TheRiov wrote:
We can prove and even replicate the effects on a small scale. Why is it so incomprehensible that those effects apply on the large scale?
It wouldn't be, if the small scale you claim that is being replicated, or the composite models of all those small scale experiments, actually returned a result that matched what was expected from the individual small scale. That has not yet happened, further reinforcing the idea that there is simply not enough information about such a complex system.
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No one is suggesting that the climate has not been affected by other forces (Solar activity, meteor/comet strike, nearby supernova, volcanic activity, etc)
Yet you just ignored those factors in your "made up to prove to the math" example, when some climatologists consider those exceptionally important, yet can't agree on the effects (solar forcing, cloud feedback loops, etc).
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The believers in HIGCC are suggesting that human influence adds another disruptive factor, and unlike those other factors our influence continues to increase instead of being a rare event, its an increasing factor.
We agree on the creating a disrupting factor. I believe I have always stated on these boards when ask that I think there is some influence. I just have always questioned the degree of that influence, the egotistical determination that we can influence a much larger trend in any meaningful way, and most importantly, the effectiveness of what is being proposed considering they can't get models to predict what is actually occurring. If they can't even get that right, why am I supposed to trust their predictions on the solution would work?
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This is just pure thermodynamics. There are many other effects to consider. (Increased greenhouse activity lowering the Earths ability to radiate energy away for one)
And just to reiterate the point, there is a relatively heated (sorry for pun) debate on exactly the feedback mechanism related to green house cases and reflective ability of clouds in that feedback loop. You have made the assumption that one factor forcing is more or less important than the opposing forcing from another, when that hasn't been conclusively proven yet.