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Climate change a different take on what to do about it.

#2021 User is online   hrothgar 

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Posted 2014-December-03, 17:06

View PostAl_U_Card, on 2014-December-03, 16:16, said:

Wow, I really wield a lot of power and influence, invalidating peer-reviewed studies and the efforts of dozens of qualified scientists just by my quoting their results...This approach, however, does allow the avoidance of paying attention to the "disturbing" information. If an acolyte doesn't provide the advice, you must not listen to that of the profane, that is how belief-systems work, is it not?


How cute, the village idiot confuses mocking for respect...
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#2022 User is offline   Daniel1960 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 08:22

View Postmikeh, on 2014-December-03, 11:45, said:

One of my favourite writers is the late Stephen Jay Gould. He often wrote essays about scientific ideas that held sway for some time and are now forgotten or, if remembered, are ridiculed. He strove to put those ideas within the context of what was then understood about the way the world worked and, seen in that light, was able to show that those who came up with the ideas were actually (usually) intelligent thinkers, led astray by a lack of knowledge.

Thus I am very much aware of how science has moved in fits and starts. Mendelian genetics, and plate tectonics are classics of that type. However, the global warming debate seems unlikely to be subject to revision in the same manner as the mechanism of inheritance of physical attributes or the understanding of how Africa and South America seemed to 'match' in outline and geological features.

Indeed, the current research on climate change is more akin to the development of ideas that cause a change in the existing paradigm than to the notion that the IPCC (for one) opinion represents the old school that is about to be found to have been wrong.

More importantly, and disquietingly, the 'debate' on global warming largely pits profoundly and proudly ignorant people, who disdain science and understanding, against those who have dedicated their lives to learning about how this aspect of the world actually works.

This is especially true in the US, where it is commonplace for republican leaders to preface their refusal to accept scientific opinion as valid by saying 'I'm not a scientist but.....' where what follows is a rejection of science in favour of 'common sense' or biblically based beliefs.

Now this troll purports to quote 'science', but does so very selectively, and out of context. He correctly, as far as I can see, identifies instances in which the data suggests that some scenarios forecast by some researchers have not materialized. I don't know of any scientist who claims that his or her modelling is infallible. I don't know of any who claim that their understanding of climate is perfect or that forecasts are even as reliable as predicting tomorrow's weather.

Thus if one is willing to be intellectually dishonest, it is easy to show that some, and indeed many, of the predictions made over the last 30 years have not come true and to then argue that therefore the entire notion is a fraud or an error. Easy, but unfair and on a fundamental level, dishonest.

One can legitimately, from what little I know, argue that human understanding of the precise details of how global warming occurs and how it will develop is incomplete. That is not a valid argument to do nothing.

Imagine 4 of us standing in a road, seeing a large truck coming towards us. One of us argues that the truck is going slowly enough that we will only be seriously injured. Another, no, the truck's speed is such that we will be killed. A third person says that maybe we are miss-interpreting the direction of the truck....it will probably miss us. What should the 4th person do? Stand still and wait, or move to one side?

The climate change deniers are saying, in essence, that we should do nothing to get out of the way, since it is possible that we have miss-interpreted the direction of the truck. Actually, it is worse than that. To make the analogy more accurate, we need 101 people in the road, and 97 of them are saying we need to get out of the way, 3 are saying we stand put, and the 1 blind person, who needs to rely on the advice of others, prefers to listen to the 3 'truck-deniers'.

Or you have some symptoms. Tests are run. 100 medical specialists say you need surgery or you will die. 3 say that maybe the tests were inconclusive. Would you have surgery? Or would you go to your local Fox news personality for another opinion?

It's easy to find excuses not to accept bad news. Easy but foolish.

The problem with the debate about global warming is that too many people think there are only two "sides" to the debate, and that one or the other must be right. On one side, we have the group claiming that the warming experienced over the past century has all been manmade, and will multiply several fold in the coming years. On the other side, is the group claiming that all the warming was natural, and that mankind contributes little to the overall equation. They call each other "deniers" and "alarmists" in order to belittle their opponents in the eyes of the general populous. To state that only one of these groups is proudly ignorant and disdains science and understanding is a stretch.

