Are you a genuine skeptic or a climate denier?
Posted on 30 May 2011 by John Cook
The ABC Drum have just published my article Are you a genuine skeptic or a climate denier? Right now, there are no comments but I imagine the discussion will get fierce shortly so be sure to keep an eye on it (expect to see all the traits of denial I describe rear their ugly head in the comments and be quick to point them out). An excerpt:
In the charged discussions about climate, the words skeptic and denier are often thrown around. But what do these words mean?
Consider the following definitions. Genuine skeptics consider all the evidence in their search for the truth. Deniers, on the other hand, refuse to accept any evidence that conflicts with their pre-determined views.
So here's one way to tell if you're a genuine skeptic or a climate denier.
Read full article...
Skeptical Science and our book Climate Change Denial have been popping up elsewhere in the media over the last few weeks. My co-author Haydn and I appeared on Robyn William's Science Show a few weeks ago - you can listen to streaming audio or download the interview in mp3 format. The Science Show webpage also has a transcript of the whole interview.
On the morning of the Sydney book launch, I did an interview with John Stanley from the Sydney commercial radio station 2UE. You can listen to an mp3 of the interview here. Many thanks to 2UE for letting me republish the interview here on Skeptical Science and thanks to John just for having the interview - I wonder how many angry emails he received from 2UE listeners afterwards.
After our Sydney and Canberra book launches (more on that in a future post), Haydn and I returned to Sydney to record an interview with James Valentine at ABC 702. This interview gave us the opportunity to do something I've been looking forward to for a while - respond to talk-back callers. Sure enough, the first caller was a geologist enquiring about past climate change!
[DB] "My point is that there is a natural component to temperature which has influenced the warming of the 80s and 90s,"
During which forcings other than CO2 have been flat. Perhaps you conflate temperatures and anomalies?
"and the lack of warming in the past decade."
Provably oh-so-wrong.
Witness the "Aughts" as the warmest decade on record, with 2005 and 2010 being tied as the warmest years in the instrumental records. It is poor science indeed to repeat a fallacy without any supportative documentation.
You should indeed "go study", for your comments do indeed reveal the need.
[DB] "Would using the Preview option help to make sure the image postings are correct?"
Yes. If they don't show properly after pushing the Preview button, then something is wrong. Typically it is the inclusion of an extraneous space after the URL but before the second parenthesis. Or the transposing of the closing slash and the HTML tag command being used.
Please remember to keep widths at 450 pixels or less. Lastly, PNG, JPG or GIF work best (avoid TIFF). DOC and PDF will not result in a viewable picture (you will have to separate the graphic in question from the document and upload it to the Web first).
The sample HTML commands at the TIPS page have all been tested by me and work in the SkS Comment posting windows.
[dana1981] Examining statistically insignificant trends over such short timeframes is rather pointless. You're just seeing short-term noise. But for the record, RSS has a positive trend over the past decade.
[DB] "The issue was whether temperatures have risen or fallen over the past decade."
Umm, no. The issue of this thread is Skepticism vs climate Denialism.
Quite frankly, there's so much wrong with your comment I scarce know where to begin. The focus on RSS, insignificant timescales, cherry-picked start dates (Tamino has many posts on this), etc.
Cherries Jubilee:
[Source]
Your attempts to stay off-topic merely reaffirm the perception of denial (which is on-topic) you convey. If you wish to discuss temperature records or something other than Skepticism vs climate Denialism, please use the Search function for a far more appropriate thread. Thanks!
[DB] You strain credulity, sir.
Why anyone (let alone a scientist) would try & read into a short, noisy time series dataset and see things that aren't there and then declare (without a postulated physics-based mechanism to explain it) that the quasimythological oscillation/trend/periodicity du jour explains away the temperature rise so that there's nothing to worry about, is beyond me.
Tamino describes the thought processes involved here, among many other similar posts.
[DB] Fixed image (you used ” instead of "...makes a difference[don't ask me why]). Please remember to keep image widths below 500 pixels.
[DB] Thanks for filling my daily quota of learning 1 thing. Time for bed.
[DB] It might be helpful to read this. The conclusion:
"Has global temperature evolution over the last century+ been cyclical? Not."
Even when the data is clear as day, they close their eyes.[DB] Scaddenp kindly pointed you previously to this post on the PDO. That would be an appropriate venue to discuss it, if that is your wish. It is off-topic here. Please kindly reconsider your tone, as others are trying to help you.