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sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) (sci.geo.meteorology) For the discussion of meteorology and related topics. |
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#21
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A scientist does not end at conjecture, using data he moves on.
Please do some work and get some references or hard numbers. |
#22
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On Tue, 24 May 2005 21:45:53 GMT, "Coby Beck"
"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message On Tue, 24 May 2005 19:03:34 GMT, "Coby Beck" Two problems for me with using summer and winter to make the general point about short term chaotic behaviour and long term patterns. First, it is not really an analogy about climate and weather, it is the very issue at hand. Analogies work by putting an aspect of the unfamiliar into a familiar context. Second, the cycle of summer-winter can be thought of as a steady state, cettainly it is not a pattern that will be affected by global warming (at least not in a broad sense). I think it does not successfully isolate the easiest way to debunk the classic "you don't know if it will rain tomorrow, how can you tell it will be warmer in 100 yrs". Climate is per definition average weather, so there are two operators in that classic, one, how can you predict average weather, when you cannot predict isolated instances of weather, and two, how can you predict the average result of some forcing which influences the weather, when you cannot predict what will result from that forcing on any particular day. I'd say the cyclical annual change in insolation over the seasons should demonstrate quite well, that one can indeed predict the former rather more reliably than the latter. Yes, this all make perfect sense. I guess the deeper philisophical question here is how to provide a serious and thoughtful rebuttal to a shallow and ridiculous claim. I think a shallow and ridiculous claim cannot be dealt with the same way in circumstances where 'reason is king' is acknowledged, as it can in circumstances where that is not the case. In the former case rebuttal would likely center on the claim itself, the assumptions that underlies it, and its implications. In the latter case the strategy would likely have to be completely different, the weight being put on discreditation of the claim by any effective means, with no options taken off the table, rather than through strictly rational rebuttal. A thoroughly scientifically minded person would not be very good at this. |
#23
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"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
news ![]() On Tue, 24 May 2005 21:45:53 GMT, "Coby Beck" Yes, this all make perfect sense. I guess the deeper philisophical question here is how to provide a serious and thoughtful rebuttal to a shallow and ridiculous claim. I think a shallow and ridiculous claim cannot be dealt with the same way in circumstances where 'reason is king' is acknowledged, as it can in circumstances where that is not the case. In the former case rebuttal would likely center on the claim itself, the assumptions that underlies it, and its implications. In the latter case the strategy would likely have to be completely different, the weight being put on discreditation of the claim by any effective means, with no options taken off the table, rather than through strictly rational rebuttal. A thoroughly scientifically minded person would not be very good at this. One qualification to this: I think that motive is an essential element, and the motive of whomever puts forward the argument is actually more critical in terms of the best response tactic than is the quality of the argument. The "weather vs climate" fallacy can actually be offered up sincerely by naive rather than manipulative people. I think one of the biggest challenges scientist face in dealing with lay people is determining what is obvious or not and what points can be taken for granted. Being wrong on these counts can lead to misinterpretation of questions or confusions. -- Coby Beck (remove #\Space "coby 101 @ bigpond . com") |
#24
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On Thu, 26 May 2005 20:05:42 GMT, "Coby Beck"
"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message I think a shallow and ridiculous claim cannot be dealt with the same way in circumstances where 'reason is king' is acknowledged, as it can in circumstances where that is not the case. In the former case rebuttal would likely center on the claim itself, the assumptions that underlies it, and its implications. In the latter case the strategy would likely have to be completely different, the weight being put on discreditation of the claim by any effective means, with no options taken off the table, rather than through strictly rational rebuttal. A thoroughly scientifically minded person would not be very good at this. One qualification to this: I think that motive is an essential element, and the motive of whomever puts forward the argument is actually more critical in terms of the best response tactic than is the quality of the argument. The "weather vs climate" fallacy can actually be offered up sincerely by naive rather than manipulative people. Surely motive is an essential element. However -- it is hard if not impossible to gauge motives on a medium like this. What one can gauge is whether it is possible to engage the other person in a meaningful dialog. That should IMO in all cases be attempted. Dialog is a deadly weapon against manipulation, if it succeeds, manipulation will have to cease. But, if it sorely fails, one should be willing to change tack, to use language in a different mode, as a stick or a whip, rather than a tool for discourse. Importantly, if it comes to that, it must be done with cold deliberation rather than out of frustration and anger. I think one of the biggest challenges scientist face in dealing with lay people is determining what is obvious or not and what points can be taken for granted. Being wrong on these counts can lead to misinterpretation of questions or confusions. Yes, that is true, but if a dialog can be got going, the frailties of language, the inevitable misinterpretations and language use confusion should not pose insurmountable problems. |
#25
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"Torsten Brinch" wrote in message
... On Thu, 26 May 2005 20:05:42 GMT, "Coby Beck" "Torsten Brinch" wrote in message I think a shallow and ridiculous claim cannot be dealt with the same way in circumstances where 'reason is king' is acknowledged, as it can in circumstances where that is not the case. In the former case rebuttal would likely center on the claim itself, the assumptions that underlies it, and its implications. In the latter case the strategy would likely have to be completely different, the weight being put on discreditation of the claim by any effective means, with no options taken off the table, rather than through strictly rational rebuttal. A thoroughly scientifically minded person would not be very good at this. One qualification to this: I think that motive is an essential element, and the motive of whomever puts forward the argument is actually more critical in terms of the best response tactic than is the quality of the argument. The "weather vs climate" fallacy can actually be offered up sincerely by naive rather than manipulative people. Surely motive is an essential element. However -- it is hard if not impossible to gauge motives on a medium like this. What one can gauge is whether it is possible to engage the other person in a meaningful dialog. That should IMO in all cases be attempted. Dialog is a deadly weapon against manipulation, if it succeeds, manipulation will have to cease. But, if it sorely fails, one should be willing to change tack, to use language in a different mode, as a stick or a whip, rather than a tool for discourse. Importantly, if it comes to that, it must be done with cold deliberation rather than out of frustration and anger. Nicely said. (This is just a "me too" post ![]() -- Coby Beck (remove #\Space "coby 101 @ bigpond . com") |
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