What many people fail to realize is that these two groups are not only far apart from each other, but far apart from the scientific measurements and observations. Both sides claim that most scientists must agree with their position, because so few agree with the opposing view. The IPCC stated that there are very confident that at least half of the warming since 1950 is manmade (~0.3C). Most surveys of scientists show support for a 50:50 natural to manmade ratio, with others ranging from 0 to 100%. Based on the scientific data, warming as been fairly constant overall since the 19th century, with oscillating periods of greater and lesser warming. Each of the extreme sides will choose that period of data which best exemplies their position as proof of their stance; 1979-1998 or 1998-2014, depending on which side one is aligned. The same is done with sea ice measurements. Sea level rise has been fairly constant during that timeframe also; both the satellite data and tidal gauges show no trend change over their respective measurement periods. Additionally, using a particularly hot or cold, wet or dry year to claim support is extremely short-sighted and highly misleading.

I agree that our understanding of how global warming will develop is limited, as is our understanding of the global climate system. If mankind has caused global temperatures to rise 0.3C over the past 65 years, what justification would anyone have to state a significant deviation from this observation? Since mankind's contribution is expected to continue (whatever its exact portion), nature is unlikely to continue much longer. Some people seem to refer to the debate over AGW as the arguments between the two extreme positions mentioned previously, and conclude that there really is not a debate. Probably true, as neither of these sides really debates anything, rather it is better described as a barroom brawl. The debate that is occurring is over how much mankind and nature have contributed to the warming, and what the future results entail. This is critical in determing how much money need be spent immediately to alleviate potential problems, as opposed to spending money to develop the best long-term solutions, which benefit the most people. First world problems differ substantially from third world ones.

In your previous truck analogy, it may be better to say that its brakes fail going downhill. Thus, we have a combination of the truck's velocity and gravity weighing on the situation, with the debate over the initial speed of the vehicle. Standing in the middle of the road at the bottom of the hill would be foolish. However, standing at the top of the next hill would be a completely different story. Some deny that the intial velocity of the truck has any influence, but others deny the effects of gravity.
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#2023 User is online   PassedOut 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 09:04

View PostDaniel1960, on 2014-December-04, 08:22, said:

The problem with the debate about global warming is that too many people think there are only two "sides" to the debate, and that one or the other must be right. On one side, we have the group claiming that the warming experienced over the past century has all been manmade, and will multiply several fold in the coming years.

I'm not aware of anyone who insists that the warming "has all been manmade," but you might be right. Have you any references to back you up?

The manmade portion of the warming is the portion that we can control, hence the focus.
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#2024 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 09:51

View PostDaniel1960, on 2014-December-04, 08:22, said:

The problem with the debate about global warming is that too many people think there are only two "sides" to the debate, and that one or the other must be right. On one side, we have the group claiming that the warming experienced over the past century has all been manmade, and will multiply several fold in the coming years. On the other side, is the group claiming that all the warming was natural, and that mankind contributes little to the overall equation. They call each other "deniers" and "alarmists" in order to belittle their opponents in the eyes of the general populous. To state that only one of these groups is proudly ignorant and disdains science and understanding is a stretch.


I echo PassedOut: I think most who have followed the issue understand that there have always, as best we can tell, been fluctuations in global climate, Witness the fate of the Viking colonization of Greenland, for an example in fairly recent human history.

However, the consensus is undoubtedly that human activity is contributing significantly to the problem, to the extent that the magnitude of the changes appear to be far greater than anything seen since the last ice age came to an end, and the change is occurring far faster than purely natural change would occur Speed of change negatively impacts the ability of populations (of all forms of life) to adjust or adapt. Magnitude of change similarly affects adaptation.

Since there appears to be little we can (or should?) do to negate the natural component, the logical response ought surely to be to look at how we can deal with and limit the human contribution. I fail to see how there can be an honest debate over the need for that sort of response. The debate could, I expect, be over HOW we go about that, but that isn't what the deniers argue over. Just as do creationists claim there to be a debate about their view of human origins and those held by evolutionists(and there is a significant correlation between belief in creationism and science denial, tho the global warming deniers are by no means all creationists) the idiots who deny the man-made contributions to global warming pit irrational belief against actual observation and call it a debate.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
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#2025 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 10:44

View PostPassedOut, on 2014-December-04, 09:04, said:

The manmade portion of the warming is the portion that we can control, hence the focus.

I quite agree that we — whoever "we" is — should focus on what we can control, if there is a need for control. I'm not sure there's a need, even though a need is apparently "obvious" to some. I'm also not sure how much "we" can control, considering that none of any "we" I can identify is Emperor of Earth.
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#2026 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 10:53

View Postblackshoe, on 2014-December-04, 10:44, said:

I quite agree that we — whoever "we" is — should focus on what we can control, if there is a need for control. I'm not sure there's a need, even though a need is apparently "obvious" to some. I'm also not sure how much "we" can control, considering that none of any "we" I can identify is Emperor of Earth.

