This is not to get into an argument, just to say one thing. I've thought about a few things that were brought ot my attention and just wanted to offer t..."/>
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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
'RWA' ='AFAF'
Thursday, November 11, 2010 7:23 AM
DREAMTROVE
Thursday, November 11, 2010 7:44 AM
1KIKI
Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 8:14 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:I decided many years ago to square up what I do with what I believe. I don't work for a place whose mission I don't believe, I don't pass by anyone who needs help, I sniff test what I am asked to do. There may be things I accept - like FACTS on global warming - but I don't blindly accept things just b/c an authority said so. OTOH I don't blindly rebel, either. Either blind path is a road to being manipulated to someone else's ends.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 10:44 AM
HKCAVALIER
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: If you look at the body of research in social psychology, from Milgram's obedience experiment to Zimbardo's Stanford prison experiment on down, you'll find a pattern. People, as a whole, often act in gullible, irrational, conformist, obedient, and submissive ways. This doesn't apply to just one type of personality or one type of ideology. It applies to most normal, regular people. Regular people like you and me. Here is a list of some of the most famous ones: http://www.spring.org.uk/2007/11/10-piercing-insights-into-human-nature.php It is easy to come up with a label for people we perceive as authoritarian or obedient. But more likely than not, we ourselves have those traits too. We just don't see it when we ourselves do obedient, blind-faith, dogmatic, authoritarian stuff. WE tell ourselves we have good and correct reasons for our beliefs and behavior--THEY don't. So the way I see it, if I invent a label for a certain trait, I would describe it in such a way that I could apply it to myself as well. Demonization of ANY group of people is a bit dangerous. We are ALL "we." There is no "they." JMHO.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 12:27 PM
Quote: Niki: And I don't start all threads, just to clarify. PN is way "ahead" of me...he's been ahead of everyone since I came.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 12:49 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2010 12:55 PM
CANTTAKESKY
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: You CLAIM to be impartial.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 1:15 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2010 1:21 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: That’s an AF trait; inability to ever question one’s beliefs or even consider one might possibly be wrong. I know I’m wrong sometimes, and I’ve freely admitted it.
Quote:It's not specifically about global warming, it's climate change, and I believe it's happening.
Quote:By your criteria, we would believe NOTHING for certain. That means you can't NOT believe in Climate Change OR believe in it.
Quote: That's not logical to me; going through life not believing anything is true isn't a way to live.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 1:34 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: Here, from another thread, where you were very much partial to your own position but dismissive of others, all while claiming objectivity: CTS: "I study the evidence. Any expert interpretation of data has to stand up to skepticism and challenges--NO MATTER who they are, no matter whether you like what they say or not. That is what scientific objectivity means."
Thursday, November 11, 2010 1:48 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2010 2:28 PM
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: I hope you don't feel piled on if I post this anyway, even if it covers some of the same ground as others.
Quote:If we look at your actual argument as an argument FOR something, rather than a system of undermining OTHER's arguments, what are you advocating? That we know nothing? That reality is beyond our poor senses to perceive accurately? That if we come across someone who believes differently from us, we must concede that their beliefs are veridically indistinguishable from our own?
Quote:Does it really serve your argument to tell Signy that she doesn't know when a truck's gonna hit her because her perception of the truck is based on assumptions? Do you interrogate every detail of your perception before stepping out of the way when you see a truck bearing down on you?
Quote:The big, big problem with this kind of argument, this radical subjectivity, is that it is used to rationalize abuse of all kinds, even, historically, fascism.
Quote:Have you ever been in an abusive relationship?
Quote: Did you ever rationalize your partner's abuse by saying to yourself that you didn't appreciate how it must seem from their point of view, the extraordinary pressures they must be under? We never get out of such relationships until we realize that our perceptions are more than mere opinion.
Quote:These studies all perpetuate the grand "conflict" between reason and emotion. Scientists so often see themselves as fighting some tragically doomed Götterdämmerung against emotionalism.
Quote:The two pillars of mental health are high self-esteem and clear boundaries, ...They are importantly not reducible to a set of rules, because rules engender rigidity...The key to reducing such rigidity is empathic awareness.
Quote:And empathy is the first thing to go when Science sets down to analyzing its data.
Quote: I'd say low self-esteem is behind all the conclusions in your 10 studies.
Quote:In my view, these experiments are unwittingly designed to make the inevitable triumph of emotion over reason look as disturbing and dangerous as possible.
Quote:All I see demonstrated in these experiments is that emotional well-being is simply a greater human necessity than achieving moment to moment logic in our thought process.
Quote:To leap from that to the idea that we have no control over ourselves, or that we're naturally inclined toward evil and conformity borders on the misanthropic.
