matagi wrote:What I do not understand is - regardless of whether you believe in climate change or not, surely taking steps to reduce emissions and pollution, cut down on waste and take care of the environment are good things?
matagi wrote:What I do not understand is - regardless of whether you believe in climate change or not, surely taking steps to reduce emissions and pollution, cut down on waste and take care of the environment are good things?
Lindsay wrote:While I am certainly in favour of reducing pollution and waste, I am also very sceptical of the climate change industry. The whole 'climate change' (didn't it used to be global warming) concept has taken on the status of a religion and those who question its doctrine are heretics to be burned at the stake. The tone of the linked article shows exactly this attitude. The climate is always changing, alway has, always will. Far from helping the environment, this emphasis on man made climate change is taking money and resources away from the environmental issues we can do something about and wasting them on airy fairy feel good concepts that have little grounding in reality.
Lindsay wrote:The whole 'climate change' (didn't it used to be global warming) concept has taken on the status of a religion and those who question its doctrine are heretics to be burned at the stake.
photohiker wrote:Lindsay wrote:The whole 'climate change' (didn't it used to be global warming) concept has taken on the status of a religion and those who question its doctrine are heretics to be burned at the stake.
And yet, if you visit alternate 'skeptical' sites, the reverse is the case. Those that post with skepticism of a skeptical post are the heretics.
Troll behaviour is troll behaviour regardless, and it destroys effective discussion. I think that, and not the validity or otherwise of Climate Change is the topic.
As the word sceptic is replaced by denier, should free thinker be replaced by 'troll'?
photohiker wrote:Troll behaviour is troll behaviour regardless, and it destroys effective discussion. I think that, and not the validity or otherwise of Climate Change is the topic.
maddog wrote: ...how would you explain the use of the emotive term 'denier' (as used both in the article and in this thread above), with all that historical baggage, in place of the more traditional term 'sceptic' for those that doubt that orthodox? Fair and balanced? Rational and enlightened?
...And why are the Climate Change crowd so intolerant?
...As the word sceptic is replaced by denier, should free thinker be replaced by 'troll'?
maddog wrote: I share your healthy scepticism of AGW...I agree that the bed-wetters rely largely on faith.
Lindsay wrote: The whole 'climate change' (didn't it used to be global warming) concept has taken on the status of a religion and those who question its doctrine are heretics to be burned at the stake.
Pteropus wrote:Btw, climate science is evidence based and not faith based like religion. Science and religion should not be uttered in the same sentence and yet it is a tactic of people who want to discredit science to compare the two...which is rather amusing to me that people still try to make that comparison.
Son of a Beach wrote:Pteropus wrote:Btw, climate science is evidence based and not faith based like religion. Science and religion should not be uttered in the same sentence and yet it is a tactic of people who want to discredit science to compare the two...which is rather amusing to me that people still try to make that comparison.
The problem with this is that while science is supposed to be evidence based (ie, repeatable, observable, etc) some things that are supposedly science are not actually, or not entirely, evidence based but still extolled as true science. This leads to some so-called 'science' being at least partially faith based, but still in the name of science.
photohiker wrote:Son of a Beach wrote:Pteropus wrote:Btw, climate science is evidence based and not faith based like religion. Science and religion should not be uttered in the same sentence and yet it is a tactic of people who want to discredit science to compare the two...which is rather amusing to me that people still try to make that comparison.
The problem with this is that while science is supposed to be evidence based (ie, repeatable, observable, etc) some things that are supposedly science are not actually, or not entirely, evidence based but still extolled as true science. This leads to some so-called 'science' being at least partially faith based, but still in the name of science.
Have you got an example of this SoaB?
matagi wrote:What I do not understand is - regardless of whether you believe in climate change or not, surely taking steps to reduce emissions and pollution, cut down on waste and take care of the environment are good things?
stepbystep wrote:Personally I'm a skeptic of anything I am told by the government or corporate worlds, does this make me a denier, or those that swallow everything they are told naive???
stepbystep wrote:Is climate change happening? Possibly the most stupid question ever posed, if you answer no, then you indeed are a lost cause to humanity. Is humanity a lost cause is possibly a more interesting question to me
Son of a Beach wrote:photohiker wrote:Have you got an example of this SoaB?
Table top cold fusion (nuclear fusion) is the most obvious one I can think of (from the mid-nineties, I think it was).
In that case the method was easily disproved, but for a short time there, it was thought (by a few) to be true science.
In some cases, it is not actually the experiment or data that is wrong, but merely the interpretation. But that interpretation is still sold as science.
phan_TOM wrote:Pretty much spot on SBS, & back on topic, but just because funding is a necessary part of the process doesn't mean it's the same as being paid to publicly state the 'company line' so to speak. Many people have theories, and it's a valid part of scientific endeavour, but real science is based on research that is part of a peer review process & even though this is not infallible it's pretty damn good. It beats the emotiomally charged superstition and rational economics that our lives are governed by anyday of the week!