Let me ask you this: whose opinion on this matter should actually count? Yours, being ignorant on the topic (assuming you are no more than a reasonably well-read lay person), or the consensus opinion of the vast majority of those with extensive academic expertise and many years of dedicated study?

Do you ask your bus driver, your accountant, your daycare provider for medical advice or do you ask your doctor?

That is what is so bewildering about people like you. Intelligent but clinging to the notion that your unqualified skepticism should offset the warnings of those who actually know the subject.

The fact that YOU personally don't know any of the answers is no reason to reject the advice of those who do. Your attitude is a classic denier stance dressed up not as denial but as 'healthy skepticism'. It is innately dishonest since if we were discussing a field in which you had expertise, you would probably insist that your opinion counted more than the opinions of those with no expertise.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
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#2027 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 11:07

View PostPassedOut, on 2014-December-03, 11:15, said:

Ad hominem attacks are unpleasant, for sure. But how else does one deal with a dishonest poster? Everyone makes mistakes, and almost all of the posters here readily acknowledge mistakes when the mistakes are pointed out. Indeed, one of the main reasons for posting opinions clearly is to learn when one's opinions are wrong, to be able to correct them. Alucard (and lukewarm formerly) does not argue honestly, so why should he be treated as if he does?
IMO few posters acknowledge mistakes that are pointed out to them. Some believe they're right and sometimes they are. In a discussion group, we should confine criticism to disputing alleged facts and refuting arguments. Echoing PassedOut's favorite quotation

Friedrich Nietzsche said:

The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper.

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#2028 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 11:09

Denial seems to me to be first and foremost a position based on political ideology, i.e., faith-based, and as such does not respond to factual observations.
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#2029 User is offline   Daniel1960 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 12:16

View PostPassedOut, on 2014-December-04, 09:04, said:

I'm not aware of anyone who insists that the warming "has all been manmade," but you might be right. Have you any references to back you up?

The manmade portion of the warming is the portion that we can control, hence the focus.

Yes. These characters, with whom I have had several arguments in the past, not only conclude that the warming is all manmade, but that natural contributions are cooling the Earth, leading them to claim that mankind has cause more than 100% of the warming. Unfortunately, many people follow this site.

http://www.skeptical...aphics.php?g=57

On the other side, you have these clowns claiming that manmade emissions of carbon dioxide are cooling the Earth.

http://hockeyschtick...o2-is-100x.html
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#2030 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 12:31

Again guys manmade pollution or global warming is natural. To separate the two is not science. To say we cannot influence natural factors that effect global warming is not science. Man is fully nature, what man creates or destroys is fully nature and natural. The debate is not whether we will try and bend nature to mankind's will but how much,how fast and what are the costs involved.

In this forum the debate seems to be millions if not billions of humans are going to die from global climate change if we do not impose huge costs on our economy. They are going to die soon. If you wont impose those huge costs today you don't care about people.

Al seems to say the science does not say this. But I don't think Al is against clean air and drinking water. I don't think Al is against imposing costs to clean the air and water at the very least.

then people quote nonsense such as 97% as if science is a popularity contest or experts never get the science wrong. Doctors get stuff wrong all the time just look at smoking or transfat, experts are wrong all the time.

One way to look at the burden of evidence is what the detractors say, they will uncover the worst of the scholar's argument. Is there basically zero evidence that the opposite of the thesis is remotely right?

I think one common mistake made is mistaking evidence of no harm for no evidence of harm. The first principle of iatrogenics is as follows: we do not need evidence of harm to claim a drug or climate change or an unnatural via positive procedure is dangerous. Harm is in the future, not in the narrowly defined past.
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#2031 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 12:47

View Postmike777, on 2014-December-04, 12:31, said:



then people quote nonsense such as 97% as if science is a popularity contest or experts never get the science wrong. Doctors get stuff wrong all the time just look at smoking or transfat, experts are wrong all the time.

No....people like you who take nuggets of information as if they show the whole story are (usually) 'wrong all the time'

There were some studies done by some unethical scientists that misrepresented the safety of smoking, but even amongst the industry funded studies there were findings that smoking was extremely dangerous in the long term, and addictive. The real problem was the executives who, despite what their experts were telling them, lied.\

In the meantime, a number of experts for years argued precisely that: and eventually the truth came out.

