Mysturji wrote:I did get of to a bad start, and I offer my apologies to fact-man for that.
What set me off was the admonitions in the OP about "No denial here! No-no! We must all agree about points one through nine" that pissed me off, on top of the other stress of the last few days, and I read in that all of the other dogmatic, fundamentalist type behaviour that kept me out of these kind of threads at RDF.
Interestingly, though the thread did invite the creation of another thread for purposes of discussing skepticism, which you in fact did create, and here we are in it.
This very distinction was hammered out at RDF and we did end up there with three threads on GW and climate change, just as we now have three identical threads here. And the skeptic thread at RDF was a very robust affair and was indeed much, much longer than the other two, probably longer than the other two combined. I don't recall ever seeing any posts from you in that thread, assuming your user handle was the same there as it is here, which I understand may not be the case. But nevertheless, there was ample opportunity at RDF for members to voice skepticism and/or denial and plenty of memnbers did exactly that.
I think MacDoc figured out that the skeptics thread at RDF was 100 pages in length.
Hence I fail to see how you
"read in that all of the other dogmatic, fundamentalist type behaviour that kept me out of these kind of threads at RDF." There was a skeptics thread at RDF, and as I've noted it was the most used and most robust of all three threads on the subject in that forum.
When we dealt with the question at RDF and tried to figure out what a good logical breakdown of the discussion might be we came up with three threads, 1) reporting on the science, 2) discussions the science and its policy implications, and 3) discussing skepticism and denialism.
A lot of work by a lot of people went into making that decision and arriving at what, in the end, turned out to be a very workable three-thread structure. It definitely satisfied all the needs that had been expressed regarding the best way to structure things.
When we came here, I think MacDoc decided that the best place to start was to duplicate RDF's three thread structure, which had worked so well. He asked me to create the "policy implications" thread, which I did, while he created the science reporing thread and we left the idea of a third or skeptics thread open to see if there was a demand for it.
That's why in the OP of the "policy implications" thread I started this statement was included:
Fact-Man wrote:
I would prefer that doubts or denials of that body of science not be debated here. Sceptical or denialist debate may be made the topic of another thread anyone may create should they wish.
which was an open invitation for yourself or anyone to create a skeptics thread, which you then proceeded to do, but only after dropping a bomb on my OP.
Mysturji wrote:
I felt more at home here, and thought I would be more likely to get a word in, because over there (it seemed to me the last time I tried to post in a CC thread) that anyone who doesn't completely toe the AGW Party line (even just a "yes, but...") is immediately shouted down by a pack of rabid wolves and dissed as completely ignorant of all science in all it's forms. The peanut gallery then chips in with a flurry of ad-homs, they pat each other on the back, then the wannabe Cali's step in with links to 23,971 peer-reviewed papers and say "See: Proof! Go away and don't come back until you're read it!". Because unlike the original version, they can't "Blind them with science" or construct a valid argument, so they BURY the poor fucker in cut&paste science for DARING to say "Yes, but...".
Well, you're exaggerating here.
The skeptics thread at RDF was home to several denialists and skeptics who persevered there literally for years, Zappi, Jij, Collegavanerik, JohnBrandt, Egrey, AM, and Luis Diaz, among others. The so-called "pack of rabid wolves" to which you allude didn't slow these folk down for a minute. Had you joined in you'd have had plenty of allies.
I won't say it wasn't rancorous at times or that members didn't give the moderator Gallstones a run for her moderating money, it certainly did become turbulent and angry and harsh from time to time, sometimes even for extended periods, but Gallstones managed to keep it generally in line, handing out more than a few month-long banishments to members on both sides of the issue.
Part of the problem in that thread was the repetition of already debunked arguments, Zappi was particualrly guilty of this transgression, and Jij wasn't far behind him. Can you understand how such repetitions can become frustrating to those on the other side of the issue? How many different times does an argument or a case have to be shot down? It seems once ought to be enough.
And perhaps especially when the skeptic/denialist community has been unable to proffer any peer-reviewed science that explains the warming that's been observed. AGW science does explain it, the denialosphere has failed to do so. There are no countervailing theories to AGW and what few that have been offered, e.g., natural variability, the sun's intensity, cosmic rays, water vapour, have all been shot down.
Mysturgi wrote:
It has become something of a cliche over at RDF, because fundies keep saying it, but in some cases it is true: To some people, science (especially the science of climate change) is a religion. They appear to have complete and utter faith in something they don't understand, and they act like science has all the answers.
Do you have faith that the jetliner you're about to climb aboard to fly off to Rio will actually get you there safe and sound? I can't think of anyone who would board such a jetliner without that kind of faith, yet few of them have any idea of the aeronautical science that underpins a jetliner's ability to do what it does.
I don't think that's any kind of religious faith at all, it's merely a reflection of the airplane's track record and the track record of commercial aviation.
We aren't and can't or won't all be scientists; at some point we all place faith in science and we do so largely on its track record. Medical patients do this routinely, subjecting themselves to medical procedures about which they have no clue of the science upon which they are based.
The idea that climate science was a new "religion" was put out there by the denialosphere ... as a means of denigrating the science and those who adhered to it. I always thought i was kind of funny that this charge would be levied on an
atheist site, of all places. It was pure demonization.
Mysturgi wrote:
People like that piss me off for being as ignorant as they accuse me of being, just for saying "yes, but..."
In the face of behaviour like that, I have rolled my eyes and bitten my tongue. I thought it would have been different here. My mistake.
I don't think it's a "mistake" at all and the reason I don't is because I'm convinced that if you post cogent arguments agaist AGW in this thread they will be taken seriously and seriously considered. And the truth is there's a Nobel awaiting anyone who does develop a scientific explanation for the warming we've observed that's not AGW.
It does however take some familiarity with the issue to do this, one has to know which arguments have already been debunked for example, one has to know AGW science pretty well and have some undertanding of where its weak spots may be. That's a fairly tall order but I'm the last guy who will claim it isn't possible.
I think the best approach is when you run across an argument you think has merit in debunking AGW to first throw it out there as a question, rather than as an assertion.
"I ran across this paper and it appears to me it debunks AGW, has it been discussed? Is it holding water? Can it be trusted? Is my source reliable? Then see what you get by way of response and carry on from there. That is, of course, a non-confrontional approach and is, rather, a collegial one.
Note that I did not accept the apology you proferred at the beginning, not because I don't think it's worth accepting but because I don't think it was necessary in the first place. I can and do appreciate the idea of it and the impetus that drove you to making it, but I just don't think you owed anyone an apolgy for anything.
I chalk these things up to the "heat of the battle," so to speak, and I know that all of us are capable of going off sometimes. No harm, no foul.
And this post is most assuredly not intended to be antagonistic but is rather offered as an
explanation of my own behavior and my interpretation of the events and the communications that have led us to this point.
So do enjoy your day and certainly chime in here with whatever you wish to say on the topic. There is
no animus or resentment, of that you may rest assured.
Cheers, eh? 