Page 26 of 212 FirstFirst ... 162223242526272829303676126 ... LastLast
Results 626 to 650 of 5280
  1. #626
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Post Count
    13,321
    That's not true.

    First, climate science isn't an "emerging" science. It's been studied for as long and in as much depth as just about any other science. What's emerging is the belief mankind has a larger role in global climate than was before believed...and, there is still serious disagreement over whether or not that is true.

    Also, I don't think it's arrogant to believe mankind can have a thorough understanding of physics; orbital mechanics, for instance.

    The arrogance, I believe, lies in the fact global warming proponents now believe mankind is a significant factor in the process of global climate change and, as such, should seek to discover how we can alter something they don't yet completely understand. Once we are able to control the Moon's global effect on the tide, I'll believe we can affect climate.
    I'm just going to call bull on your first two sentences. And, it was vehemently argued that mankind had no business whatsoever putting men in space...the very thought was dangerous. Such blind hubris..the arrogance of such a thing was unthinkable to some segments of society.
    Predicating control of a heretofore immovable object is not a particularly strong metaphor.

    That being said, as soon as we take control of something we own it. It becomes our responsibility, and we will have to work harder to maintain and manage it. One example that illustrates this well is agriculture. Agriculture requires a great deal of control over resources. In addition it creates new problems which in addition require even more work to solve....much like the emerging thought that we have an impact upon our climate.

  2. #627
    Veteran
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Post Count
    97,536
    "belief mankind has a larger role in global climate than was before believed...and, there is still serious disagreement over whether or not that is true."

    not a belief, it's scientific fact.

    the disagreement is not serious, is paid for by carbon-industry, etc corps

  3. #628
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Post Count
    26,781
    I'm just going to call bull on your first two sentences. And, it was vehemently argued that mankind had no business whatsoever putting men in space...the very thought was dangerous. Such blind hubris..the arrogance of such a thing was unthinkable to some segments of society.

    Predicating control of a heretofore immovable object is not a particularly strong metaphor.
    There's a difference between believing man shouldn't do something because it's dangerous and believing a man can't do something because it is infinitely larger than he is.

    Space exploration <> global climate control.

    That being said, as soon as we take control of something we own it. It becomes our responsibility, and we will have to work harder to maintain and manage it. One example that illustrates this well is agriculture. Agriculture requires a great deal of control over resources. In addition it creates new problems which in addition require even more work to solve...
    The effects of agriculture is localized, regional at best...not global.

    ...much like the emerging thought that we have an impact upon our climate.
    I agree, it's an emerging thought. One that's not settled. One over which there is serious disagreement among people much smarter, about such things, than anyone that visits this forum. And, certainly, one at which it would be foolish to thrown costly and draconian fixes.

  4. #629
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    Wow...

    just wow...

    How can you be so ing stupid?

    pH has little to do with differences, because it changes so little. Why are you bringing up pH? Why are you going off on some stupid tangent again? Your "k" factor also changes little over the long term.

    From your link:


    Also from your link:

    Now I thought it was only about 3.1% per degree, but your link says it's more. I guess I could be misunderstanding what they mean.

    Why can't you accept, the the oceans have a sourcing flux of about 90 GtC and a sinking flux of about 94 GtC, and that temperature has a notable effect on this. An increase in global temperature both increases the sourcing and decreases the sinking. Your link with the formula is a simplified formula for approximation. Look what it does.

    I don't think you understand how all this works. Maybe these will help:

    Appendix A
    Calculations


    A New Formula for the Effect of Temperature on the Partial Pressure of CO 2 in Seawater

    Now before you dismiss the water vapor one, keep in mind the immediate humidity in the fractions of a centimeter above a water surface.
    You have officially entered the realm of asshole bag. Why didn't you quote the entire Takahashi blurb?

    However, if 0.281C is taken as a measure for a systematic error introduced by imperfections of our interpolation scheme, it
    shouldcorres pondto an error of 73 matm in seawater pCO2, on the basis that the seasonal temperature effect on ocean-surface-water pCO2 is in a range between +4 and 4%1C1 over the global oceans (Takahashi et al., 1993).

    While the temperature effect on pCO2 in isochemical conditions (qln pCO2/qT) is +4.23% 1C1 (Takahashi et al., 1993), the temperature dependence changes over the range indicated above because seasonal temperature changes in mixed-layer water are accompanied with an increase (by deep-water upwelling andsea–ai r CO2 exchange) or decrease (by photosynthesis andsea–ai r CO2 exchange) in the total CO2 concentration.
    He is quantifying not only the surface flux, but also the chemcial ratio change in the water itself, the mixing of the waters and biotics.