As for the 97%, only an idiot would argue that when 97% of a large community of experts....actual, real, live people with doctorates and experience and credentials, and peer-reviewed publications....express a view on the subject-matter in which they are expert, the preponderance of opinion is meaningless.......you have watched too much Fox news, Mike....'experts are wrong all the time' is the 'rationalization' of people who don't understand what they are discussing.
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#2032 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 12:56

View Postmikeh, on 2014-December-04, 12:47, said:

No....people like you who take nuggets of information as if they show the whole story are (usually) 'wrong all the time'

There were some studies done by some unethical scientists that misrepresented the safety of smoking, but even amongst the industry funded studies there were findings that smoking was extremely dangerous in the long term, and addictive. The real problem was the executives who, despite what their experts were telling them, lied.\

In the meantime, a number of experts for years argued precisely that: and eventually the truth came out.

As for the 97%, only an idiot would argue that when 97% of a large community of experts....actual, real, live people with doctorates and experience and credentials, and peer-reviewed publications....express a view on the subject-matter in which they are expert, the preponderance of opinion is meaningless.......you have watched too much Fox news, Mike....'experts are wrong all the time' is the 'rationalization' of people who don't understand what they are discussing.


MikeH , please quote my posts in full and don't take only a nugget and then attack me.
You in fact are only taking nuggets of information on smoking and trans fat and the history of science and experts.

In fact I never said 97% of their views are meaningless, this is your spin, not mine.
I said science is not a popularity contest. Quoting that 97% number over and over again is not science, it is a crude shortcut.

I did not mention fox news you did.

You clearly do not know the history of the science done on smoking or trans fat and doctors. You only mention a small, very small part of that history. In fact you can go across the history of time and find experts are wrong, you actually can find experts who have been wrong across the history of time. New evidence opens them to admit mistakes and move on. As Winston puts it new observations.

Then you attack me

One way to look at the burden of evidence is what the detractors say, they will uncover the worst of the scholar's argument. Is there basically zero evidence that the opposite of the thesis is remotely right?

I think one common mistake made is mistaking evidence of no harm for no evidence of harm. The first principle of iatrogenics is as follows: we do not need evidence of harm to claim a drug or climate change or an unnatural via positive procedure is dangerous. Harm is in the future, not in the narrowly defined past.
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#2033 User is offline   Daniel1960 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 13:12

View Postmikeh, on 2014-December-04, 12:47, said:

No....people like you who take nuggets of information as if they show the whole story are (usually) 'wrong all the time'

There were some studies done by some unethical scientists that misrepresented the safety of smoking, but even amongst the industry funded studies there were findings that smoking was extremely dangerous in the long term, and addictive. The real problem was the executives who, despite what their experts were telling them, lied.\

In the meantime, a number of experts for years argued precisely that: and eventually the truth came out.

As for the 97%, only an idiot would argue that when 97% of a large community of experts....actual, real, live people with doctorates and experience and credentials, and peer-reviewed publications....express a view on the subject-matter in which they are expert, the preponderance of opinion is meaningless.......you have watched too much Fox news, Mike....'experts are wrong all the time' is the 'rationalization' of people who don't understand what they are discussing.

To you even know to what the 97% you quote refers? That is the percentage of climate scientists who believe that the Earth has warmed - all causes included. I do not think many people here are arguing that the planet has not warmed over the past two centuries. You seem to be making the fallacious jump from 97% believing that the globe has warmed to 97% believing that mankind is causing global warming. Others make the same mistake, including my friends at the aforementioned website. The percentage of scientists believing the latter is much lower.

Various news agencies and websites are highly biased in their reports on this subject. Accusing others of being misinformed, based on slanted news coverage, may require a little self-reflection.
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#2034 User is online   hrothgar 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 13:19

View Postmike777, on 2014-December-04, 12:56, said:


You clearly do not know the history of the science done on smoking or trans fat and doctors. You only mention a small, very small part of that history.


For christ's sakes. Many of the best known climate skeptic lobbying groups grew out of organizations that played the precise same role supporting big tobacco.
(The Heartland Institute is the protypical example, but there are plenty of others)

This is a well documented fact.
Alderaan delenda est
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#2035 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 13:22

Of course and that is only a part of the history of the science of smoking and trans fat. I have stated the agency problem many times when people quote studies.
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#2036 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 13:26

FWiw Here is my simple ecological policy. Many of these ideas are taken from various sources.

