A third of the world now faces deadly heatwaves as result of climate change

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The way scientists think!? That’s just an odd statement. Scientists are not so easily grouped. They can be extremely inconsistent and irrational, motivated by politics religion, ideology, and yes, even superstition as much as the rest of the world.

That you think it’s a special group that others can relate to or don’t belong to the club is playing into one stereotype of science and scientists. The prideful worship of ones own knowledge. And the egoism that science seems to attract in people.
After formation through considerable training and professional development it does turn out that scientists know something about science. And typically more than folk who have not undergone this formation. They also understand something about peer-review, impact, and citations. It is a special group, albeit no more unique than other professional group -priests, doctors, lawyers, etc. if this sounds like prideful worship to you, you’ve got some explaining to do.
 
It is not an opinion paper but a scientific review of the scholarly literature the IPCC almost completely ignored.
Without examining each paper in detail, it is impossible for me to know that those papers are relevant. And even if I did examine them in detail, I probably could not judge their accuracy based on my own expertise. So that leaves me with trust. I have more reason to trust the IPCC for both objectivity and accuracy as compared to the NIPCC. So the most reasonable position for me to take is that the papers cited by the NIPCC and which the IPCC completely ignored were either irrelevant or biased and inaccurate.
 
I personally believe that Science is and can be infected with ideology, as like all things in life are, so no matter, if Science is self-correcting, the scientists themselves may prove to be otherwise.
As I said before, Science as it is practiced is the best source of scientific truth. If you know of a better source, what is it?
Just think of the Climate gate fiasco.
Very well. I will. I read this about Climategate:

*Eight committees investigated the allegations and published reports, finding no evidence of fraud or scientific misconduct
*
 
After formation through considerable training and professional development it does turn out that scientists know something about science. And typically more than folk who have not undergone this formation. They also understand something about peer-review, impact, and citations. It is a special group, albeit no more unique than other professional group -priests, doctors, lawyers, etc. if this sounds like prideful worship to you, you’ve got some explaining to do.
No, your rephrasing was sufficient.
 
What on earth are you talking about?
So explain your comment then.
And your comments are specious. This “claim” has been qualified. At the same time, it is clear to scientists and academics more generally that citations, properly informed by other data, are a valuable indicator of scientific merit. That is such indicators are important in formative and summative performance reviews of scientists. Something you might know if you were in business.
Not at all and the claim has been thoroughly discredited. You appear to have a problem discerning subjectivity.

What is considered “clear” to scientists and academics is purely subjective.
What is considered “properly” informed by other data is purely subjective.
What is considered a “valuable” indicator is purely subjective.
What is considered “important” in reviews of scientists is purely subjective.

I am well aware of the misleading importance that is placed on popularity metrics in certain parts of the scientific community.

Does volume of citations determined scientific merit?
 
Without examining each paper in detail, it is impossible for me to know that those papers are relevant. And even if I did examine them in detail, I probably could not judge their accuracy based on my own expertise. So that leaves me with trust. I have more reason to trust the IPCC for both objectivity and accuracy as compared to the NIPCC. So the most reasonable position for me to take is that the papers cited by the NIPCC and which the IPCC completely ignored were either irrelevant or biased and inaccurate.
Hand waving away valid scientific research because it does not conform to your partisan ideology is not an argument. The NIPCC reports include over 4000 scholarly peer-reviewed references that are as relevant, unbiased and accurate as what is cited in the IPCC reports. This ignored scientific research comes from the same journals referenced in the IPCC reports.

The NIPCC was necessary to provide a counter-balance to the biased reporting of the IPCC. Unlike you I am not afraid to have people read both reports and come to their own conclusions. Only AGW advocates try to persuade people from reading the NIPCC’s detailed scientific reports. Why are you so afraid of anyone reading the NIPCC reports that you have to try and discredit them?

We have already established that you will never accept anything that goes against your pre-conceived ideology on AGW.
 
The true story of Climategate can be found here:
Why should anyone trust your references to Climategate more than mine? Do you deny that
Eight committees investigated the allegations and published reports, finding no evidence of fraud or scientific misconduct ?
 
Hand waving away valid scientific research because it does not conform to your partisan ideology is not an argument.
As I said, I am not qualified to check the scientific accuracy of those reports. I dismiss them for that reason - not because I choose to ignore them. It would be intellectually dishonest of me to say that I could read them and verify them personally.
The NIPCC reports include over 4000 scholarly peer-reviewed references that are as relevant, unbiased and accurate as what is cited in the IPCC reports.
That claim you have stated but not proven.
The NIPCC was necessary to provide a counter-balance to the biased reporting of the IPCC.
The fact that the NIPCC is seen as a counterbalance to reporting that is deemed inaccurate a-priori is evidence that the NIPCC is itself a biased agenda-driven organization. You could prove me wrong by citing a group of papers that the NIPCC cites positively and which affirm the findings of the IPCC. Can’t find them? Then it is reasonable to assume they were left out on purpose.
Unlike you I am not afraid to have people read both reports and come to their own conclusions.
I think competent scientists should read both reports and come to their own conclusions. But people like me are unable to do that. We need to trust someone.
We have already established that you will never accept anything that goes against your pre-conceived ideology on AGW.
Who is “we?”
 
