But what does he know ?

David
Recently, he was misquoted in a magazine interview: he was said to believe aliens built them.mrflora wrote:Burt Rutan also believes that aliens built the pyramids.
Regards,
M.R.F.
Expalain how those statements are mutually exclusive.jmc wrote:I notice he shares the climate skeptic's tendency towards schizophrenia. He simultaneously states;
1) There's no proof that global warming is a happening
2) The increased global temperatures would be good rather than bad.
Killing off a billion or three humans might work as well. Which draconian reductions in CO2 output in the time frames imagined just might produce. You can never be too precautionary.In anycase this isn't a case of overhype global warming and people die. Its a case of ignore global warming and people could die. Reducing CO2 emmissions is a reasonable precautionary meassure.
Regarding temperature change being good, it really depends on what timescale we're taking about. A slow increase in temperature of a few degrees over 10,000 years might well be good a rapid increase in temperature in 100 years by the same ammount could be catastrophic.
So far the highest rate estimated from adjusted data is about 3.3 mm a year. About a foot a century. Even triple that would be easy to handle.Rising sea-levels won't flood that much of the Earth's surface, its just that 1/2 the world's population lives on the bits that will be flooded. The average turnover of house construction is about 100 years. If sealevels rose significantly in 50 years it would be an absolute disaster.
There is a correlation all right. Sometimes CO2 rise is coincident or slightly before temp rise. (according to ice cores) Sometimes it follows by 200 to 800 years. Seems like solid proof (of something) to me.So far there we have a historical correlation between CO2 and rising temperatures, we've also learnt enough about methane hydrates and positive feedback from the reduced albedo of melting ice to get worried. As I said before the burden of proof is on the skeptics to show there isn't a problem.
Talking to the hand is a waste of time. You will get better results talking to India and China.The Earth is a complex self-regulating system and we don't understand what the climatological effects of perturbing it will be. We known we're emmitting enough CO2 to significantly change the chemical composition of the atmosphere, unless were sure that this is safe we should stop at the earliest convenient opportunity.
A) The AGW hypothesis states that the activities of human beings are causing global warming. If your arguing against the theory that humans are causing global warming, its irrelevant whether a temperature rise would be good or bad.MSimon wrote:A) Expalain how those statements are mutually exclusive.jmc wrote:I notice he shares the climate skeptic's tendency towards schizophrenia. He simultaneously states;
1) There's no proof that global warming is a happening
2) The increased global temperatures would be good rather than bad.
B) Killing off a billion or three humans might work as well. Which draconian reductions in CO2 output in the time frames imagined just might produce. You can never be too precautionary.In anycase this isn't a case of overhype global warming and people die. Its a case of ignore global warming and people could die. Reducing CO2 emmissions is a reasonable precautionary meassure.
Regarding temperature change being good, it really depends on what timescale we're taking about. A slow increase in temperature of a few degrees over 10,000 years might well be good a rapid increase in temperature in 100 years by the same ammount could be catastrophic.
C)Yes it could be. So far the variations in temperature seem to be in the +/- 1 deg C or less range. And such fluctuations are normal over 100 year or longer time scales.
c)So far the highest rate estimated from adjusted data is about 3.3 mm a year. About a foot a century. Even triple that would be easy to handle.Rising sea-levels won't flood that much of the Earth's surface, its just that 1/2 the world's population lives on the bits that will be flooded. The average turnover of house construction is about 100 years. If sealevels rose significantly in 50 years it would be an absolute disaster.
D)There is a correlation all right. Sometimes CO2 rise is coincident or slightly before temp rise. (according to ice cores) Sometimes it follows by 200 to 800 years. Seems like solid proof (of something) to me.So far there we have a historical correlation between CO2 and rising temperatures, we've also learnt enough about methane hydrates and positive feedback from the reduced albedo of melting ice to get worried. As I said before the burden of proof is on the skeptics to show there isn't a problem.
E)The burden of proof is on you to prove that the money wouldn't be better spent on large meteor protection or defusing the Yellowstone Caldera. Or advanced agriculture or fusion research or water purification or any number of really good things.
F)Talking to the hand is a waste of time. You will get better results talking to India and China.The Earth is a complex self-regulating system and we don't understand what the climatological effects of perturbing it will be. We known we're emmitting enough CO2 to significantly change the chemical composition of the atmosphere, unless were sure that this is safe we should stop at the earliest convenient opportunity.
G)Plants thrive at CO2 concentrations of 5,000 ppm. However humans have some trouble at those levels and above. I say keep it below 1,500 ppm. That is a nice compromise between plants and animals. Plants deserve our chemical love.
A) No, this is basic risk management theory -- a given chance of catastrophe is much worse that the same chance of nothing much. If you think there is a 10% AGW is happening, then your response must be dictated by how bad that outcome would be.A) The AGW hypothesis states that the activities of human beings are causing global warming. If your arguing against the theory that humans are causing global warming, its irrelevant whether a temperature rise would be good or bad.
Some are. It has been suggested that population be reduced to a "sustainable" billion or so.B) Noone's suggesting killing off billions of human beings!
Actually, most fusion scientists are pimping for government hand-outs and will mouth any politically correct jibberish that will improve their chances of getting one. Even folks who have shown themselves to be steadfastly anti AGW in this forum have suggested Polywell as an antidote to AGW to acheive full funding.jmc wrote: ...(Incidentally most nuclear fusion scientist are AGW/Energy supplies running out alarmists)
I think economies come under the rubric of complex systems you don't understand and can't afford to break.G) Messing around with complex systems you don't understand and can't afford to break isn't a good idea. That's why lab experiments are always made as small as possible.
It wasn't me. In fact I see AGW as a hazard if it proves false and have said so.KitemanSA wrote:Actually, most fusion scientists are pimping for government hand-outs and will mouth any politically correct jibberish that will improve their chances of getting one. Even folks who have shown themselves to be steadfastly anti AGW in this forum have suggested Polywell as an antidote to AGW to acheive full funding.jmc wrote: ...(Incidentally most nuclear fusion scientist are AGW/Energy supplies running out alarmists)
Well not exactly. Microcomputers were actually the spawn of calculators.PCs weren't invented in a laboratory, they were the result of massive computers in universities, the military and NASA, gradually being made cheaper more powerful and more compact.