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nietzsche wrote:
NOT A FACT: The world is going to end in 2050 because we have cars and factories.
rdsrds2120 wrote:nietzsche wrote:
NOT A FACT: The world is going to end in 2050 because we have cars and factories.
You, nor anyone, can know that to be a fact or not a fact.
--Gomez
rdsrds2120 wrote:I don't follow what you mean talking about the first point. A cycle with an explanation is an observed force and factual.
--Gomez
nietzsche wrote:rdsrds2120 wrote:I don't follow what you mean talking about the first point. A cycle with an explanation is an observed force and factual.
--Gomez
No. Information comes from processing data, the processing needs a certain criteria to be chosen, and that criteria contains biased definitions. That a group of people agree on certain definitions doesn't make them factual. Imagine a 2-axis graph going for infinitum, you can zoom in, zoom out an infinite amount of times, what you will see will always be different depending on the level of zoom you are in. What appears to be a pattern dissapears if you zoom in/zoom out.
That is the problem with popularized research, people interprets it many times before it reaches you. From the point someone chose an experiment to be included in X journal or paper, a judgement was made there, and not to mention that a thesis is a propositon of how the world behaves, adapting it to a model, and a model is no other thing that a way for humans to understand, therefore biased. You get the point.
So, it's important to be cautious as to separate the facts from the judgements we and others make about it.
At some point, we need to agree on certain definitions, that nevertheless biased, they are necessary to understand (as basic as the language to use, and others, but the less complex we stay, the more clear things are and less biased).
Global Climate Change is always been there, change is the constant. Good or bad? well, that's a judgement.
Humans influence the climate change, it would be impossible not to as we are inside the system. How much, I leave that to science but I'd be really jealous of trusting any research paper no matter how gifted the scientist or how important is the journal, because it's a matter of politics and money now.
Metsfanmax wrote:nietzsche wrote:rdsrds2120 wrote:I don't follow what you mean talking about the first point. A cycle with an explanation is an observed force and factual.
--Gomez
No. Information comes from processing data, the processing needs a certain criteria to be chosen, and that criteria contains biased definitions. That a group of people agree on certain definitions doesn't make them factual. Imagine a 2-axis graph going for infinitum, you can zoom in, zoom out an infinite amount of times, what you will see will always be different depending on the level of zoom you are in. What appears to be a pattern dissapears if you zoom in/zoom out.
That is the problem with popularized research, people interprets it many times before it reaches you. From the point someone chose an experiment to be included in X journal or paper, a judgement was made there, and not to mention that a thesis is a propositon of how the world behaves, adapting it to a model, and a model is no other thing that a way for humans to understand, therefore biased. You get the point.
So, it's important to be cautious as to separate the facts from the judgements we and others make about it.
At some point, we need to agree on certain definitions, that nevertheless biased, they are necessary to understand (as basic as the language to use, and others, but the less complex we stay, the more clear things are and less biased).
Global Climate Change is always been there, change is the constant. Good or bad? well, that's a judgement.
Humans influence the climate change, it would be impossible not to as we are inside the system. How much, I leave that to science but I'd be really jealous of trusting any research paper no matter how gifted the scientist or how important is the journal, because it's a matter of politics and money now.
tl;dr: We can't ever know anything, so give up now.
notyou2 wrote:Over the past 3 decades the number of weather related insurance claims in North America have quadrupled.
nietzsche wrote:While that is in the end the point, we gotta be practical and agree on something, however, the further that we go "so let's assume that", "let's define this as", "according to the generally accepted notion that", and more.. the more assumptions we are making, the more judgements. We gotta keep that in mind all the time.
That's why philosophers are considered wise, because they are able to go on specifics and discuss to detail while never losing sight of the big picture.
rdsrds2120 wrote:nietzsche wrote:
NOT A FACT: The world is going to end in 2050 because we have cars and factories.
You, nor anyone, can know that to be a fact or not a fact.
--Gomez
nietzsche wrote:This is retarded, it's just so fucking easy and you guys keep at it.