Why should anyone trust your references to Climategate more than mine?
Because Wikipedia can be edited by anyone with an Internet connection at any time.
Do you deny that

Eight committees investigated the allegations and published reports, finding no evidence of fraud or scientific misconduct
I do not deny the white washed findings of these committees. The truth however is much more interesting.

Slanted inquiries (Financial Post, Canada, September 17, 2010) - Archive]

Probes into the Climategate emails used biased panels and carefully restricted terms of reference.”

The Climategate Inquiries (PDF) (55 pgs) (The Global Warming Policy Foundation)
Understanding the Climategate Inquiries (PDF) (50 pgs) (Ross McKitrick, Ph.D. Professor of Environmental Economics)

‘Consensus’ Exposed: The CRU Controversy (PDF) (83 pgs) (United States Senate)

A U.S. Senate report found that the CRU emails show scientists:
  • Obstructing release of damaging data and information;
  • Manipulating data to reach preconceived conclusions;
  • Colluding to pressure journal editors who published work questioning the climate science “consensus”; and
  • Assuming activist roles to influence the political process
 
As I said, I am not qualified to check the scientific accuracy of those reports. I dismiss them for that reason - not because I choose to ignore them. It would be intellectually dishonest of me to say that I could read them and verify them personally.
Very curious posting on science discussion and debate.
 
Because Wikipedia can be edited by anyone with an Internet connection at any time.
…which is exactly why I trust it more than your list of hand-picked agenda-driven articles that no one can correct.
I do not deny the white washed findings of these committees. The truth however is much more interesting…
You have not yet shown why anyone should believe what you say is the truth over what someone else say is the truth. Listing several smear campaigns and calling it the truth does not make it so.
 
Both reports have summaries written for anyone with at least a high school diploma to be able to understand them:

NIPCC Climate Change Reconsidered II: Physical Science - Summary for Policymakers (PDF) (22 pages)

The reports themselves are not very difficult to read they are just long.
Summaries would be insufficient for the purpose your argument needs. Recall that the question what whether the average person could determine which articles were accurate so they could “decide between them.” Obviously we can’t pass judgment on the accuracy of a scientific article by reading only the summary, which tells** what** they concluded, not how exactly they concluded what they did. Judging between two conflicting summaries means judging who is the more persuasive writer. It still comes down to who do you trust. If you want to convince me of something that I cannot directly verify myself, then cite someone who I already know and trust who is saying that.
 
From your comments later in this post, it seems you accept the fact that heat was taken up in the Pacific, and that you have further questions about the mechanism by which “much if not most of the excess heat” was taken up.
The heat content of the oceans is 1000 times greater than the heat content of the atmosphere, both of which “take up” heat. In El Nino years heat heat certainly appears to be given up by the Pacific. In La Nina years, what? - heat is absorbed? OK, these are natural cycles. What is the impact of CO2 on these processes? I think that question has generated some weak answers.
Owing to sampling limitations, it is uncertain whether an increase in the rate of subsurface–ocean heat uptake occurred during the past 15 years.
This is the point I was making. There is simply insufficient data to support the assertion that the missing heat is in the oceans. That “it is presumed to be” may be legitimate, but “it is” is not, and ocean temperature charts going back to the early 60’s cannot be taken too seriously due to obvious “sampling limitations.” I’m not insisting the heat was not taken up in the oceans, all I’m saying is that we cannot claim to know that it was.
However, it is very likely that the climate system, including the ocean below 700 m depth, has continued to accumulate energy over the period 1998–2010.
This phrasing is fine and indicates the true state of knowledge of the matter, but here’s the question: if CO2 increases the heat in the climate system by causing the atmospheric temp to increase, how do the oceans get heated while the atmosphere does not? Atmospheric temperatures did not increase so all the excess heat went elsewhere, yet if CO2 is the culprit the excess heat must have originally been atmospheric. What’s the explanation for that?

Ender
 
Very curious posting on science discussion and debate.
Why so? I am just recognizing my limitations as a non-expert.

If a structural engineer tells you that it takes a 10-inch steel i-beam to span a certain distance, you do not say “My common sense tells me that an 8-inch beam will do.”

If an infectious disease specialist tells you that a certain antibiotic is ineffective against a specific bacteria, you don’t tell him that all you need is a little vitamin C.

If a nuclear physicist tells you that a certain isotope of carbon has a half-life measured in centuries, you don’t tell him that you think it is really 5 minutes.

So why should climate science be any different?

Now there is nothing preventing any one of us from becoming experts in any of these fields. But to think that we could do so without having put in the study that these real experts have done is mostly arrogance.
 
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