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by edejong
2545 days ago
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I intentionally leave my position on climate change out of the discussion, because it is irrelevant. Also, my qualifications on this topic, how little I might have, should not interfere with finding common grounds. However, if it helps, I do not have any ties with scientific research, pro, or contra groups wrt climate change. The situation is painted black and white by popular media and social websites. There are, however, many shades of gray. Most climate scientists are not on either end. However, due to duplicitous media coverage the discussion is quickly polarizing. The polarization is the bigger issue. For example, we can agree global warming is happening and we can agree this causes increasingly extreme weather conditions. However, there are many secondary and tertiary effects. These, alleviating or contributing to global warming, are not part of our climate models. Instead of jumping to conclusions, we should acknowledge the limitations of our understanding and our scientific findings. The foundation (IPCC climate models) should be discussed. Where are they accurate? How can they be improved? Does it help us predict local climate change, so we can prepare migrations and structural changes? |
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> Also, my qualifications on this topic, how little I might have, should not interfere with finding common grounds.
You tell me which is more valuable: the testimony of an expert, or of someone with no qualifications? I think the former - do you disagree?
> The situation is painted black and white by popular media and social websites.
My fear is we're quite possibly terribly damaging the planetary ecosystem. That's pretty black and white to me.
> Most climate scientists are not on either end.
If you are going to claim this, please back this up when you say it. Claims without references are useless.
https://skepticalscience.com/global-warming-scientific-conse... - "Depending on exactly how you measure the expert consensus, it’s somewhere between 90% and 100% that agree humans are responsible for climate change, with most of our studies finding 97% consensus among publishing climate scientists."
<https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2017-06-15/97-per... - a more careful look at those figures.
> due to duplicitous media coverage
duplicitous - please justify that.
> However, there are many secondary and tertiary effects. These, alleviating or contributing to global warming, are not part of our climate models.
These being...? Specifically? I actually need to know these because I take a (non expert) interest in climate models. It's actually tangentially related to my current job.
> Instead of jumping to conclusions
At some point we have to accept or reject a hypothesis that we're putting ourselves at enormous risk. Or we can keep putting it off until we find out for sure whether that lump is or isn't cancer, by which may be too late.