F
friardchips
Guest
:tiphat::clapping:
The harmful gassing of the world comes from the direction of the IPCC.I guess you know everything best. Good for you.
:tiphat::clapping:
The harmful gassing of the world comes from the direction of the IPCC.I guess you know everything best. Good for you.
You mean they are on the Internet. And yes, it should be deemed newsworthy, since the MSM is completely biased when it comes to Climate Disruption (that’s the new term they are using now).The retractions are public.
Whether or not they are deemed newsworthy is another matter.
I mean that retractions are published in the journals, with a press release in cases of notoriety.You mean they are on the Internet. And yes, it should be deemed newsworthy, since the MSM is completely biased when it comes to Climate Disruption (that’s the new term they are using now).
Again, I’m not denying the retractions, but how public is public, i.e., it’s not the every day person who has access, or can keep up with all the retractions and/or have the stamina to do so? However, if the media helped in pursuing a more neutral approach to AGW, than we’d all be the better for it.I mean that retractions are published in the journals, with a press release in cases of notoriety.
Btw, are you suggesting the the retractions are all about climate science? Look again.
I realize what you are saying, but I don’t think that you have a legitimate point on the matter of retractions of scientific articles.I’m simply saying that the media is very slanted, and since the media seems to be the source people look to for information, then it behooves the media to act responsibly and creditably.
You are conflating media with science which is a logical fallacy,. I do not watch any main stream media nor do I indulge in winged blogs so I have no idea what of what you are referring to.Yes, but is that misconduct being relayed to the MSM? That’s a rhetorical question as I already have the answer to that one.
I didn’t say all science, but when it comes to AGW, then yes, the media is much too willing to deny any evidence that might weaken it.You are conflating media with science which is a logical fallacy,. I do not watch any main stream media nor do I indulge in winged blogs so I have no idea what of what you are referring to.
Best advice: don’t get your science from the popular media. Read and think for yourself.I didn’t say all science, but when it comes to AGW, then yes, the media is much too willing to deny any evidence that might weaken it.
It is, in other words, very very biased reporting. And that is, of course, my opinion, but it’s based on watching/observing the media, which you have already stated you do not watch.
p.s. Have you ever heard of the term “watermelons”?
Hello Lynn,One of the sources that cited the NIPCC sounded familiar by a known climate scientist so I looked it up:
Benestad, R. E., H. O. Hygen, R. van Dorland, J. Cook, D. Nuccitelli, “Agnotology: Learning from Mistakes,” Earth Systems Dynamics, 2013, Vol. 4, pp. 451-505.
Dear Ender,I don’t think this assertion is accurate, if for no other reason than there is insufficient data to support such a claim. Yes, I am aware that this has been presented as an explanation, but it is nothing like being “fairly well established.” It is a speculative attempt to explain why the real world does not behave like the models predict.
I don’t know whether this is accurate or not, but there are clearly serious scientists who have alternate hypotheses. Nor is it clear that there is anything at all unusual going on
over the time period analyzed [1959/1979 - 2015], these natural factors have involved historically quite normal solar, volcanic and ENSO activity.
After calculating the effects of those natural factors this report concluded:
there is no Natural Factor Adjusted Warming at all.
Looking over the PDF you’re citing, the objection that it’s not peer reviewed is fairly mild. The question that kept coming into my head as I read was, “Who does this?”That is, all of the warming we have experienced for at least the last half century is natural and has nothing whatever to do with CO2. Are they right? I have no idea, but it will take more than “It’s not peer reviewed, ignore them” to convince me.
The propaganda machine never stops working does it? Think of how many carbon emissions are caused by all this prattle about climate change.![]()
It seems it may have been published (I’ll check, since I know Rasmus), but I am going thru the list of the 123 in spare time, and so far I’ve found:Hello Lynn,
The real question is why this paper was counted as a citation of NIPCC in the first place.
This discussion paper has been under review for the journal Earth System Dynamics (ESD). The revised manuscript was not accepted.