Quote:when will science stop using anxious, dependent, habitually submissive children as the default test subjects in determining human nature???)
Thursday, November 11, 2010 2:42 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: How about this experiment: take an idea you 'believe' in, like gravity for example, which is relatively neutral and impersonal. Find a way to put it so you can feel your hackles rise.
Quote:Your response to the IMPLICATIONS of global climate change - that the world will have to address it in a concerted effort - may be clouding your read of the actual science.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 2:43 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2010 2:44 PM
SIGNYM
I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.
Quote:I advocate being skeptical in science. I advocate seeing science as a journey rather than a destination, a process of unending discovery rather than a body of "facts." I advocate thinking critically about where data come from, and asking if we had measured data differently, would we get different "facts"?
Quote:But if the big rig were a metaphor for an important scientific finding that had implications for human behavior, absolutely, I would ask all those questions and challenge every interpretation of the facts. That is what science is about.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 3:17 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2010 3:52 PM
MAL4PREZ
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: Instead, you refuse to give any credit to the yeasayers - subjecting their arguments to truly ridiculous objections - which can be brought to the futile endpoint of 'what is the nature of reality'. You are driven to question EVERYTHING, even down to the nature of your own existence, in order to not give that data any credit - at all. OTOH you will believe ANY argument and set of data proposed by the naysayers, no matter how contradictory, unsupported by fact, or illogical.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 4:12 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: "Humans are too small to have a long-term impact on the environment"? "
Quote:"Individual freedom is the most important metric of human existence"?
Quote:"Not rocking the boat is more important than survival"?
Quote: Skepticism is all well and good provided (1) it sprays out equitably in all directions and (2) it yields to the preponderance of evidence. Beyond that it just becomes partisan opposition.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 4:14 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: ANYWAY, I'm done with you. I have better things to do with my time than to debate some random person's fantasies.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 4:22 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: These studies all perpetuate the grand "conflict" between reason and emotion. Scientists so often see themselves as fighting some tragically doomed Götterdämmerung against emotionalism. I didn't get that when I read about these studies. To the best of my knowledge (but I may be wrong), the authors did not interpret these studies that way. They were looking more at cognitive mechanisms than emotional ones.
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: These studies all perpetuate the grand "conflict" between reason and emotion. Scientists so often see themselves as fighting some tragically doomed Götterdämmerung against emotionalism.
Quote:Quote:And empathy is the first thing to go when Science sets down to analyzing its data. The empathy Science doesn't have and the empathy mentally healthy humans need are two separate entities. Science doesn't need good mental health; it is just an objective method of discovery.
Quote:Quote: I'd say low self-esteem is behind all the conclusions in your 10 studies.If that is true, there appears to be a lot of subjects with low self esteem. :)
Quote:Quote:In my view, these experiments are unwittingly designed to make the inevitable triumph of emotion over reason look as disturbing and dangerous as possible. I think the experimenters were just surprised that cognition can be compartamentalized the way it is. I don't see a big to-do about emotion here.
Quote:Quote:All I see demonstrated in these experiments is that emotional well-being is simply a greater human necessity than achieving moment to moment logic in our thought process.Interesting. For me, I see how powerless most people feel, which may have at its root an epidemic of low self-esteem, as you say.
Quote:Quote:when will science stop using anxious, dependent, habitually submissive children as the default test subjects in determining human nature???)They are convenient for the psychology professors, and cheap. But yes, it is a biased sample of the human race.
Quote:It is more of a soft probability, that people tend to behave thus. Very few people, after all, have really great mental health.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 4:32 PM
Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: Such as stating that the oil industry would support the big "global warming hoax" in order to cash in on sequestration, ... No, CTS, I'll not let that one go, now that you've reminded me about it. It was such a ridiculous claim that I still can't quite believe that it was meant seriously.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 5:33 PM
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: Your lack of urgency, your resistance to interpreting the evidence as cause for alarm, leads folk to think you've made up your mind already.
Quote: If you were remotely interested in really considering the possibility of global warming, you wouldn't be so nonchalant about it all,
Quote: but I see you address all advocates of GW theory with the same contempt you feel Signy has earned.
Quote:How is it that you are so convinced that GW is untrue,
Quote:At what point do you feel it is important to stop endlessly debating the minutia and actually do something to stop a cataclysm from happening,
Quote:HK is not SignyM.
Quote:But it isn't used as a "soft probability" it is invoked as definition of human nature and the rationale you use to tell Niki that she can't possibly know what motivates other people to do what they do.
Quote:CTS: If you look at the body of research in social psychology, from Milgram's obedience experiment to Zimbardo's Stanford prison experiment on down, you'll find a PATTERN. People, as a whole, OFTEN act in gullible, irrational, conformist, obedient, and submissive ways. This (pattern) doesn't apply to just one type of personality or one type of ideology. It applies to most normal, regular people. Regular people like you and me....(insert link) It is easy to come up with a label for people we perceive as authoritarian or obedient. But MORE LIKELY THAN NOT, we ourselves have those traits too.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 5:46 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: But oddly enough, you don't subject alternative claims to the same scrutiny. You don't demand PROOF that the volcano vents CO2, that the CO2 being vented creates the Keeling curve stretching over decades, or even that the measurements are contaminated at all with volcanic CO2. It's the blatant asymmetry that gives you away.
Thursday, November 11, 2010 5:58 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2010 8:15 PM
Quote:Originally posted by 1kiki: CTS: "I never asserted that the Keeling curve was created by volcanic CO2, so that is a non-issue." CTS previously: "There are those who challenge the Keeling curve; they do know that Mauna Loa is an active volcano, and CO2 is a volcanic gas right? ;)
Quote:During the same period atmospheric CO2 measurements were started near the top of the strongly CO2-emitting (e.g., Ryan, 1995) Hawaiian Mauna Loa volcano. The reason for the choice of location was that it should be far away from CO2-emitting industrial areas. At the Mauna Loa Observatory the measurements were taken with a new infra-red (IR) absorbing instrumental method, never validated versus the accurate wet chemical techniques. Critique has also been directed to the analytical methodology and sampling error problems (Jaworowski et al., 1992 a; and Segalstad, 1996, for further references), and the fact that the results of the measurements were "edited" (Bacastow et al., 1985); large portions of raw data were rejected, leaving just a small fraction of the raw data subjected to averaging techniques (Pales & Keeling, 1965). http://www.co2web.info/ESEF3VO2.htm
Quote:CTS: The point is, there IS a debate, based on how one measures and defines the "amount of carbon dioxide.""
Thursday, November 11, 2010 8:42 PM
Thursday, November 11, 2010 8:45 PM
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: What I meant was that the Scientists themselves jettison empathy the way zoologists jettison "anthropomorphism" before they even get started. I submit that taking emotion out of their reasoning damages their ability to reason.
Quote:Scientists don't want to touch emotion unless it's with a ten foot pole, preferably with a low level electrical charge.
Quote: But, where I come from, art expresses meanings, particularly emotional ones, and the choice of a favorite work is exceptionally meaningful. ...--would you be surprised that choosing one piece as your favorite might imply things about your emotional nature?
Friday, November 12, 2010 8:08 AM
FREMDFIRMA
Quote:The whole of it is actually better summed up by it's extremism - cause I kinda reject "Lucifer Effect" of the type suggested by the Stanford Prison, Milgram and other related experiments, as well as propaganda like Lord of the Flies due to both essential sample corruption, and that they seem to be "cooked" in a fashion to support a premise that is at best flawed, if not unsustainable. You can't take a sample from a society in which folks have their humanity crushed out of them from the very cradle, pull it from one of the most authoritarian institutions on the planet (public/college "education") and then suggest that humans are naturally inhumane and authoritarian - because your "study" has been inadvertently pre-loaded to produce that exact result whether you meant it or not. That is why the MK-Ultra and other experiments failed, cause via mass-media, propaganda (like Hearst, father of yellow journalism) and other social interventions, often times downright physical ones, like seizing children from "undesirable" subcultures (native americans, mormons) and "re-educating" them - we'd ALREADY *been* involved in pyschological manipulation and programming/conditioning on a grand scale, and the damn fools running things didn't seem to realize they were running their experiments in an ant farm which was itself a larger experiment by people who'd been doing it ever since Plato suggested it. Lest one forget, I am a Rosseau-Kropotkinist, a belief I did not come by arbitrarily, but by seeking the CAUSES of behavior, rather than their outcomes, and the singlemost disastrous concept we have is that "People are naturally evil, and must be controlled for thier own good!" - a concept for the most part offered to us with one hand BY people offering a leash in the other, for their own reasons... So you can't take a group of people CONDITIONED for twenty some (or even ten, as in Lord of the Flies ) years to a certain behavior, and then try to make the case that it's inborn, that's bloody ridiculous - and many recent studies by researchers overseas have shown it, by pointing out that unconditioned children for the most part do not display those behaviors. If I wanted to spike the hell out of Milgram, I'd simply select the sample from entirely FreeSchool/HomeSchool children, and lay good odds you'd not find one in ten who would follow through. Genetics might load the gun, but it's environment which pulls the trigger - and sure, while there's some exceptions to that, misfire an whatnot, this is the bulk of humanity, they're trained to a behavior that is unnatural, unhuman even cause for a fact were we really inherently like this - how the hell did we ever build civilization in the first place ? Cause if you buy into all that rot, you wind up with a chicken-and-egg problem - namely, how did we build civilization to civilize us, if we need to be forcibly civilized to get anything done ? (And I use the term civilized in a very tongue in cheek sense here!)