    Your dumbass does not get let off the hook and I guess I am going to have to rub your nose in your quotes from before because your too stupid to keep up with the discussion.

    I a not the one making these claims.

    Do you really think that they do not consider water solubility in their studies? Really?
    Below is crown stupid and has been the basis of Glassman proxied through you in the aqcuital nonsense.

    I don't know if they do or not. It seems as though they don't. They most certainly don't acknowledge a few simple truths about the process.

    have any studies to show they do properly account for the process?
    It's annoying that I cannot talk to you about anything more complex than a couple of variables but this is simple enough: do you withdraw that last quote?

  5. #630
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Post Count
    13,321
    There's a difference between believing man shouldn't do something because it's dangerous and believing a man can't do something because it is infinitely larger than he is.

    Space exploration <> global climate control.


    The effects of agriculture is localized, regional at best...not global.


    I agree, it's an emerging thought. One that's not settled. One over which there is serious disagreement among people much smarter, about such things, than anyone that visits this forum. And, certainly, one at which it would be foolish to thrown costly and draconian fixes.
    You missed the point, again. At the inception of the meme, all endeavors are infinitely larger than man. Btw, that concept makes no sense when broken down. Infinitely? Not really.

    Nobody said it was settled. But the resistance to the mere mention of it is a very strong call back to the meme.

  6. #631
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    The effects of agriculture is localized, regional at best...not global.
    If by regrional you mean the region being the entire earth then I agree with you. Being able to make nitrates using N2 from the air and diesel power changed everything from population capacity, to fuel consumption, to removal of covered terrain to plant crops and free range livestock etc.

    It also gotten to the point that every continent but one is covered in agricultural regions. this notion that there is a magical line where things stop having an effect doesn't exist.

  7. #632
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Post Count
    26,781
    You missed the point, again. At the inception of the meme, all endeavors are infinitely larger than man.
    I've never believed that.

    Btw, that concept makes no sense when broken down. Infinitely? Not really.
    Don't start Chumping the thread TeyshaBlue.

    Nobody said it was settled.
    Sure they have. I believe the words, "the science is settled," have been used.

    But the resistance to the mere mention of it is a very strong call back to the meme.
    It's not the "mere mention" of it that is the problem. It's the bloated bureaucracy and nonsense that accompanies it -- cap and trade, defining CO2 as a toxin, Kyoto, Copenhagen, and Rio, AGC proponents with larger carbon footprints than most countries in the world, just to name a few.

  8. #633
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Post Count
    13,321
    I've never believed that.


    Don't start Chumping the thread TeyshaBlue.


    Sure they have. I believe the words, "the science is settled," have been used.


    It's not the "mere mention" of it that is the problem. It's the bloated bureaucracy and nonsense that accompanies it -- cap and trade, defining CO2 as a toxin, Kyoto, Copenhagen, and Rio, AGC proponents with larger carbon footprints than most countries in the world, just to name a few.
    "I've never believed that."
    Then stop saying it.

    Don't conflate political nonsense with the underlying science. I can understand why you would want to do that, but it's pretty hollow.

  9. #634
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Post Count
    26,781
    Yep, sure enough...someone did say, "the science is settled."

    Gore Takes Global Warming Message to Congress

    The science is settled, Gore told the lawmakers. Carbon-dioxide emissions — from cars, power plants, buildings and other sources — are heating the Earth's atmosphere.

  10. #635
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Post Count
    26,781
    "I've never believed that."
    Then stop saying it.
    When did I say "all endeavors are infinitely larger than man?"

    Don't conflate political nonsense with the underlying science. I can understand why you would want to do that, but it's pretty hollow.
    The underlying science is only on our plates because of the political nonsense. If Algore and company hadn't made a religion out of AGCC, it wouldn't even be on our radars. As it stands, as the clowns lose their credibility, the fad seems to be passing and the world seems less inclined to buy into the hysteria.

    I suspect we won't even be arguing over it in a few years. Well, except for Manny.

  11. #636
    I play pretty, no? TeyshaBlue's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Post Count
    13,321
    "When did I say "all endeavors are infinitely larger than man?""

    Stop reading the WC Playbook.

    One endeavor at a time. Today we're talking about climate science which is according to you, infinitely larger than man.

    Which again, is nonsensical at best.

    Gore <> Scientist.

    Alex Jones says a great many things. They're about as relevant.

  12. #637
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    57,943
    Yonivore loves to say on this subject that has absolutely no factual basis but he perceives as an absolute certainty. He then loves to paint with large brush strokes that really have no basis in reality either.

    I've been around here long enough to understand thats how it works on an internet forum and thats how it works in politics. If politician A says something he doesn't need it to be backed in fact because the only people who are going to call him on it are those who are against him. If the subject is technical, then it won't even matter if he gets called on it because who is going to understand the intricacies of the topic outside of those in the field?