FACT: Global Climate changes all the time, there are cycles, some take long time, some little time, there are minicycles.
oVo wrote:nietzsche wrote:This is retarded, it's just so fucking easy and you guys keep at it.
FACT: Global Climate changes all the time, there are cycles, some take long time, some little time, there are minicycles.
True there are minicycles... but FACT IS there is currently more carbon dioxide being introduced into our atmosphere than has ever been present in the history of our planet. It is not a good thing. Maybe you intentionally ignore this or just don't keep up with current events.
nietzsche wrote:This is retarded
nietzsche wrote:notyou2 wrote:Over the past 3 decades the number of weather related insurance claims in North America have quadrupled.
Exactly the kind of data that while it's informative and could point to a tendency, it's use, if not careful can be misleading and, exactly the kind of data those interested in the manipulation of masses use. One convinced individual will spread the information charged with judgement and emotion to x amount of peers.
How long has insurance existed? 400 years or so? Ok, maybe (I have no idea) we are living on the most extreme climate over the last 400 years, that, in the history of earth is next to nothing. Or it might be that people is constructing now where there is more risk because there isn't available space on safer places, or maybe people actually invest quite a lot on their houses now and decide to buy insurance, or maybe the lobbies push more laws requiring insurance for everything, or maybe it's the insurance ads every minute on tv. And even at that, say, what if your stats are incorrect? Either manipulated by the whatever-insurance-national-alliance or even the newspaper where you got that info from?
I'm not saying either side is right, all I'm saying is there are facts, and there are opinions. There are theories that are closer to being accurate and there are those who might end up being utterly wrong. DIdn't most authorities claim the earth was flat a few hundred years ago? Whatever it is that ends up being right, check your facts before you form your opinion, and even while you are forming your opinion you gotta check why you are choosing certain researchers to be right. Or do whatever you want, but just don't think that because someone said so it is.
Mets and rds and all those who promote awaraness and changes in policies and behaviour of people have long ago made up their minds, the same is the case of the naysayers, whatever fact you present them it will be colored by them to either support their views or simply discarded as heresy.
notyou2 wrote:Over the past 3 decades the number of weather related insurance claims in North America have quadrupled.
Metsfanmax wrote:nietzsche wrote:While that is in the end the point, we gotta be practical and agree on something, however, the further that we go "so let's assume that", "let's define this as", "according to the generally accepted notion that", and more.. the more assumptions we are making, the more judgements. We gotta keep that in mind all the time.
That's why philosophers are considered wise, because they are able to go on specifics and discuss to detail while never losing sight of the big picture.
In response, I will quote Richard Dawkins.
"Is there a meaning to life? What are we for? What is man? After posing the last of these questions, the eminent zoologist G. G. Simpson put it thus: 'The point I want to make now is that all attempts to answer that question before 1859 are worthless and that we will be better off if we ignore then completely.'"
Philosophers may be 'wise' but none of your philosophizing helps us make actual policy decisions, which must consider the risks in any action. The risks of inaction on this issue are great, given that the vast majority of experts in the field agree that some serious damage is headed our way if we do not substantially decrease greenhouse gas emissions. Good policy is not about trying to decide whether any one particular model is right -- it's about betting carefully. And in this case, the conservative action is the one to sharply reduce our greenhouse gas emissions. It's possible that the argument has been reinforced by bias so much that we've created an entirely false understanding of the physical system -- but I wouldn't bet on it.
oVo wrote:nietzsche wrote:This is retarded, it's just so fucking easy and you guys keep at it.
FACT: Global Climate changes all the time, there are cycles, some take long time, some little time, there are minicycles.
True there are minicycles... but FACT IS there is currently more carbon dioxide being introduced into our atmosphere than has ever been present in the history of our planet. It is not a good thing. Maybe you intentionally ignore this or just don't keep up with current events.