A vet may recommend a certain product becasue of whatever reason, likely involved with money, but they are not naively doing so. They are experts in physiology, chemistry, the interaction of cells with different natural and synthetic compunds etc and not just pushing whatever the drug of the month is. I'm guess I'm just saying that the influence of certain companies, even though present, may not be as significant as you are suggesting.stepbystep wrote:Personally I'm a skeptic of anything I am told by the government or corporate worlds, does this make me a denier, or those that swallow everything they are told naive???
me toostepbystep wrote:Is climate change happening? Possibly the most stupid question ever posed, if you answer no, then you indeed are a lost cause to humanity. Is humanity a lost cause is possibly a more interesting question to me
I agree and with the seeming lack of momentum in tackling climate change, highly likely. (carbon emissions were the highest on record last year and are set to break that record this year and into the forseeable future)
phan_TOM wrote:A vet may recommend a certain product becasue of whatever reason, likely involved with money, but they are not naively doing so. They are experts in physiology, chemistry, the interaction of cells with different natural and synthetic compunds etc and not just pushing whatever the drug of the month is. I'm guess I'm just saying that the influence of certain companies, even though present, may not be as significant as you are suggesting.
photohiker wrote:phan_TOM wrote:A vet may recommend a certain product becasue of whatever reason, likely involved with money, but they are not naively doing so. They are experts in physiology, chemistry, the interaction of cells with different natural and synthetic compunds etc and not just pushing whatever the drug of the month is. I'm guess I'm just saying that the influence of certain companies, even though present, may not be as significant as you are suggesting.
+1 (Having been involved in the industry in a past life) Perhaps we should invite OneStepMore to comment.
Definitely, industry supports the education system for Veterinary Science to some extent, and they also support working vets in the community but to a far smaller extent than with the medical profession. This is not a one-sided affair where industry barges into Uni and tries to take over - typically, the Uni approaches industry first looking for cash to support program or building projects etc. There is a line to be drawn, yes, but you cannot change for instance basic biochemistry because you have a product to sell.
Once in private practice, Vets are able to make commercial decisions about products used based on their own professional and commercial preferences.
stepbystep wrote:Didn't want to pick on vets(their knowledge has served my dogs well) but I do my own research and consult alternative practitioners, one of these practitioners extended the life of one of my dogs for 9 years when standard vets advised euthanasia, same goes for our medical industry, and how our food is grown, processed and sold. This is my opinion based upon my beliefs and experiences. There is a world of knowledge that goes beyond accepted science and this is simply the point I was trying to make.
photohiker wrote:It's fair to say that there are good and bad Vets, just as there are good and bad doctors or alternative medical practitioners.
Lindsay wrote: The climate is always changing, alway has, always will. Far from helping the environment, this emphasis on man made climate change is taking money and resources away from the environmental issues we can do something about and wasting them on airy fairy feel good concepts that have little grounding in reality.
maddog wrote:The non-believing public has tired of politically corrupted science, crony peer-review, and doomsday prophecies that just never come to be.
What is the public perception of climate
change and risk?
The survey of almost 3100 Australians found that:
• 74 per cent of respondents accept that the world’s climate is changing.
• More than half believe the impacts of climate change are already being felt in Australia.
• 90 per cent accept that climate change is either partly or principally caused by human activities and lifestyles.
• 71 per cent of respondents reported that their concern about climate change had increased over the past two years.
• 78 per cent of respondents consider that if nothing is done to reduce climate change in the future,
it will be a ‘very serious’ or ‘somewhat serious’ problem for Australia.
• Many respondents perceived there was a link between climate change and extreme weather events (Figure 1).
Fewer than 6 per cent of Australians surveyed could be called true ‘climate change sceptics’, i.e. disbelievers or strong sceptics with respect to the reality of current climate change. According to the project’s research team, these results suggest public opinion has been greatly misrepresented in the media.
andmaddog wrote: ...their thin skinned and humourless intolerance for scepticism (and free-thinking in general) is reminiscent of the treatment of heretics, infidels, etc, by religious fundamentalists throughout the ages.
in previous posts, you seem to be doing a good job with intolerance and using emotive terms with comments likemaddog wrote: the use of the emotive term 'denier' (as used both in the article and in this thread above), with all that historical baggage, in place of the more traditional term 'sceptic' for those that doubt that orthodox? Fair and balanced? Rational and enlightened?
maddog wrote:In addition to the diversion of funding from less speculative scientific disciplines (than computer modelling climatologists), the credibility of the environmental science community as a whole has suffered. The non-believing public has tired of politically corrupted science, crony peer-review, and doomsday prophecies that just never come to be.
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