    Thats why Yonivore can get away with this crap. He can say that no prediction has come true regarding Climate Science. Why does he believe that? Because thats what he's read on some blog or heard form some person and he is ignorant of the subject. Of course, anyone familiar with the science knows that the temperature increases we've seen are right in line with the IPCC forecasts. Some of the other forecasts have been correct as well - IE the sea ice and sea level increase.

    Atmospheric sciences are damn complicated. The fluid dynamics of an entire atmosphere are very hard to define at a very high resolution. That being said, when taking a look at the entire system it is NOT that difficult to understand how the reduction in outgoing energy will raise the energy of the system and by how much. That fact is always lost in these debates. It is much easier to understand climate science on a global resolution than it is to find out what the temp due to AGW is going to be in XYZ neighborhood in ABC city 50 years from now.

    Its much like I can tell you that if you stop excercising and you eat poorly you will put on weight but I may not be able to tell you the exact measurements you're going to have after 2 years of this lifestyle. Thats because when you break down the energy budget of the earth you've made it a much simpler system than if you try to predict the very chaotic movement of each small piece of the atmosphere.

    Furthermore, when people say like there are natural causes for climate change they almost always do so without understanding the way paleoclimates have worked in the past. The reason scientists have homed in on CO2 is not because they held a god damn straw poll at some conference but because it has been the regulator of climate on the planet according to all of the evidence we have. As an example, the current interglacial cycles we've seen on earth are a result of the CO2 cycling in and out of the atmosphere. That CO2 cycling is in turn controlled by the orbital variations that affect which parts of the earth receive more sunlight and when they receive that energy. If not for CO2, there would be no mechanism for these changes to occur.

    So what we have now, is a huge increase in the amount of CO2 being put into the atmosphere which has been directly attributed to human influence. (on another note here - the idea that humanity is incapable of of influencing the earth is incredibly stupid. There's just no nice way of putting it because there are mountains of examples and evidence to show that humans have a huge effect on the planet and to ignore that fact is the act of willful ignorance of stupidity) If anyone wants to dispute that this is due to human influence they are welcome to overturn the mounds of evidence that says it is humans. They can provide a place the CO2 is coming from and explain where the CO2 we emit into the atmosphere goes and they will probably win themselves a nobel prize.

  13. #638
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    57,943
    Dupe

  14. #639
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    44,134
    I love it when you talk dirty in climate change threads...your passion is just so...uhhh...passionate...

  15. #640
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    "I've never believed that."
    Then stop saying it.

    Don't conflate political nonsense with the underlying science. I can understand why you would want to do that, but it's pretty hollow.

  16. #641
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    57,943
    Also, am I the only one who can't help but capture the huge irony in claiming that an urban heat island affect is the cause for global warming while at the same time claiming humans can't affect the climate?

    The inconsistencies don't even occur to him.

  17. #642
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    44,134
    Also, am I the only one who can't help but capture the huge irony in claiming that an urban heat island affect is the cause for global warming while at the same time claiming humans can't affect the climate?

    The inconsistencies don't even occur to him.
    I kinda get the micro urban irregularity of temperature. The ranchito which is 35 miles south of San Antonio gets colder than San Antonio in the winter. Geographically it should be warmer. Lots of asphalt and concrete and other heat sink material in cities. On the other hand, the global heat sink dwarfs the urban heat sinks.

  18. #643
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    57,943
    The urban heat island affect is very much real. But urban environments make up a tiny amount of the entire planet.

  19. #644
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    44,134
    The urban heat island affect is very much real. But urban environments make up a tiny amount of the entire planet.
    I honestly try to stay out of this thread but I know that I read that a lot of the global collection sites were in urban areas. If you look at how some of those sites have exploded in the last 30 years (China, India, Asia, etc.) then there may be SOME validity of potential data skew from urban island contamination. Just sayin. Not really wanting to get in this argument.

  20. #645
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
    My Team
    Portland Trailblazers
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Post Count
    43,117
    He is quantifying not only the surface flux, but also the chemcial ratio change in the water itself, the mixing of the waters and biotics.
    If that's what you wish to believe. Remember, this exchange of CO2 levels between atmosphere and ocean only occur where they meet. The rest of the mixing changes the levels as they mix. Regardless of what other functions do, consider them constant for the purpose of how temperature changes mixing, in your partial derivative. This mixing is limited by temperature and salinity, and the rate is limited by wind, pH, and humidity.

    edit add...