Phatscotty wrote:That doesn't have anything to do with the point you are trying to make. Even if prices of timber, copper, labor all stayed the same since 1970 (yeah and cigarette packs were 45 cents/median home price $23,000) the number of weather related insurance claims are going to rise simply based on population. New towns are being built all the time. If a global warming made tornado hits a certain location in 1978, it does no damage because nobody built anything there yet. Yet a tornado that is half the size of the 1978 tornado goes through the exact same spot in 2014, because urban sprawl there is growth and now there are a dozen building and 80 houses, can cause tens of millions of dollars of damage. And of course prices have risen since the 70's, dramatically. Again, lets take house A and it get's flattened in 1978, it's gonna cost 10,000 to totally replace that house. An exact same house as house A gets flattened by a tornado in 2014, it will cost you more than quadruple, more like octuple, to replace that exact same house in 2014.
It's more than misleading, it's meaningless
hotfire wrote:Direct quote from Sustainable Construction third edition p 219 pertaining to loss of prime farmland
"Wasteful land use is the problem, not growth itself. From 1982 to 1997, the US population grew by 17 percent, while urbanized land grew by 47 percent. Over the past 20 years, the acreage per person for new housing almost doubled; and since 1994, 10-plus acre housing lots have accounted for 55 percent of the land developed"
also 70 barrier island off the US coast have been commercially developed, and millions live on them. Barrier islands have no effective protection against flooding and damage from severe storms. The continuing subsidence of these passive coasts (combined with changes caused by commercial development and the ongoing rise in sea level) will undoubtedly cost lives and destroy property.
notyou2 wrote:hotfire wrote:Direct quote from Sustainable Construction third edition p 219 pertaining to loss of prime farmland
"Wasteful land use is the problem, not growth itself. From 1982 to 1997, the US population grew by 17 percent, while urbanized land grew by 47 percent. Over the past 20 years, the acreage per person for new housing almost doubled; and since 1994, 10-plus acre housing lots have accounted for 55 percent of the land developed"
also 70 barrier island off the US coast have been commercially developed, and millions live on them. Barrier islands have no effective protection against flooding and damage from severe storms. The continuing subsidence of these passive coasts (combined with changes caused by commercial development and the ongoing rise in sea level) will undoubtedly cost lives and destroy property.
You are correct. Stuff that happens in America will destroy the world as we know it. That's how much influence you Americans have on this planet. We should rename the planet The USofA and Whatever.
Dukasaur wrote:notyou2 wrote:hotfire wrote:Direct quote from Sustainable Construction third edition p 219 pertaining to loss of prime farmland
"Wasteful land use is the problem, not growth itself. From 1982 to 1997, the US population grew by 17 percent, while urbanized land grew by 47 percent. Over the past 20 years, the acreage per person for new housing almost doubled; and since 1994, 10-plus acre housing lots have accounted for 55 percent of the land developed"
also 70 barrier island off the US coast have been commercially developed, and millions live on them. Barrier islands have no effective protection against flooding and damage from severe storms. The continuing subsidence of these passive coasts (combined with changes caused by commercial development and the ongoing rise in sea level) will undoubtedly cost lives and destroy property.
You are correct. Stuff that happens in America will destroy the world as we know it. That's how much influence you Americans have on this planet. We should rename the planet The USofA and Whatever.
I don't know why you're mocking him. The study he cited might have been American, but the problems he describes are worldwide. Wasteful land use, in conjunction with ludicrous overpopulation, is the driver of environmental degradation.
There was a time when shopping malls were built as one building with a fairly compact strip of parking lots around it. Now, malls are built so that every chain store has its own building, and they sprawl over hundreds of acres. Can't even be called malls any more really, more like miniature cities with interconnected parking lots. And every square inch is paved. Gravel parking lots used to be a key element in the recharging of the aquifer in urban areas, now everything is paved and every single drop of rain is diverted from the aquifer to the sewer.
Lest ye think that the West is the only one at fault, the Third World with its callous slash-and-burn economy is pound for pound every bit as bad.
I think it should be a mandatory rite of passage that everyone should spend six months in the bush before they become a citizen. Maybe if people had a little more time to see the trees and come face-to-face with the badgers, they wouldn't be so quick to bulldoze every square inch of forest to put up another fucking Wal-Mart. Maybe.
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