OCinBuffalo Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 He just looked at cloud cover in England and talks about cosmic rays. Why are Mars and Jupiter getting warmer then? Now that's a great point. Unless of course, they have Hummers on Mars and Jupiter. Nothing like a real control group when one is attempting to conduct real scientific research. Oh, I forgot, England, which makes up less than 1% of the surface of the earth, is a fine "control group". If things are getting hotter on planets that have no humans at all, and never have, with the exception of our space garbage, um, I mean Nasa programs, then that would poke a serious hole in the environtologists argument. In fact, if it was proved that 4 or more planets were in fact becoming warmer, that's too much of a coincidence and that's pretty much the end of Al Gore.
OCinBuffalo Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 Fundamentally, the video's logic is flawed because it assumes that the effects of global warming are NOT inevitable, and it assumes that human activity both to create global warming and to stop global warming will ALWAYS have an effect. The bottom right quadrant can occur even though the left column was chosen, and, it's contrapositive, the top left quadrant can occur even though the right column was chosen, are both true statements. And that is where this construct's, this guy's, this video's, and anyone, obviously not trained in logic, who supports this video's, argument ends. Permanently. Read the rest if you want to know why. The effects of global warming can be inevitable, just as inevitable as the 3-4 ice ages we are sure happened(anyone who has ever been to Watkins Glen knows this and you don't have to be a genius to see the obvious effect of glaciers moving back and forth), with no human involvement whatsoever. Also, humans may or may not be able to stop another ice age from occurring. 1. It is entirely possible that humans do everything we possibly can to avert global warming, AND, that the earth still undergoes a disaster, THEREFORE, humans end up dead, having no affect at all. 2. It is also possible that humans do nothing we possibly can to avert global warming, AND, we have no effect on the cause, THEREFORE, humans end up dead, having not been the cause of global warming. His little logic chart doesn't take these, or others, into account. It is lame at best and representative of the general lack of logic training so blatantly prevalent in so-called "intellectuals" running around today. It's like nobody took Course II, or, they forgot it by the time they got around to their grad work. The false choice: in his rows we can only choose true or false with regard to global warming being extremely bad. What about the opposite? What about extremely good(i.e. averts the next ice age)? This chart is premised upon global warming having no effect or a bad effect, when it is LOGICALLY possible that it can have a good effect. Building a logical construct that doesn't include all possibilities is wrong all day, every day, and twice on Sunday. Therefore, the premises of his argument are biased, and as such, illogical. It may have some rhetorical value, but it is logically worthless. Inversely, the false choice in the columns is that we can only choose true or false on whether humans do something. We don't see a place for whether either choice has an effect on the outcomes. Logically the whole thing breaks down because it is possible(and I am inclined to believe far more probable) for the bottom right quadrant to occur(mass chaos) even though the left column(do something) was chosen. Bottom right can occur even though left column was chosen = my statement. The contrapositive(which is always supposed to be true as well by the way) of my statment? It is possible for top left quadrant to occur even though even though the right column was chosen = we can still have mass economic upheaval and a new great depression even if we choose to do nothing about global warming. This is also, hopefully obviously, true. Getting it now? Both my statement and it's contrapositive are TRUE! Thus proving the soundness of my argument, and, proving the ridiculousness of the video's. Most importantly it proves that his little chart is perhaps the furthest thing I have seen from a logical endeavor in a long while. Environtolgists should leave the logic and the math, and the use of both, to those of us who are trained how to use them properly. They can have their "science" but logic/math is our domain and here we have rules here that must be followed, especially by outsiders. Anybody want to put me to the test, please understand I can CASE statement this out for you, that's right, the whole thing....properly.
ExiledInIllinois Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 I ask again, are these folks considering that when ice melts it takes about 9 or 10 less space. Also, there is a lot of sediment that will stay in place. If we did have global warming and melting of the ice caps, I don't believe a 20 foot rise in water. In fact, seeing as most people think that 90 percent of a burg is below water, I won't venture to say it is a push at best and maybe even a lowering of costal water levels as more water evaporates into the air. I suspect a rise in global humidity, but rising waters doubtful. You know there is land under Antarctica... It is a continent... ??
VABills Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 You know there is land under Antarctica... It is a continent... ?? Yeah because Antarctica is the only place in the world with ice.
ExiledInIllinois Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 Yeah because Antarctica is the only place in the world with ice. If all the melted and most ran into the sea... Would it effect the oceans... ??
DC Tom Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 Yeah because Antarctica is the only place in the world with ice. Fine. Let's turn it on its head. Assume Antarctica is the ONLY place where ice rests on land. How much water is that added to the ocean if it melts?
Chef Jim Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 Fine. Let's turn it on its head. Assume Antarctica is the ONLY place where ice rests on land. How much water is that added to the ocean if it melts? So how much ice would actually have to melt to raise all the ocean levels 20 feet. Is there even that much ice on the planet?
finknottle Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 So how much ice would actually have to melt to raise all the ocean levels 20 feet. Is there even that much ice on the planet? Yes - current estimates of the ice-pack yield an increase of 80-100 meters. In fact, the buildup of glaciars on Antartica 40-30 million years ago was a major contributor to the lowering of sea levels that reconnected the land bridges between continents. Prior to that there was a sustained period of isolation in which life evolved in their own directions - for example, the common ancester to the carnivore family split into the dog side of the family in North America and the cat side in Asia. Then, bam! The ocean in the middle of the US turned into plains, the Bering shelf was exposed, the straits separating Europe and Asia dried up, and land-bridges started popping up between Africa and the rest; and all those species went at it tooth and nail and claw and hoof. Here's a map of the earth 94 million years ago which gives you an idea of what how things change over time. http://www.scotese.com/cretaceo.htm The sea-levels then were about 200 meters higher. The unusually high level is partly due to all the melted ice, partly due to they way the shelfs happened to be at the time (they were relatively young and shallow), but also partly do to another relevant factor: the volume occupied by water is also a function of temperature. While we are used to thinking about climate change in terms of surface temperature, most scientists focus on deep sea temperatures. Back then they were about 15 degrees higher, giving the water more volume.
