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Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
gosh its gone quiet in here ;-)
how does that song go? there are more questions than answers though im not sure how the more that you find out the less you know :-) ) |
Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
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Given the amount of funding to be had at the moment (providing your study is related to climate change in some way), I wonder whether vested interests play a part here? |
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I also think it is naive to believe that the oil industry is the only vested interest here. As I said earlier, there is a lot of research money to be had at the moment, for people willing to give their time over to researching climate change. |
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btw, what ever happened to "Freedom of Speech" ;) ps I believe that Global Warming is happening, just uncomfortable when groups say what and what can't be researched - if the research these "cod" groups produce is untrue, surely peer review will kill it dead. |
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Basically, a researcher submits an article to a journal. The journal then sends the manuscript out to a number of people who are considered knowledgeable in the area. These people (typically 3 or 4) independently critique the paper and give a verdict of accept/reject/accept given modifications. The journal's editor then makes a decision based on these reviews. It's about selecting the research that is good enough to get published. A similar process is used in bids for research funds from the research councils. Quote:
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/...876541,00.html Public Debate usually takes the form of one side taking the side of the affirmative, with the burden of advocating and proving the resolution, and the other debater takes the side of the negative, with the burden of refuting the affirmative's case. Not saying "Stop it, it's wrong";) Oh, and this is on the Royal Society's website http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/page.asp?id=4688&tip=1 "Thus at bottom, it is very difficult to separate human induced change from natural change, certainly not with the confidence we all seek. In these circumstances, it is essential to remember that the inability to prove human-induced change is not the same thing as a demonstration of its absence. It is probably true that most scientists would assign a very high probability that human-induced change is already strongly present in the climate system, while at the same time agreeing that clear-cut proof is not now available and may not be available for a long-time to come, if ever. Public policy has to be made on the basis of probabilities, not firm proof." |
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as for freedom of speech, well if you have a lot of cash, from wherever it comes, your speech can be a helluva lot freer because you have greater access to mass communication mediums. |
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Re: Global warming 'past the point of no return'
this is what the royal society has to say about climate change and the arguments put forward against it: http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/downloaddoc.asp?id=1630 they certainly see the us oil industry's opposition to kyoto etc as being key to the 'research' findings they present.
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in an ideal world freedom of speech would be matched by equal access to communication of that speech. an impossible dream obviously but im sure yoi can see the point im making in that those with power and/or money can reach more people than humble mortals like me and you. this is, though, another debate :-) |
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As I said, I think what the Oil companies are doing is equivalent to what the Tobacco companies did (and are still trying to do) at the end of the 20th Century - however, trying to "ban" the funding of research sets an awfully dangerous precedent; let's hope no fundamentalist vegetarian anti-vivisectionists get in charge, or they could "ban" medical research based upon animal testing (but, as you say, that's another thread). As you have so often said in other threads, these rights are fundamental, and any encroachment on them weakens them.:) |
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one of the key points here is that exxon is funding multiple organisations (which the rs says are of dubious origin) rather than a single, reputable scientific orghanisation. This, the rs alleges, suggests that opposition to the general scientific consensus is more widespread than it in fact is. In short, my reading is that they are saying its just a pr tactic. |
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One columnist I read this weekend - either the Sunday Express or Sunday Herald, I forget which - suggested that some climate scientists are beginning to sound worryingly like a priestood, for whom climate change is an article of faith, rather than a scientific theory open to challenge and revision. |
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