Now you're just babbling nonsense. Why "hypothesis" are you talking about? There's overwhelming evidence for the effects climate change will have. It's only a matter of degree, which will depend on whether we act or not. We're already seeing the effects, which are WORSE than the scientists predicted years ago.
— Xtrix
No, there isn't. Because it has not happened yet. — h060tu
Not what might be the case based on models, predictions, hand waving, media personalities, documentaries, alarmism and a autistic 16 year old. — h060tu
No, there's evidence to back them up -- overwhelming evidence which, once it's explained to you, is more than convincing. All you have to do is make a little effort. Even a simple wikipedia search is fine. Or are they part of the global conspiracy too?
— Xtrix
Right, because Google, Bill Gates, the Rockefellers, the Chinese Communist Party and several others who donate to Wikipedia don't have any influence at all over the content that might be adduced there. None. — h060tu
You've already given yourself away buddy. You've proven you only read fringe bullshit about climate change. This is yet another example.
— Xtrix
No. I've read NOAA, I actually have it bookmarked LOL I just don't believe your claims because you have absolutely nothing to substantiate them. Only rhetoric. — h060tu
That actual study says nothing about antropogenic climate change. It talks about climate change without qualification. When you actually break down the study into the various ways in which scientists think what is causing climate change, the numbers go way below 70%. I know the study, and it doesn't corroborate anthropogenic climate change. — h060tu
No, they're worth my time. I've read both, in fact. I've given sources that go over their points thoroughly. I'd be glad to go over their lies here as well.
— Xtrix
No you haven't. — h060tu
Bottom line -- 97% (that's misleading -- it's closer to 100%) of climatologists accept climate change is a fact, that we're the cause of it, and that we need to take major steps to do something about it. But you go with Lindzen, by all means.
— Xtrix
No they don't. That number is from a comic book writer. It's fallacious. — h060tu
I never "swallowed" anything. His view is one view. IPCC is another. — h060tu
Until there is evidence that can establish the likelihood of one hypothesis over the other, then there is underdetermination of hypothesis. — h060tu
You assume that because I question your assumptions, that I am a "denier" I am not a "denier" I am Agnostic on the question. — h060tu
I don't know, and neither do you and neither do they. There's a just a lot of claims, and nothing to back them up. — h060tu
No, they're very alarmed indeed. Rightfully so.
— Xtrix
They're really not. — h060tu
So I think I see where this non-discussion is going. More mouthing off by science ignoramuses who think they know more than people that have studied this their entire lives because they've spent a few minutes thinking about the subject. It's embarrassing.
— Xtrix
Yeah, that's what you're doing. — h060tu
I cited two climate scientists who agree with me. — h060tu
LOL So scientists you disagree with are not worth your time, only ones that already confirm your preconceived bias. That's amazing. — h060tu
Yeah, this conversation is over. You're just a propagandist, an ideological robot. That's fine, but I'm wasting my time talking. My time is important, yours not so much. — h060tu
The government is not a source. There was a "source" about WMDs in Iraq. It's fake. I don't the government "data" on anything. Economics, WMDs, their secret programs and operations destroying other people's countries, creating false flags, lying to the American people, infiltrating groups and manipulating events, mind control programs. Yeah, no. I don't trust the government "data" unless it's methodology is sound. If the methodology is sound, I'll believe it. But I don't take government data at face value. — h060tu
Richard Lindzen at MIT. — h060tu
I'm not an expert, but he is. And I haven't studied climate science as a layman, in years. So I don't really want to have a debate on this. — h060tu
Another book I read was by a Swedish guy named Bjorn Lomborg — h060tu
I'm not an expert, but there's a lot of alarmism going on. Elizabeth Kolbert, who wrote The Sixth Extinction a massive alarmist tome, is a journalist, not a scientist. There are other such books and misinfo/disinfo out there. — h060tu
Well, there's a scientist at MIT who's name currently escapes me — h060tu
Your article was about CO2. — h060tu
CO2 emissions are not even remotely the only, or even the primary driver of climate change. — h060tu
those number of projections are based on completely faulty and speculative models of how climate has evolved — h060tu
Most climate data is based on tree rings and glacial mass, — h060tu
Most climate data is based on tree rings and glacial mass,
— h060tu
Wrong. — Xtrix
And in fact, the only real good solid data on climate that we have is only since the Industrial Revolution.
— h060tu
Completely wrong. — Xtrix
Completely correct. — h060tu
Lol. Right, and you know because you're a climatologist. Please explain where these "models" go wrong. I myself would love to know -- as I'm sure most climate scientists would as well.
— Xtrix
They already know. Most climate scientists aren't alarmists. — h060tu
No one is arguing this. Pure straw-man.
— Xtrix
Not really. — h060tu
Your article was about CO2. — h060tu
What "actual scientists" are you referring to, exactly? Please name one.
— Xtrix
Well, there's a scientist at MIT who's name currently escapes me, but I'll gladly look for his name for you. — h060tu
No, they won't "tell you" because there are a number of projections which depend on what we do now.
