| " the evidence for human influenced climate is so vast and so well researched that it would take an absolute miracle to displace it at this point." Even now there are various scenarios, not a single consensus. And I rather doubt that you personally have verified the climate science, so what makes you so sure? Btw it is not about humans influencing climate (of course they do), but about the doomsday scenarios. "Reproducibility and peer review are part and parcel of science and it is always done by other people than the ones involved in the original research." Peer review is not a a guarantee for good science, it was invented for the government grant system. Sorry if people call on the peer review system, to me it just shows they are delusional about the workings of the science systems in most places. "But to you 'other people' may include people that have not studied the subject matter and that are not capable of following the arguments" Everybody can study the subject matter, that is the thing. It is you who claims only certain people of your choosing are capable of doing so. "And I'll throw my lot in with the 99.9%, not because it makes my life any easier but simply because that makes good sense." Do you even know what the 99.9% say? You can check how that number was derived - it was people evaluating abstracts and judging whether those papers agree that humans affect climate. It doesn't say everybody agrees on the doomsday scenarios. |
I also read that report, but I got a different vibe from it than you did. What I read was a bunch of settled stuff, a bunch of stuff where the results are predictable but the exact circumstances are not and a bunch of still open stuff requiring more research hopefully resulting in being able to settle other questions. It's pretty much like any other scientific report that I've read with the difference that it spans the globe.
The tricky bit is that the countries that are doing the least to help stave this off are also the ones best positioned to ride it out unless we end up with one of the worst case scenarios.
But locally some countries are already experiencing the first set of symptoms and it isn't pretty. (Notably: the South of Europe and North Africa)
> Btw it is not about humans influencing climate (of course they do), but about the doomsday scenarios.
The doomsday scenarios will come to pass if we don't make some pretty drastic changes. Personally I won't live to see it, but my kids most likely will, even if they're off by a couple of decades.
Because the thing that there is a lot of discussion about is the exact dates, not necessarily on what the consequences are.
Anyway, you seem to have made up your mind on this and I have more important things to do (in the short term...).