    Seems to me pH and wind have very little long term change, but the heating effect on the water via solar changes are known long term changes. Deeper mixing also doesn't matter unless it reaches the surface pressure saturation point, and resurfaces. Gas solubility is also based on pressure, and the pressure increases rapidly as you get deeper and deeper.
    Last edited by Wild Cobra; 06-14-2012 at 07:45 PM.

  21. #646
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
    My Team
    Portland Trailblazers
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Post Count
    43,117
    Also, am I the only one who can't help but capture the huge irony in claiming that an urban heat island affect is the cause for global warming while at the same time claiming humans can't affect the climate?

    The inconsistencies don't even occur to him.
    I don't see it as the heat island being the cause of global warming. I see it as a cause for assumed temperatures to be higher than they are. It's just that all the temperature data taken from these places skews the real global change. These little island of heat an indication of a very small percentage of global land size, yet they are probably more than 70% of the data points.

    What if the only data we looked at were untouched sites from the day they were built with no other buildup around them over time?

    Now again, I am not denying there is global warming. I am only disagree with the degree claimed and root cause.

    Now I don't know what the global buildup land area is vs. unimproved, but I would thing it's well under 1%. Sure, the heat islands have an effect, but what is only 1$ of their effect.

    What if...

    What if the temperature data says global temperature is 1C greater, and 70% of the data points are influence by the heat island effect. The 30% are real data and a sample of 99% of the earth, and shows a 0.2C change. If I do the math based on that, treat all data points as being equal, I get a a 0.76 C rise in temperature. If I give each the weight based on a value to represent how much surface area is apportioned to each, I only get a 0.208 C rise.

    I know they attempt to correct the actual readings, but how can they actually do that? All urban sites are contaminated data points. Their is no way to disagree with that fact.
    Last edited by Wild Cobra; 06-14-2012 at 07:38 PM.

  22. #647
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Post Count
    57,943
    I honestly try to stay out of this thread but I know that I read that a lot of the global collection sites were in urban areas. If you look at how some of those sites have exploded in the last 30 years (China, India, Asia, etc.) then there may be SOME validity of potential data skew from urban island contamination. Just sayin. Not really wanting to get in this argument.
    It may be counterintuitive, but when you only look at sites that are outside of an urban heat island effect you actually see a LARGER temp growth. Scientists have undertaken many studies to take a look at the effect these sites have on the record and its really not a big effect either way because they make up so little of the surface.

    Then you have measurements from space which say the same thing.

  23. #648
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    If that's what you wish to believe. Remember, this exchange of CO2 levels between atmosphere and ocean only occur where they meet. The rest of the mixing changes the levels as they mix. Regardless of what other fictions do, consider them constant for the purpose of how temperature changes mixing, in your partial derivative.
    As someone that can grasp more complex ideas better than you I can see where your ability to interrelate things stops. Its not what I want to believe its literally what the quote says.

    the temperature dependence changes over the range indicated above because seasonal temperature changes in mixed-layer water are accompanied with an increase (by deep-water upwelling andsea–ai r CO2 exchange) or decrease (by photosynthesis andsea–ai r CO2 exchange) in the total CO2 concentration.
    temperature dependence changes

    accompany

    an increase by deep-water upwelling and

    a decrease by photosynthesis

    You teach 7th grade reading students to pull out the subjects and the verbs. There they are.

    We have just seen where the rubber meets the road on your scope of understanding. You do not understand functions as descriptions of systems at all and you suck at math. , you aren't very good at reading.

  24. #649
    Veteran Wild Cobra's Avatar
    My Team
    Portland Trailblazers
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Post Count
    43,117
    As someone that can grasp more complex ideas better than you I can see where your ability to interrelate things stops. Its not what I want to believe its literally what the quote says.



    temperature dependence changes

    accompany

    an increase by deep-water upwelling and

    a decrease by photosynthesis

    You teach 7th grade reading students to pull out the subjects and the verbs. There they are.

    We have just seen where the rubber meets the road on your scope of understanding. You do not understand functions as descriptions of systems at all and you suck at math. , you aren't very good at reading.
    Yes, the range of +/- 4C also changed things that have an effect. This brings us back to the 3.1% change per degree by temperature alone I mentioned.

  25. #650
    Believe.
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Post Count
    22,886
    What if...

    What if the temperature data says global temperature is 1C greater, and 70% of the data points are influence by the heat island effect. The 30% are real data and a sample of 99% of the earth, and shows a 0.2C change. If I do the math based on that, treat all data points as being equal, I get a a 0.76 C rise in temperature. If I give each the weight based on a value to represent how much surface area is apportioned to each, I only get a 0.208 C rise.


    That's how I model heat absorption and transfer. WTF was Boltzmann thinking?

    You cannot understand multivariable functions. You have no chance on doing mathematical approximations of this phenomenon.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •