Oh dear.
Well I guess that asserting that you know what would have been in my head in an alternate universe when I was alive in Sandwich, 1906 is a small step in the right direction compared with musing publicly about my mastabatory habits (perhaps you need to get out more?). But really, just making your opponents arguments up so you can ridicule them (Straw Man) is not going to convince anyone sensible.
Same goes for Dodgy with his ' Spare us the "I care" bo**ocks'. Here's a hint: read what was actually said and engage with that. I never used the words you decry as bollocks. Again, you'll be be more persuasive if you don't make stuff up.
Debating trick No. 2, reframe the debate
Really? The science is irrelevant? The science dates back to the work of John Tyndall and later Svante Arrenhuis who in 1896 came up with the first and surprisingly accurate estimates of the greenhouse effect and how it could warm the world if 'carbonic acid' accumulated in the atmosphere...
Svante Arrhenius - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Was he motivated by a desire to enable George Osbourne to impose green taxes? Seems implausible. What I do find interesting is the well-documented willingness of those on the right to dismiss and deny the science if the policy implications are that some kind of collective action for the common good may be required, to the extent that they will embrace the blatent lies and demonstrably false output of intellectual minnows like Delingpole and Booker (Watts, Goddard) because it suits their ideology even though it stands in implacable opposition to the conclusions of the vast majority of studies, scientists and the position statements of virtually 100% of scientific associations.
Scientific opinion on climate change - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Science, at its best, is an attempt to discover the truth about our universe, as Wittgenstein proposed to describe: 'everything that is the case.'. It is an imperfect enterprise, constantly self-correcting and self-improving. But to dismiss it as 'irrelevant' and to embrace instead pundits who are quite happy to promulgate stuff that they know, and we know, is not the case... well blow me, that's zealotry.
Well I guess that asserting that you know what would have been in my head in an alternate universe when I was alive in Sandwich, 1906 is a small step in the right direction compared with musing publicly about my mastabatory habits (perhaps you need to get out more?). But really, just making your opponents arguments up so you can ridicule them (Straw Man) is not going to convince anyone sensible.
Same goes for Dodgy with his ' Spare us the "I care" bo**ocks'. Here's a hint: read what was actually said and engage with that. I never used the words you decry as bollocks. Again, you'll be be more persuasive if you don't make stuff up.
Debating trick No. 2, reframe the debate
The science is irrelevant as it just contributes to the arguments on both sides according to how it is interpreted.
Svante Arrhenius - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Was he motivated by a desire to enable George Osbourne to impose green taxes? Seems implausible. What I do find interesting is the well-documented willingness of those on the right to dismiss and deny the science if the policy implications are that some kind of collective action for the common good may be required, to the extent that they will embrace the blatent lies and demonstrably false output of intellectual minnows like Delingpole and Booker (Watts, Goddard) because it suits their ideology even though it stands in implacable opposition to the conclusions of the vast majority of studies, scientists and the position statements of virtually 100% of scientific associations.
Scientific opinion on climate change - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Science, at its best, is an attempt to discover the truth about our universe, as Wittgenstein proposed to describe: 'everything that is the case.'. It is an imperfect enterprise, constantly self-correcting and self-improving. But to dismiss it as 'irrelevant' and to embrace instead pundits who are quite happy to promulgate stuff that they know, and we know, is not the case... well blow me, that's zealotry.
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