So how do we know that they are not wrong again? — Agree to Disagree
Please state clearly which you think kills more, heat or cold? — Agree to Disagree
Can you provide links to dispute the claim that cold kills more than heat? — Agree to Disagree
Extreme heat and extreme cold both kill hundreds of people each year in the U.S., but determining a death toll for each is a process subject to large errors. In fact, two major U.S. government agencies that track heat and cold deaths--NOAA and the CDC--differ sharply in their answer to the question of which is the bigger killer.
Some changes (such as droughts, wildfires, and extreme rainfall) are happening faster than scientists previously assessed.
Mikie, are you saying that sometimes (climate) scientists get it wrong? That their assessment of the speed of change was not correct.
How do we know that they are not wrong about other things? — Agree to Disagree
What gives you the right to deny them the benefits that they have gained. — Agree to Disagree
Global climate change is not a future problem. Changes to Earth’s climate driven by increased human emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases are already having widespread effects on the environment: glaciers and ice sheets are shrinking, river and lake ice is breaking up earlier, plant and animal geographic ranges are shifting, and plants and trees are blooming sooner.
Effects that scientists had long predicted would result from global climate change are now occurring, such as sea ice loss, accelerated sea level rise, and longer, more intense heat waves.
"The magnitude and rate of climate change and associated risks depend strongly on near-term mitigation and adaptation actions, and projected adverse impacts and related losses and damages escalate with every increment of global warming."
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Some changes (such as droughts, wildfires, and extreme rainfall) are happening faster than scientists previously assessed. In fact, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) — the United Nations body established to assess the science related to climate change — modern humans have never before seen the observed changes in our global climate, and some of these changes are irreversible over the next hundreds to thousands of years.
Scientists have high confidence that global temperatures will continue to rise for many decades, mainly due to greenhouse gases produced by human activities.
The IPCC’s Sixth Assessment report, published in 2021, found that human emissions of heat-trapping gases have already warmed the climate by nearly 2 degrees Fahrenheit (1.1 degrees Celsius) since pre-Industrial times (starting in 1750).1 The global average temperature is expected to reach or exceed 1.5 degrees C (about 3 degrees F) within the next few decades. These changes will affect all regions of Earth.
The severity of effects caused by climate change will depend on the path of future human activities. More greenhouse gas emissions will lead to more climate extremes and widespread damaging effects across our planet. However, those future effects depend on the total amount of carbon dioxide we emit. So, if we can reduce emissions, we may avoid some of the worst effects.
For the last 40 years we have been told that the world will end in 10 years. — Agree to Disagree
scaremongering — Agree to Disagree
But which kills more, heat or cold? — Agree to Disagree
shellacking next year — Quixodian
Understanding climate denial used to seem easy: It was all about greed. Delve into the background of a researcher challenging the scientific consensus, a think tank trying to block climate action or a politician pronouncing climate change a hoax and you would almost always find major financial backing from the fossil fuel industry.
Those were simpler, more innocent times, and I miss them.
True, greed is still a major factor in anti-environmentalism. But climate denial has also become a front in the culture wars, with right-wingers rejecting the science in part because they dislike science in general and opposing action against emissions out of visceral opposition to anything liberals support.
And this cultural dimension of climate arguments has emerged at the worst possible moment — a moment when both the extreme danger from unchecked emissions and the path toward slashing those emissions are clearer than ever.
[…]
Back in 2009, when Democrats tried but failed to take significant climate action, their policy proposals consisted mainly of sticks — limits on emissions in the form of permits that businesses could buy and sell. In 2022, when the Biden administration finally succeeded in passing a major climate bill, it consisted almost entirely of carrots — tax credits and subsidies for green energy. Yet thanks to the revolution in renewable technology, energy experts believe that this all-gain-no-pain approach will have major effects in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
But not if Republicans can help it. The Heritage Foundation is spearheading an effort called Project 2025 that will probably define the agenda if a Republican wins the White House next year. As The Times reports, it calls for “dismantling almost every clean energy program in the federal government and boosting the production of fossil fuels.”
What’s behind this destructive effort? Well, Project 2025 appears to have been largely devised by the usual suspects — fossil-fueled think tanks like the Heartland Institute and the Competitive Enterprise Institute that have been crusading against climate science and climate action for many years.
But the political force of this drive, and the likelihood that there will be no significant dissent from within the G.O.P. if Republicans do take the White House, has a lot to do with the way science in general and climate science in particular have become a front in the culture war.
I think you don't realise what a couple of degrees of global warming really means. — ChatteringMonkey


Alarmists want you to believe that any temperature increase anywhere is bad. But there are many places in the world where a small temperature increase would be good. — Agree to Disagree
If the earth was abnormally cold in the Little Ice Age (pre-industrial times) then the temperature recovering to normal (i.e. global warming) is probably a good thing. — Agree to Disagree
Global warming is slow and small compared to seasonal warming. — Agree to Disagree
If you don't know this then you don't know much about climate-change/global-warming. — Agree to Disagree
Best to laugh and walk away. — Banno
Your response shows that you don't really know much about climate-change/global-warming. — Agree to Disagree
Climate scientists almost always only tell the public about temperature anomalies. — Agree to Disagree
But they have chosen to "hide" the actual temperatures from the public. — Agree to Disagree
Look at all of the purple and blue color in the Northern Hemisphere. Purple represents actual temperatures less than zero degrees Celsius. Literally freezing cold. — Agree to Disagree
Yes, it's cold in winter. :roll: — Banno
For example, Russia with +7.5 degrees Celsius of global warming will still have an average high temperature of the hottest month lower than America's with no global warming. — Agree to Disagree
I believe that these roadblocks won't be overcome. — Agree to Disagree
Why should the Russians cooperate with you? — Agree to Disagree
These counties might say that they will cooperate, but how hard will they really try? — Agree to Disagree
You call me a denier whenever you disagree with me. You say that my ideas are nonsense whenever you don't want to discuss them. I have refrained from labelling you because I want to have a genuine discussion about climate-change/global-warming. It is you who is stopping us having a good faith discussion. — Agree to Disagree
It seems that if 2) and 3) are true, then you are sure of at least some of the limits of science. — PhilosophyRunner
And the same question for the other things you called pseudoscience. There is some reason you call these pseudoscience, something that distinguishes them as not science. What is it? — PhilosophyRunner
This unverified-but-not-unverifiable direction of research begs for abuse by pseudo-scientific interests. — Pantagruel
But isn't this what keeps philosophy alive as an independent discipline? Without that, doesn't it become just a theme? — Pantagruel
This may serve as a good starting point to understand the demarcation of science - what makes one theory science and another pseudo-science? Is it in the method used? — PhilosophyRunner
Do you care that the people who live in Russia are too cold? — Agree to Disagree
The science is never settled. — Agree to Disagree
I am not sure whether CO2 is responsible for 100% of the temperature increase. — Agree to Disagree
You seem to care about Foote's experiment because you used it to show that the glass container with more CO2 heated up the fastest. — Agree to Disagree
To save you from wasting more of your time, and my time, I will tell you what I believe. I believe:
- that CO2 is a greenhouse gas
- that humans are responsible for most of the increase in CO2 level above about 280 ppm
- that a lot of the increase in CO2 levels is due to the use of fossil fuels
- that the average temperature of the Earth has warmed by around 1.0 to 1.5 degrees Celsius since pre-industrial times
Does that make me a "denier" ? — Agree to Disagree
I also think that there is a scientific attitude, a characteristic way of approaching problems. — Quixodian
Scientific practice ideally consists in unbiased and (as much as is humanly possible) presuppositionless inquiry. — Janus
In my view, it'd be hard to sincerely act as if anything goes. — plaque flag
However this is itself a danger, because pseudo-science can also cloak itself in the garb of architectonic. Hence the confusion of the modern world. — Pantagruel
Does everybody want climate-change/global-warming to be "solved" ? — Agree to Disagree
Are the people who live in Moscow “suffering” from global-warming? — Agree to Disagree
Questions about Eunice Foote's experiment: — Agree to Disagree
Calling me names seems to be your way of avoiding a real discussion of climate change. — Agree to Disagree




There is nothing "average" about my views on climate change. — Agree to Disagree
If you think that worrying about cows producing methane is ludicrous then please tell the people who think that this is problem that they are being ridiculous. — Agree to Disagree
As well as looking at temperature anomalies I have also looked in detail at actual temperatures. — Agree to Disagree
Do I sound like "just a fairly average climate denier" to you? — Agree to Disagree