— Xtrix
Yes, and those number of projections are based on completely faulty and speculative models of how climate has evolved. — h060tu
Most climate data is based on tree rings and glacial mass, — h060tu
And in fact, the only real good solid data on climate that we have is only since the Industrial Revolution. — h060tu
They can, and they have.
— Xtrix
CO2 emissions are not even remotely the only, or even the primary driver of climate change. And in fact, not even among greenhouse gases.
CO2's role is very overplayed. Methane gas might be worse. — h060tu
If other countries can do it, so can we
— Xtrix
But they can't do it. — h060tu
"If we want to survive?" We'll survive climate change easily. Talk to any climate scientist, like actual ones, not activists, and they'll tell you. Sure, it will have an effect, but it's definitely not the hottest climate in the whole history of the climate, and it's also not cataclysmic. — h060tu
The Biden Plan will:
Ensure the U.S. achieves a 100% clean energy economy and reaches net-zero emissions no later than 2050. On day one, Biden will sign a series of new executive orders with unprecedented reach that go well beyond the Obama-Biden Administration platform and put us on the right track. And, he will demand that Congress enacts legislation in the first year of his presidency that: 1) establishes an enforcement mechanism that includes milestone targets no later than the end of his first term in 2025, 2) makes a historic investment in clean energy and climate research and innovation, 3) incentivizes the rapid deployment of clean energy innovations across the economy, especially in communities most impacted by climate change.
Build a stronger, more resilient nation. On day one, Biden will make smart infrastructure investments to rebuild the nation and to ensure that our buildings, water, transportation, and energy infrastructure can withstand the impacts of climate change. Every dollar spent toward rebuilding our roads, bridges, buildings, the electric grid, and our water infrastructure will be used to prevent, reduce, and withstand a changing climate. As President, Biden will use the convening power of government to boost climate resilience efforts by developing regional climate resilience plans, in partnership with local universities and national labs, for local access to the most relevant science, data, information, tools, and training.
Rally the rest of the world to meet the threat of climate change. Climate change is a global challenge that requires decisive action from every country around the world. Joe Biden knows how to stand with America’s allies, stand up to adversaries, and level with any world leader about what must be done. He will not only recommit the United States to the Paris Agreement on climate change – he will go much further than that. He will lead an effort to get every major country to ramp up the ambition of their domestic climate targets. He will make sure those commitments are transparent and enforceable, and stop countries from cheating by using America’s economic leverage and power of example. He will fully integrate climate change into our foreign policy and national security strategies, as well as our approach to trade.
Stand up to the abuse of power by polluters who disproportionately harm communities of color and low-income communities. Vulnerable communities are disproportionately impacted by the climate emergency and pollution. The Biden Administration will take action against fossil fuel companies and other polluters who put profit over people and knowingly harm our environment and poison our communities’ air, land, and water, or conceal information regarding potential environmental and health risks. The Biden plan will ensure that communities across the country from Flint, Michigan to Harlan, Kentucky to the New Hampshire Seacoast have access to clean, safe drinking water. And he’ll make sure the development of solutions is an inclusive, community-driven process.
Fulfill our obligation to workers and communities who powered our industrial revolution and subsequent decades of economic growth. This is support they’ve earned for fueling our country’s industrial revolution and decades of economic growth. We’re not going to leave any workers or communities behind. —
Let me know when you conduct this experiment. I wish you the best of luck, but I won't hold my breath. Personally I think it's a waste of time. But in any case, the point stands: there's no evidence for your claim. So why say it? That's not scientifically sound either.
— Xtrix
Why ask me for an appeal to authority when you can just dismiss it as an appeal to authority? — VagabondSpectre
You opened the post by bringing up an ill-defined anecdote about how scientists say their god is nature (do you need me to quote everything line by line?), — VagabondSpectre
What do you think scientists meant by "nature" and "god", and why is that relevant to why natural philosophy dominates every other understanding in today's world? — VagabondSpectre
Isn't it possible that modern science is not dominated by Cartesian or natural philosophy? — VagabondSpectre
No one can offer a definition that shows Aristarchus wasn't doing science but Galileo was, for example, so who cares?
— Xtrix
Why do you get to get to ask me to prove an unending series of negatives? First you'll goad me into showing Aristarchus wasn't doing science, then you can just keep pulling random names out of a hat until I get too tired to carry on... — VagabondSpectre
If some ancient philosopher based their epistemological framework around the predictive power of their mathematical or explanatory models, then maybe they employing the modern scientific method to some extent. But really, who cares? — VagabondSpectre
The experimental evidence is in our face phenomenon... — VagabondSpectre
That's not what you said. You said:
You're looking at it backward actually. QM and GR are "in our face" phenomenon that we cannot deny. — VagabondSpectre
So quantum mechanics and general relativity are "experimental evidence" now? That's completely meaningless as well.
