Ted wrote:Grimshaw wrote:I'm saying if it were me, and I'm an alright kind of chap, i certainly wouldn't present any evidence to the contrary if it meant i would be put out of a job because of that evidence. Or rather, i'd find a way to discredit the evidence.
Thank God you are not a scientist, then. It is not a matter of being an "alright kind of chap" or protecting your career. It is about conducting science professionally.
Conducting science professionally? Like the protagonists in the climategate emails? Have you read that stuff? I have, and i don't see anything professional about it. I can email them to anyone interested. That's where i get my ideas when it comes to this, and you may say that's an isolated incident, but how do we know that? If man made global warming is something for us to be concerned about, if we need to do something soon or it all goes down the u-bend.......why the need to 'massage' the figures?
If the problem is a real one, there should be no massaging necessary. Altering figures to fit a theory is not science, its how kids cheat on their science homework.
Tomo wrote:It's been a fascinating thread. Can I ask a key question here? Regardless of what you believe about climate change, how did you arrive at that belief?
There's no punchline. It's a serious question.
I got intrigued by the evidence to the contrary and decided to do my own digging. I got peeved at some of the lies that were born in order to make the theories stick, and at the bad science that lies at the heart of it. I also find it fascinating to argue with people about this stuff, because a lot of people get very passionate about it but can't tell you why. Possibly it's media influence. It's a thorny issue, but one that isn't being discussed rationally because we keep getting fed exaggerations and hyperbole. A whole lot of 'what-ifs' which frankly don't wash with me. All i think about when people go on about global warming/climate change is Helen Lovejoy from the Simpsons standing there saying ' Wont someone please think of the children!! '
When the notion that solar activity was responsible for global warming came along, and was then 'disproved', you had people bickering over it in a very interesting manner. Some said the disproving was simply a smear campaign aimed at the scientists disproving it.
Another example of scientists behaving professionally? They're not superheroes or machines, they're human, and therefore subject to every petty emotion you and i are.
And like i said in a previous post, since this is science it should be up for debate, and it isn't. There's something not right about that, it leaves me feeling very uncomfortable. Nothing is certain, there are no facts, only interpretations. ( 10 points )