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Mad Scientist - Dr. AlGore
Message
From
04/07/2006 08:15:52
 
 
To
03/07/2006 23:16:59
Neil Mc Donald
Cencom Systems P/L
The Sun, Australia
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01133351
Message ID:
01133566
Views:
15
Hi Neil,

Sure the numbers suggest that a miniscule variance to an already tiny number would have no effect whatsoever. But you have also stated that we are dealing with a complex system. The tiny number for CO2 is operating on the planet in a specific way already. To conclude that any change would have minimal impact looks a leap in logic to me.

We know that the complex system called the human body can benefit from micro levels of certain poisons yet be killed by only slighty higher concentrations.

We know from a study in North America post 9/11 that jet contrails have some impact on the average surface temperature. Who would've thought that from a mere 32,000 flights per day?!

We are talking about weather here, which is a subject with high economic impact and so has been studied for at least a few hundreds of years. A subject to which the world's most powerful computers have been applied for at least 4 decades in attempts (largely unsuccessful I think you'll agree) to be able to predict (only) severe weather. To flatly conclude that .001 increase of CO2 in the atmosphere would have no effect is at least presumptuous when we can not successfully model a hurricane for which virtually all (known to be relevant) parameters are known.

cheers

>Hi Jim,
>See Message#1133508
>
>
>>SNIP>
>>>The processes at work are far more complex than what is being put forward, and have little or nothing to do with what man is or has being doing.
>>>
>>
>>It is so complex yet you can dismiss man's contribution just like that?
>>
>>While I appreciate that I am uninformed on the details of the matter, I find it smarter to listen to a large majority of scientists rather than dismiss their warnings because my limited knowledge can poke a hole in their theory. I rather feel that my little poked hole is far more likely to be my error than theirs.
>>
>>There have been lots of things through my life that I was sure I had all figured out, only to be deflated by the unknown facts/events. This smelled like another one of those to me after a while, so I came around.
>>
>>I have an innate mistrust of scientists who get their funding directly from industry (coal, oil, automobile, etc) and wonder why it is that most of them dismiss "global warming" out-of-hand.
>>It truly is unfortunate that business and government have become so influential in the work of scientists and particularly their conclusions.
>>
>>
>>cheers
>>>
>>SNIP
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