— Xtrix
I'm having a hard time comprehending what you're trying to say here. "In our face phenomenon" refers to the experimental observations that force us to accept GR and QM as strong models. — VagabondSpectre
If you think you have a "gotch'ya" here, you don't. You're just be semantically obtuse or else misunderstanding. — VagabondSpectre
No, you contrasted "rationality" by conflating it with "rationalism" (hence why you mentioned Descartes) which is completely wrong. Inductive reasoning already assumes reason (it's right there in the word), and hence rationality - ratio is Latin, which translates as "reason."
— Xtrix
Have you ever heard of the "etymological fallacy"? It's sort of similar to equivocation; definitely an excellent source of wanton misinterpretation... — VagabondSpectre
You're trying to win the argument by somehow showing that I am technically incorrect, when you have not seem to understood or addressed the statement I have made. Even if my critique of Descartes has been unfair (not giving him enough credit as a scientist, I guess), you're still not actually addressing my position; you're just rejecting it out of hand. — VagabondSpectre
Once again, just to be clear, modern science employs an inherently inductive method to actually confirm and usefully deploy its models in the real world; that's what has let it advance so much compared to less strictly focused schools — VagabondSpectre
So what is the point of this thread again? I know you feel you have been amply clear, but just indulge me. — VagabondSpectre
So the connection goes: phusis -> naturalism, naturalism -> scientific practice? In what regard is phusis a basis for scientific practice if it bears some connection to the current ontology of science? — fdrake
The regulation of financing regulates the speech. — Hanover
I actually went to the Biden site where he lists out his positions. If I had to pick what I didn't particularly like, it would relate to raising taxes specifically on the wealthy and corporations, because I'm tired of the class warfare, which is how this usually plays out. He wants to study the idea of reparations, which I find horribly polarizing and unjust. That alone will cost him my vote. He had an entirely hands off stance with China, and I do see them as a threat and concern. I'm not in principle opposed to tariffs as he is. I didn't like his idea of raising teacher's salaries, as I don't follow how the federal government should have a hand in that very (very very) local issue. He's in favor of 2 years of free college education, which in principle sounds good, but that sounds again like a state issue, considering different state institutions charge differently and private colleges are much more expensive. I'm also opposed to campaign finance reform because I'm close to an absolutist on free speech. His objections to drilling for oil I largely disagree with. — Hanover
I think you're grossly overestimating what other countries are doing. I live in one of the more progressive countries in the world. It's not enough. Corona lock down will be a joke compared to the costs we will be confronted with once climate change really hits. I've already started looking for a plot of land with enough arable land, a self-sufficient modular home and I'll be advising my kids to study agriculture. — Benkei
DNC lackey. — StreetlightX
Maybe you've learnt one too many lessons from Trump. — StreetlightX
You offer literal contradictions and expect to be taken seriously. What a joke. — StreetlightX
You're a sucker and everyone but you knows it. — StreetlightX
5.1k
Frank was reduced to babbling insults — StreetlightX
Frank was reduced to babbling insults and this guy reduced to, well, the same.
It's like people who support Biden are totally incapable of coherent argumentation.
Which makes sense. There's no there there. — StreetlightX
God they must love people like you. — StreetlightX
What about climate change? Do you seriously believe governments and corporations and people are competent enough to make a difference? — h060tu
Wonderful. It worked well last time, didn't it?
— Xtrix
Yes, much like how the mobilization of hunderds and thousands of people worked so well to gain Bernie the nomination hey? — StreetlightX
We're talking about actually voting, not rolling over to the DNC.
— Xtrix
Ah yes, not rolling over to the DNC by ... doing exactly what the DNC wants. — StreetlightX
See, the problem is you think this is a difference of persons. It's not. I already explained the power in the USA is held by the respective parties. — Benkei
It's not meaningful to say "they're both corrupt but he's destroying the environment". So you'll save the environment by losing your privacy. What kind of choice is that? — Benkei
That actually happened, in no small degree thanks to those who sat out or voted third party
— Xtrix
Electoral gaslighting - "look what you made me do". DNC lackey. — StreetlightX
Electing Trump isn't holding them accountable.
— Xtrix
Actually that's exactly what it is and no amount of double-speak will change that fact. — StreetlightX
I tell you what's not a hard choice, not bending the knee now when you've got nothing. At the very least, withdraw your support and act like you want something. — Baden
Yes, and in 2016 the Dems didn't listen because they were sure Hillary would win. They ain't so sure now, I can tell you. — Baden
And: Never ever give something away for free that could be used as leverage to get something in return. — Baden
I'm advocating for progressives to say this to the Dems:
"Give us what we want or fuck off." — Baden
It's clear, simple, and the only thing that has a hope of getting the weasels in the DNC to take on significant progressive policies. — Baden
From the Netherlands the only meaningful differences between Republicans and Democrats are gay marriage, abortion and a somewhat tougher stance on immigration. — Benkei
Only because you make it so. You're caught in the circular logic of saying you need to do what makes it necessary for you to do what you did. — Baden
The difference between Trump and Biden is marginal from any perspective but the US perspective. — Benkei
