GTTofAK said:
Since we are at 18 years of model diversion
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“18 years” is demonstrably false. Beyond that, in this context, divergence should not mean “away from the average” because the “average” model run is meaningless in the short-term when internal variability is the dominant factor. What divergence should mean is “away from models that accurately replicated the short-term internal variability”. This is exactly what Risbey et al 2014 looked at and they found that models that were in phase with the actual ENSO state matched observed temperatures extremely well. This demonstrates that there is little to no evidence to suggest models overestimate climate sensitivity. But even if you want to use the "average" as the gold standard, you're still wrong.
Furthermore, when you account for short-term internal variability (and keep forcings and feedbacks, the things that matter in the long-term, the same) here’s what you get:
[image
] (Schmidt et al 2014)
I used the term “sophism” to describe your posts because you make it seem like your making a point, when really you aren’t. You avoid the actual issue at hand and attempt to misdirect the reader to something unrelated.
An example of this is your first post discussing how “stochastic” is only appropriate in the context of models and not when describing ENSO is reality. While this is true, it is, on its own, pointless. You then attempt to sneak in a fallacious connection between us not being able to predict ENSO events to therefore ENSO could have a major long-term impact. While we are still unsure what causes ENSO, we understand quite well that any particular ENSO (1) merely moves energy around the system and has minimal impact on the energy balance and (2) only impacts surface temperatures for ~12 month period (La Nina’s can be a little longer). The frequency and intensity of ENSO events could change as a feedback to global warming. However, as stated before, even if we entered a perpetual La Nina state, the planet would
still continue to warm. ENSO is about temporary fluctuations away from the “average” caused by moving energy out of/into the oceans.
If the “average” continues to rise, then the long-term impact of ENSO is mute. Just because you don’t know that or choose to ignore that doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.
What’s more, you know what actually is an argument from ignorance? To say “the absence of evidence is evidence of the opposite”. For example, “I don’t know that ENSO has no long-term influence on climate (because I haven’t read the science on the matter), therefore it has a major long-term influence on climate”.