We know that fossil fuels are harmful in a nonlinear way. The harm is necessarily concave (if a little bit of it is devoid of harm, a lot can cause climatic disturbances). While on epistemological grounds, because of opacity, we do not need to believe in anthropogenic climate change in order to be ecologically conservative, we can put these convexity effects to use producing a risk management rule for pollution.

Simply, just as with size, split your sources of pollution among many natural sources. The harm from polluting with ten different sources is smaller than the equivalent pollution from a single source.*

*(Volatility and uncertainty are equivalent. Accordingly, note that the fragile is harmed by an increase in uncertainty.)

Taleb
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#2037 User is online   hrothgar 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 14:00

View Postmike777, on 2014-December-04, 13:26, said:

FWiw Here is my simple ecological policy. Many of these ideas are taken from various sources.

We know that fossil fuels are harmful in a nonlinear way. The harm is necessarily concave (if a little bit of it is devoid of harm, a lot can cause climatic disturbances). While on epistemological grounds, because of opacity, we do not need to believe in anthropogenic climate change in order to be ecologically conservative, we can put these convexity effects to use producing a risk management rule for pollution.

Simply, just as with size, split your sources of pollution among many natural sources. The harm from polluting with ten different sources is smaller than the equivalent pollution from a single source.*

*(Volatility and uncertainty are equivalent. Accordingly, note that the fragile is harmed by an increase in uncertainty.)


Remarkable that you can throw around all these high falutin words without every introducing the term "externality" or recognizing the fact that if all of your pollution sources are producing the same pollutant (namely carbon) than all your talk about convexity is a big misdirection.
Alderaan delenda est
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#2038 User is online   PassedOut 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 14:12

View Posthrothgar, on 2014-December-04, 14:00, said:

Remarkable that you can throw around all these high falutin words, without every introducing the term "externality", not recognize the fact that if all of your pollution sources are producing the same pollutant (namely carbon) than all your talk about convexity is a big misdirection.

That's what happens when you pull an isolated quote from page 287 of Taleb's book, Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder.
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#2039 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 14:22

View PostDaniel1960, on 2014-December-04, 13:12, said:

To you even know to what the 97% you quote refers? That is the percentage of climate scientists who believe that the Earth has warmed - all causes included. I do not think many people here are arguing that the planet has not warmed over the past two centuries. You seem to be making the fallacious jump from 97% believing that the globe has warmed to 97% believing that mankind is causing global warming. Others make the same mistake, including my friends at the aforementioned website. The percentage of scientists believing the latter is much lower.

Various news agencies and websites are highly biased in their reports on this subject. Accusing others of being misinformed, based on slanted news coverage, may require a little self-reflection.

I do not think, have never thought, and find it weird that you think I thought that 97% of climate scientists think that all global warming is human-made. I was criticizing the ultra-lunatic fringe who say that none of it is. I suspect that you and I are largely ad idem on the topic, so I have trouble understanding why you keep criticizing me for things you presumably think I wrote when I didn't :D

There is room for and, as far as I can tell, need for a real debate about climate change, but the debate is about how to deal with it, not whether it exists or whether human activity contributes to it. That's where, as I understand it, the 97% figure comes from (and I will readily admit that since I got that number from various media sources, it isn't clear precisely how the number was generated, who is included in the sample who arguably ought not to have been and who was excluded who arguably ought to be included. The 97% figure is merely a shorthand way of saying 'by far the majority')
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
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#2040 User is online   hrothgar 

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Posted 2014-December-04, 14:27

View PostPassedOut, on 2014-December-04, 14:12, said:

That's what happens when you pull an isolated quote from page 287 of Taleb's book, Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder.


Thanks for the reference. FWIW, here's a more representative quote from Taleb

Quote

Climate Change. I am hyper-conservative ecologically (meaning super-Green). My position on the climate is to avoid releasing pollutants in the atmosphere, on the basis of ignorance, regardless of current expert opinion (climate experts, like banking risk managers, have failed us in the past in foreseeing long term damages and I cannot accept certainty in a certain class of nonlinear models). This is an extension of my general idea that one does not need rationalization with the use of complicated models (by fallible experts) to the edict: "do not disturb a complex system" since we do not know the consequences of our actions owing to complicated causal webs.


Quote

“Perhaps the worst of this story,” Mr. Taleb added, “is the fan mail I’ve been getting from right-wing anti-environmentalists.”

Alderaan delenda est
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