On occasion, I’ve seen preprints cited in academic work, but I’ve never seen anyone claiming credit for being cited in a preprint, let alone for a paper that was rejected after review.
If you haven’t yet looked at the forward and preface to the NIPCC’s CRII, Physical Science, I recommend it. It’s quite enlightening.
As ever, Jesse
Dear Lynn,It seems it may have been published (I’ll check, since I know Rasmus)…
but I am going thru the list of the 123 in spare time, and so far I’ve found:
-many unpublished or just non-peer reviewed blog articles.
-many in non-sci jnls,
-many about CC denial (not about establishing GW or its impacts or mitigation solutions).
-many books or book chapters (which prima facie I don’t count unless I know they were peer reviewed and reputable); anyone can publish a book with bogus facts, etc, as long as the publisher thinks it can make money, and then there are the vanity presses).
-some in sci jnls that seemed to be about meta issues, such as scientific methods, and not to address CC sci, impacts, or solutions.
The credential inflation is rampant here. Letters to the editor cast as peer reviewed refutations and blog references as citations.Even the ones in sci journals that appear scientific and addressing CC will need to be checked for how they use the NIPCC…perhaps to say it is hogwash.
I may be interested later; I’m on another project now (unrelated to CC).Dear Lynn,
The article has been revised, resubmitted, and published in Theoretical and Applied Climatology, November 2016, Volume 126, Issue 3–4, pp 699–703.
Learning from mistakes in climate research
Needless to say at this point, but the NIPCC is used as an example of these mistakes.
The credential inflation is rampant here. Letters to the editor cast as peer reviewed refutations and blog references as citations.
Again, I recommend reading the preface and forward to Physical Science if you’re interested in gathering stronger material for a critique. They are quite forward about their intentions.
As ever, Jesse
Yes, that is how science works, but I was objecting to the claim that “it’s fairly well established that much, and perhaps most of the excess heat was taken up in the Pacific.” “Fairly well established” is more than the science will support.Isn’t that how science works, though? Build a model, compare it to the real world, adjust the model, rinse and repeat.
In this case, the argument for PDO/ENSO influence is double-sided. First, there is the La Nina effect combined with a negative PDO, suggested as cause for the recently concluded hiatus. Then there is El Nino effect combined with a positive PDO.
I ran into the following paper as I was preparing this response.
Two points here: the first is the assertion that indeed there was a hiatus. Given the insistence (by some) that there never was a pause in the first place I appreciate this recognition of that fact.
It certainly seems so. It doesn’t, however, necessarily suggest a mechanism, which is really what the controversy is all about.That much heat being released is a clear indication that that much heat had been stored.
The “who does this” objections are not without merit, and probably should raise flags. That said, the response to EPA actions does have merit. Given the impact of those regulations on industry, and with the change in the White House, providing reasonable grounds for rescinding those regulations is a very practical thing to do. It is also reasonable to consider whether a response to a government finding that was not itself peer reviewed in a scientific journal (I assume this) requires an official peer reviewed response.The paper itself, released in 2016, is a response to EPA regulations from 2009. Who does this?
OK, this is the type of response such a paper deserves. As far as the complaint that “the actual calculation was never supplied”, they said in the paper itself they would be happy to supply all of the data and calculations upon request, and as for the last “who does this” objection, I need only point to the Climategate emails to show the extent to which those pushing the AGW story went to prevent their calculations and data from ever seeing the light of day.Too snarky for my taste, but it includes what you were asking for, reasons to reject its findings that go well beyond “it’s not peer reviewed.” An example follows.Games with the Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI) For ENSO they did something quite unique. The developed what they called the “cumulative MEI”.In case you were wondering, no, that’s not a thing. What follows is a reverse engineering of the adjusted index, necessary as the actual calculation was never supplied (Who does this?), and a side-by-side comparison of actual MEI and the adjustment used by the authors.
