Hi Res and E, (canpakes I will address you question in just a bit)
I apologize for questioning and running. This is a very interesting topic and I appreciated the answers to my question I posed. I will get back to that shortly, but at first I need to give my value standard approach to this issue. Others have different value positions on this I understand, but I feel it is important to begin to address this issue from that place. This issue is a scientific issue but it is also a value issue and everyone should be right up front about what value position they take. I agree with the (I know horrible guy) value position of Alex Epstein. I believe human life, thriving, and flourishing, indeed even human happiness is the fundamental value that I approach this issue from. This is a basic and primary value position. I don't know how to convince anyone to accept this value scientifically because it isn't scientific. I simply believe from a basic and primary moral position that human life and its flourishing is primary. I'm certainly biased here I am human right? But it is an embedded moral position for me that I simply have a hard time apologizing for in any way.
I think Cam has it right. The opposition to the facts of climate change has nothing to do with the actual facts — it is strongly tied to identity. It requires an admission that the free market can lead to the destruction of civilization, that government intervention can not only be good, but also be necessary, and that the US must cooperate with other nations to avoid disaster. It Also requires an admission that the labs can be right.
For those who still deny that the surface atmosphere is warming and that humans are the major cause of the warming since the late 1800s, that’s a heavy blow to their political identity. No amount of evidence will lead them to admit that human activity is the primary cause.
Ok. So I am a science believer and I have stated my moral position above. So, the surface atmosphere is warming. Very little warming occurred in the 1800s when the industrial revolution was getting into gear, from 1850 to around 1880 there was a rise of approx. .3 degrees celsius, then the temperature cooled from 1880 to 1910 by approx. .4 degrees celsius. The temperature then began to rise again between 1910 to 1940 by approx. .5 degrees celsius. Then between 1940 and the 1970s there was a cooling of approx. .4 degrees celsius. It has been rising since this cooling with controversial interpretations of exactly how much due to el nino in the late 1990s and later in the 21st century. I understand the cooling in the late 1800s was largely due to volcanic activity and sulfate aerosols and volcanic activity were contributing factors to the cooling in the middle of the 20th century. I understand those that are skeptical of CO2 being the primary cause from humans point to the cooling periods as not consistent with that hypothesis.
So I agree wholeheartedly with not denying the data that the surface atmosphere is warming. I approach the position from here with a value position of human life flourishing as my value position. As Alex Epstein points out in his argument for fossil fuels over the last 100 years deaths of humans related to climate has fallen 98 percent. In fact, climate related deaths are almost non-existent to in industrialized countries. With such a rapid increase in population and CO2 emmissions that is remarkable. So I really don't die on a hill of are humans mildly responsible, partly responsible, half responsible, or primarily responsible for the warming. I say be that question as whatever it may we have greatly increased not only human lives, but the flourishing and the thriving of human life over that same period of time of CO2 increase by burning fossil fuels. So I am grateful, I am grateful that my life has been emboldened but such fantastic growth and stimilus. I have had a life that has mainly been one of thinking by practicing law. That has been increased by a great degree because we have sheltered ourselves from the ravages of climate. If that is a political identity that I just can't get rid of due to science denying I don't yet see it in myself. But I know I have changed my position on many deep seated and embedded wrong ideas such as Mormonism so I know I am capable and I like to side my mind as best as humanly possible with reality.
So our disagreement probably falls with your statement of the destruction of civilization. You stated the free market would lead to this. I can only assume that you mean the continued burning of fossil fuels by the free market rather than government intervention by I suppose green alternatives. I need you to be more specific. Also what E said here:
One of the wild things about current global warming denialism is that we're now in observerable rapid temperature increase with significant and observeable negative consequences being caused by that
First, I define negative consequences as human flourishing or human non flourishing. So I can't accept any alarming observable negative consequences. I see the opposite an incredible rising out of poverty, human conditions increases and being better at an enormous rate during the time period in question until present. So I would need those statements made more specific by you or E for me to dig into our disagreements on this further.
Second, I believe I would be the one in the position to more justifiably be granted science as my ally and support for. All of that growth and flourishing of human life from the burning of fossil fuels came from mind, science. It is my position that whatever negative consequences or the destruction of civilization you and E are talking about either come from a failure to continue to have faith in mind and science or from a different value position you and E take. You both would have to elaborate for me.
mikwut
All communication relies, to a noticeable extent on evoking knowledge that we cannot tell, all our knowledge of mental processes, like feelings or conscious intellectual activities, is based on a knowledge which we cannot tell.
-Michael Polanyi
"Why are you afraid, have you still no faith?" Mark 4:40