Maybe, but the moon is on average the same distance from the sun as the earth and the temperature on the sun-side surface of the moon has been
measured at 107C. Seems kind of boiling to me. And what I actually said was:
zdas04 25 Oct 12 12:39 said:
I don't know why it has to be a "greenhouse effect" and not a "shielding effect" (i.e. without the atmosphere a greater portion of the sun's energy would reach the earth and boil us all) which would say that more mass in the atmosphere would be cooling instead of heating. The data supports that foolishness as easily as it supports the greenhouse stuff.
What part of "The data supports that foolishness as easily as it supports the greenhouse stuff" leads you to claim that I believe that hypothesis?
"Patently false" is kind of a strong statement about a hypotheses that can actually be demonstrated on a nearby planetary body. I guess "true" can only be applied to unprovable hypotheses. Reducing complex physical phenomena to sound bytes is a good way to look like a fool.
I don't actually have a dog in this race. There is an AGW hypotheses on the table that has reached the status of a religion in the world. An hypotheses is a very good thing. But it needs to stand up to independent scrutiny. This particular hypotheses has the characteristic of being very very easy for people to relate to. It has the further characteristic of encouraging hysteria. A one-two punch that is devastating to the practice of science. Neither characteristic necessarily makes it "wrong". But neither characteristic necessarily makes it "right" either. The big problem is that it is so easy to demonize anyone who doesn't accept it as whole cloth and genuflect before the altar. This results in manipulated data, "tweaked" computer models, modifications of honest work (after submittal, without the author's knowledge) by powerful people with an agenda, and actual career harm to people who want to do honest work. The religion of AGW has reached a status where it must be resisted by everyone who has not been inducted into the religion if the economies of the world are to survive (yes, that is pretty dramatic, it is also based on solid data, I can't tell you with confidence how the climate works, but I can tell you how Cap & Trade works by looking at the graft and theft in the existing programs).
A couple of years ago I was contracted to do a "carbon emissions inventory" for a major producer for an EPA trial project (that eventually became the U.S. inventory for Oil & Gas). There were 12 companies in the study and my data was 1/8 of the total. There are a number of unknowable values. One number was truly impossible to quantify with installed equipment (because the duration of the event was much shorter than the latency of the measurement device). I made a note that this number could not be quantitatively determined and estimated 500,000 tonnes/year based on average frequency and average duration. I got a call from the lady at the EPA who said the the number "looks like I made it up". I said "I did make it up, see note 34". She said "I understand that, but it shouldn't look like you made it up". I replied "should I have made it 497,531.2 tonnes instead, it is just a made up number around a half million tonnes". She said that that would be much better and asked me to resubmit. That is the quality of the carbon inventory that countries are building tax schemes upon. Pardon me if I am terrified.
David Simpson, PE
MuleShoe Engineering
"Belief" is the acceptance of an hypotheses in the absence of data.
"Prejudice" is having an opinion not supported by the preponderance of the data.
"Knowledge" is only found through the accumulation and analysis of data.