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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#11
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On 2010-12-26 09:24:32 +0000, Graham Easterling said:
On Dec 25, 8:34*pm, Trevor Harley wrote: On 2010-12-25 18:00:46 +0000, Adrian said: On 2010-12-25, Trevor Harley wrote: Whatever happened to making predictions and seeing what happens, rathe r than interpreting evey piece of evidence post hoc in support of your theory? I think you missed the bit about the paper having been submitted for publication over a year ago. It is a shame the process of review has taken so long. Adrian But last winter was cold too. A few years ago when we were having dire wet mild winters several papers were being cited then showing they were just what GW predicted, too. Still, time will tell. -- Trevor A little sceptical in Lundie, near Dundee Weather throughwww.trevorharley.com I think it's important to distingush between global warming - which is happening, and predictions as to what the effects of this might be. It's the uncertainty which is the main danger of global warming. It's also important not to take all headlines at face value. I suspect most people think storminess (with regard to wind) has increased in the UK over the last decade, when they couldn't be more wrong. From a less cold (currently near 6C), cloudy & now quite windy Penzance. Graham Penzance But how else can we evaluate the GW hypothesis apart from the predictions it makes? And IF it really does make contradictory predictions that can account for any observied outcome, then it's not a true scientific hypothesis. It's a pseudoscience, like psychoanalysis. Now it could be that this new paper predicting colder winters explains why earlier predictions about mild wet winters were wrong, and those who made those predictions agree with the cold winter hypothesis. Then we shall just have to see, but it's going to take many winters before we can really tell. While not disputing the basic theory, I am left with a nagging feeling that many GW supporters want it both ways, and are willing to attribute any deviation from the long-term mean (even an insignificant) to a proof of GW. The snow is still 7 cm deep here. -- Trevor Curious in Lundie, near Dundee Weather through www.trevorharley.com |
#12
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On Dec 25, 8:34*pm, Trevor Harley wrote:
On 2010-12-25 18:00:46 +0000, Adrian said: On 2010-12-25, Trevor Harley wrote: Whatever happened to making predictions and seeing what happens, rather than interpreting evey piece of evidence post hoc in support of your theory? I think you missed the bit about the paper having been submitted for publication over a year ago. It is a shame the process of review has taken so long. Adrian But last winter was cold too. A few years ago when we were having dire wet mild winters several papers were being cited then showing they were just what GW predicted, too. Still, time will tell. -- Trevor A little sceptical in Lundie, near Dundee Weather throughwww.trevorharley.com Time will tell. The Independent's hack has woken up to Petoukhov's research. Good for him. Lockwood's research from 2010 also points to something similar. Both are interesting possibilities, but Keith's point about it being decades until research points to one, or the other theory being verified by outcomes is what we'll have to wait for. I don't agree at all with your point that whatever happens, it's due to GW. That's just a soundbite and would not be reflected in the scientific iterature, at all. Regional variations will happen and whether individual ones can be linked to GW is just moot. Actually, probably not even moot; I'd go for highly unlikely. This cold December, in the UK and parts of last winter, are down to unusual synoptics at the moment; there's just no proof of anything different happening. If any other factor is at work, it will take a long period of time to show. Meanwhile, GW unequivocally continues, whether, it is causing these events, or not. Again, whether that GW is caused by CO2, though extremely likely, given the avalanche of excellent, peer- reviewed research, that I'm sure you'd appreciate, still has room for debate - but not much, given that November 2010 had record global temperatures (GISS) and the meteorological year 2010 is a record for the GISS sequence, despite a plethora of cooling influences, not least moderate La Nina conditions and a 3.5 year solar minimum, which is just beginning to end. Paul - still a tiny bit sceptical in Dawlish, but, in the words of the forgettable Paul Daniels; "not a lot". |
#13
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On Dec 26, 9:40*am, Trevor Harley wrote:
On 2010-12-26 09:24:32 +0000, Graham Easterling said: On Dec 25, 8:34 pm, Trevor Harley wrote: On 2010-12-25 18:00:46 +0000, Adrian said: On 2010-12-25, Trevor Harley wrote: Whatever happened to making predictions and seeing what happens, rathe r than interpreting evey piece of evidence post hoc in support of your theory? I think you missed the bit about the paper having been submitted for publication over a year ago. It is a shame the process of review has taken so long. Adrian But last winter was cold too. A few years ago when we were having dire wet mild winters several papers were being cited then showing they were just what GW predicted, too. Still, time will tell. -- Trevor A little sceptical in Lundie, near Dundee Weather throughwww.trevorharley.com I think it's important to distingush between global warming - which is happening, and predictions as to what the effects of this might be. It's the uncertainty which is the main danger of global warming. It's also important not to take all headlines at face value. I suspect most people think storminess (with regard to wind) has increased in the UK over the last decade, when they couldn't be more wrong. From a less cold (currently near 6C), cloudy & now quite windy Penzance. Graham Penzance But how else can we evaluate the GW hypothesis apart from the predictions it makes? And IF it really does make contradictory predictions that can account for any observied outcome, then it's not a true scientific hypothesis. It's a pseudoscience, like psychoanalysis. Now it could be that this new paper predicting colder winters explains why earlier predictions about mild wet winters were wrong, and those who made those predictions agree with the cold winter hypothesis. Then we shall just have to see, but it's going to take many winters before we can really tell. While not disputing the basic theory, I am left with a nagging feeling that many GW supporters want it both ways, and are willing to attribute any deviation from the long-term mean (even an insignificant) to a proof of GW. The snow is still 7 cm deep here. -- Trevor Curious in Lundie, near Dundee Weather throughwww.trevorharley.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Opinions from "supporters" or "deniers" don't count for anything really. The academic research says it all. )) |
#14
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"Trevor Harley" wrote:
.... But how else can we evaluate the GW hypothesis apart from the predictions it makes? And IF it really does make contradictory predictions that can account for any observied outcome, then it's not a true scientific hypothesis. It's a pseudoscience, like psychoanalysis. The large-scale predictions are being borne out by observations, e.g. the climate as a whole is warming, the Arctic is warming faster than average, atmospheric water vapour is rising and leading to an increase in intense precipitation events, sea level is rising and so on. Predictions are bound to be less certain over smaller areas and shorter timescales. I don't think getting some of the detail wrong makes it pseudoscience. |
#15
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On Dec 26, 10:18*am, "Togless" wrote:
"Trevor Harley" wrote: ... But how else can we evaluate the GW hypothesis apart from the predictions it makes? And IF it really does make contradictory predictions that can account for any observied outcome, then it's not a true scientific hypothesis. It's a pseudoscience, like psychoanalysis. The large-scale predictions are being borne out by observations, e.g. the climate as a whole is warming, the Arctic is warming faster than average, atmospheric water vapour is rising and leading to an increase in intense precipitation events, sea level is rising and so on. *Predictions are bound to be less certain over smaller areas and shorter timescales. *I don't think getting some of the detail wrong makes it pseudoscience. Well put. Graham Penzance |
#16
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On 2010-12-26, Len Wood wrote:
Quiite foolish trying to solve nonlinear, second order differential equations on this time and space scale. I'm not sure that nonlinear second order differential equations would have played any part in the computer model used in this study, and nor should they necessarily have done so. Adrian -- Adrian Shaw ais@ Pontrhydygroes, Ceredigion, Cymru aber. 12mi/20km ESE Aberystwyth, 860ft/260m asl ac. http://users.aber.ac.uk/ais/weather/ uk |
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