Hello Ender,Yes, that is how science works, but I was objecting to the claim that “it’s fairly well established that much, and perhaps most of the excess heat was taken up in the Pacific.” “Fairly well established” is more than the science will support.
Two points here: the first is the assertion that indeed there was a hiatus. Given the insistence (by some) that there never was a pause in the first place I appreciate this recognition of that fact.
I will leave it to others to justify their claims that the hiatus indexed as …Second, the description that we are entering “accelerated warming” doesn’t seem to account for what happened. The implication is that warming will continue to gradually increase, perhaps in a sawtooth fashion, but inexorably up. That, however, may not be the best description of the warming, which seems more stepwise. I guess we’ll see.
Multiple strawman arguments:Dah! It’s not a climate science article and in no way refuting it refutes CC.
Where does the article claim that someone denies the climate changes?It’s an article about CC denial that uses bogus non-research, ideas, well-refuted claims, and deception so as to deceive the public (like many here at CAF) into thinking CC is not happening, is not human-caused, and/or is in no way harmful.
I take it you are new to this debate as most of those citing the IPCC are not in the field of climate science.And you just proved my point that many of those citing the NIPCC are not in the field of climate science but in some meta-fields, like the social science study of CC denial.
Does volume of citations determined the scientific validity of a paper?Numbers of citations do not really matter as much as their content.
DeSmogBlog is an unreliable site.This is going to be a fun project in my spare time…
Going thru the list of 123 cites if the NIPCC, came across 4 in a highly suspect and disreputable journal, Energy & Environment, which as DeSmog points out…
Energy & Environment is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal (ISSN: 0958-305X)DeSmogBlog is a smear site founded by a scientifically unqualified public relations man, James Hoggan and funded by a convicted money launderer, John Lefebvre. The irony here is their favorite tactic is to attempt to smear those they disagree with as funded by “dirty money”. Since its creation in 2006 the site has done nothing but post poorly researched propaganda with a clear intent to smear respected scientists, policy analysts or groups who dare oppose an alarmist position on global warming. Their articles frequently reference unreliable sources such as Wikipedia and Sourcewatch since they are unable to find any fact based criticisms of those they attack in respected news sources.
But do you think that people have the time to do this with everything else that’s going on in this world? Either way, the media should be a neutral source/fount of information (although a little bias is to be expected), unfortunately that is not the case.Best advice: don’t get your science from the popular media. Read and think for yourself.
Do not attribute unsubstantiated motives. Popular media, announces, publishes, televises, blogs, etc what they believe will attract the most people with little or no interest for truth, because people equal advertising dollars. It is also likely the media have ulterior motives in shaping their content to appeal to the biases of their core.
It is not an opinion paper but a scientific review of the scholarly literature the IPCC almost completely ignored.What was incorrect. The NIPCC paper is an opinion paper with the purpose of distracting the public from issues of climate change that the world faces.
Actually their scientific reports have 283 citations and I consider hundreds of citations extensive.The NIPCC lists:122 citations from Google Scholar from December 2011 to November 2016. Compared to what to you believe that122 citations is extensive?
Actually it was 165x if you add the interim report.
Citations are a measure of popularity not scientific validity. It is obvious the IPCC reports are more popular but that does not make the NIPCC reports scientifically invalid.Now add the 2521x that the IPCC was cited and we get a combined total of 2686 citations. To get percentages divide 165/2686 = 6%. 2156/2686 = 94%. NIPCC: 6% vs IPCC 94%. How do you account for a 16:1 difference? If you have a better objective measurement of scientific merit than citations please let us know.
If volume of references have no bearing on something being a scholarly work then the IPCC reports are not a scholarly work. You have failed to show how the NIPCC reports are not scholarly works or have been ignored.Citing 4000 references does not make a paper a scholarly work.The scientific community makes that judgement. If it is scholarly work as you believe why has it been largely ignored by the scientific community? Provide a coherent explanation will be a start to taking you seriously. Here is the question again: If the NIPCC report is a scholarly work as you believe why has it been largely ignored by the scientific community?