Booster4324 Posted April 3, 2008 Posted April 3, 2008 Fine. Let's turn it on its head. Assume Antarctica is the ONLY place where ice rests on land. How much water is that added to the ocean if it melts? I assumed he was trolling. If not, he ranks right up there with the local radio host who explained it as a "glass full of ice and water that melts...it doesn't overflow right?"
Hollywood Donahoe Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 ok, what are the logical holes in the argument? You would have to attack his assumptions - which one? I kind of lost interest about halfway through, but it seemed to me like a lame repackaging of the precautionary principle (please correct me if I've misinterpreted the message). In that case, here are some of the existing criticisms.
Booster4324 Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 I kind of lost interest about halfway through, but it seemed to me like a lame repackaging of the precautionary principle (please correct me if I've misinterpreted the message). In that case, here are some of the existing criticisms. I cannot recall anyone using a disputed Wiki article for evidence before; although I am sure it is commonplace.
DC Tom Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 So how much ice would actually have to melt to raise all the ocean levels 20 feet. Is there even that much ice on the planet? Surface area of the oceans is 361,132,000,000 square meters. 20 feet is about six meters. that's 2.1 trillion cubic meters of water. Antarctica is 14 billion square meters in area...14 billion into 2.1 trillion is about 150 meters thickness of water over Antarctica needed to raise the oceans 20 feet. Multiply by 1.1 for the density of ice...and if Antarctica's ice sheet has an average thickness of more than 165 meters and melts completely, the oceans rise 20 feet. The lowest estimates I can find for the thickness of Antarctica's ice are an order of magnitude higher - about 2000 meters thick. So yeah, apparently there's more than enough ice.
Hollywood Donahoe Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 I cannot recall anyone using a disputed Wiki article for evidence before; although I am sure it is commonplace. Pick your own, then.
swede316 Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 Surface area of the oceans is 361,132,000,000 square meters. 20 feet is about six meters. that's 2.1 trillion cubic meters of water. Antarctica is 14 billion square meters in area...14 billion into 2.1 trillion is about 150 meters thickness of water over Antarctica needed to raise the oceans 20 feet. Multiply by 1.1 for the density of ice...and if Antarctica's ice sheet has an average thickness of more than 165 meters and melts completely, the oceans rise 20 feet. The lowest estimates I can find for the thickness of Antarctica's ice are an order of magnitude higher - about 2000 meters thick. So yeah, apparently there's more than enough ice. DOOOMED!!!
VABills Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 Surface area of the oceans is 361,132,000,000 square meters. 20 feet is about six meters. that's 2.1 trillion cubic meters of water. Antarctica is 14 billion square meters in area...14 billion into 2.1 trillion is about 150 meters thickness of water over Antarctica needed to raise the oceans 20 feet. Multiply by 1.1 for the density of ice...and if Antarctica's ice sheet has an average thickness of more than 165 meters and melts completely, the oceans rise 20 feet. The lowest estimates I can find for the thickness of Antarctica's ice are an order of magnitude higher - about 2000 meters thick. So yeah, apparently there's more than enough ice. Thanks Tom, that's what I was looking for. So right now how much is the net loss of ice melt each year? Meaning melt - refreeze, over the entire surface of the earth?
swede316 Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 Thanks Tom, that's what I was looking for. So right now how much is the net loss of ice melt each year? Meaning melt - refreeze, over the entire surface of the earth? Another Ice Age may happen...but I don't think it's man made...How many Ice Ages have happened prior to us driving cars and burning fossil fuels for electricity? 60 in the last 2 million years!!!! Nothing we can do to stop it. Break out your parkas!
ieatcrayonz Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 I cannot recall anyone using a disputed Wiki article for evidence before; although I am sure it is commonplace. WWFLPU?
ieatcrayonz Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 Another Ice Age may happen...but I don't think it's man made...How many Ice Ages have happened prior to us driving cars and burning fossil fuels for electricity? 60 in the last 2 million years!!!! Nothing we can do to stop it. Break out your parkas! Agreed. Canada hasn't even come out of the last ice age yet, and we're worried about Global warming.
DC Tom Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 Thanks Tom, that's what I was looking for. So right now how much is the net loss of ice melt each year? Meaning melt - refreeze, over the entire surface of the earth? I honestly don't know. WAG...a block about the size of Rhode Island annually, maybe? In percent of total ice volume world-wide, I'd think it's well below 1% annually so far.
Chef Jim Posted April 4, 2008 Posted April 4, 2008 Surface area of the oceans is 361,132,000,000 square meters. 20 feet is about six meters. that's 2.1 trillion cubic meters of water. Antarctica is 14 billion square meters in area...14 billion into 2.1 trillion is about 150 meters thickness of water over Antarctica needed to raise the oceans 20 feet. Multiply by 1.1 for the density of ice...and if Antarctica's ice sheet has an average thickness of more than 165 meters and melts completely, the oceans rise 20 feet. The lowest estimates I can find for the thickness of Antarctica's ice are an order of magnitude higher - about 2000 meters thick. So yeah, apparently there's more than enough ice. Thank you. And I knew that would come from you. Howerver that would only be if all the ice melted.
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