JimC wrote:The critical thing to understand is that CO2, and the other greenhouse gases, absorb the long-wavelength radiation leaving Earth of space, reducing the heat loss, and actually maintaining a range of temperatures suitable to life. Without any such gases (and their low concentrations are not the issue), we would be fucking cold...
The thermodynamic equilibrium of our planet is very sensitive to small changes in greenhouse gas concentrations. My Year 11 students understand the physics behind that quite well - why can't others...
The flaw in your argument, is that it's not true.
If our planet was so very sensitive to CO2 levels, then you would get runaway warming.
There is a vast reservoir of CO2 in the oceans. It pours out of solution into the atmosphere when the ocean warms. The ocean warms if the atmosphere warms. So, warming of the atmosphere, warms the oceans, which expels CO2, which warms the atmosphere.
A classic runaway reaction that doesn't happen.
For it NOT to happen, something has to be wrong. We KNOW that warmer temperatures lead to raised CO2, you only have to look at the records, over hundreds of thousands of years, to see that.
For it not to lead to runaway warming, the thermodynamic equilibrium of our planet can NOT be as sensitive to CO2 levels as you claim.
And that's not rocket science, or even climate science, it's the bleedin obvious.