Friday, November 12, 2010 9:10 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Fremdfirma: If I wanted to spike the hell out of Milgram, I'd simply select the sample from entirely FreeSchool/HomeSchool children, and lay good odds you'd not find one in ten who would follow through.
Friday, November 12, 2010 9:59 AM
Quote:Skepticism is all well and good provided (1) it sprays out equitably in all directions and (2) it yields to the preponderance of evidence. Beyond that it just becomes partisan opposition.
Friday, November 12, 2010 12:32 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: I think the fact that at least one person besides me got the impression you dismiss or don't accept climate change shows that at least in expressing your point of view, you indicate a disbelief in climate change.
Quote:So it makes me wonder what facts exactly it would take for you to believe in the theory...and to wonder if you, and those who feel like you (not to even mention those absolutely convinced it DOESN'T exist) would be skeptical no matter what, OR would retain their skepticism to the point of no return?
Quote:If it's bearing down on you, how long do you take to determine if the threat is real and you need to move?
Quote:I would also like to know how you have weighed what facts have been presented both pro and con climate change, and why you have rejected one and not the other (if true) and what it would take for you to definitively come down on one side or another.
Quote:Dunno, just found it amusing that there are no nasty one-liners in the most recent back-and-forth in this thread.
Friday, November 12, 2010 12:46 PM
Friday, November 12, 2010 3:04 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by mal4prez: Such as stating that the oil industry would support the big "global warming hoax" in order to cash in on sequestration, ... No, CTS, I'll not let that one go, now that you've reminded me about it. It was such a ridiculous claim that I still can't quite believe that it was meant seriously. You don't have to let it go, Mal. But I am.
Friday, November 12, 2010 4:44 PM
ANTHONYT
Freedom is Important because People are Important
Saturday, November 13, 2010 8:35 AM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: Your lack of urgency, your resistance to interpreting the evidence as cause for alarm, leads folk to think you've made up your mind already. What everyone else sees as a big rig about to crush me, I see as an indistinguishable dot in the far horizon. My lack of urgency comes from my attitude of, "I think it is premature to panic. Let's take a closer look at it before we jump to conclusions."
Quote:Quote: If you were remotely interested in really considering the possibility of global warming, you wouldn't be so nonchalant about it all,I am interested, or I wouldn't be looking hard at that dot in the horizon. I can't help it if all I see is a dot.
Quote:Quote: but I see you address all advocates of GW theory with the same contempt you feel Signy has earned. That is unfortunate and certainly not intended. I try very hard to be civil and uncontemptuous, to not deal out the kind of contempt I feel I receive. Then again, maybe you all have a different definition of contempt than I do. I dunno.
Quote:If you look at the body of research in social psychology, from Milgram's obedience experiment to Zimbardo's Stanford prison experiment on down, you'll find a PATTERN. People, as a whole, OFTEN act in gullible, irrational, conformist, obedient, and submissive ways. This (pattern) doesn't apply to just one type of personality or one type of ideology. It applies to most normal, regular people. Regular people like you and me....(insert link) It is easy to come up with a label for people we perceive as authoritarian or obedient. But MORE LIKELY THAN NOT, we ourselves have those traits too.
Saturday, November 13, 2010 8:43 AM
Saturday, November 13, 2010 9:38 AM
Saturday, November 13, 2010 10:06 AM
Quote:I just thought I noticed a disconnect here: Signy and others passionately invested in this debate and you acting like they were idiots.
Quote:Calling your fellow scientists idiots is not the fast track to making friends.
Quote: It seemed to me a fair amount of the harshness in this thread might be attributable to your disregard for their very real fears.
Quote: I thought if you saw the issue in something closer to their emotional context, communication might become easier for everyone.
Quote:it seemed unkind. If people you care about are terrified of something you don't perceive as a threat, do you automatically ridicule them? Can you blame them if they get angry?
Quote:We both know what contempt is. When you ask a question which you know is absurd and to which you already know the answer--a question along the lines of "...is it like pouring a cup of boiling water into the ocean?"--you've crossed the line, don't you think?
Quote:You've been called out on this attitude before and you keep saying that is not your intent, and yet you don't change your behavior.
Quote:The gist of your quote in that context is: "If you look at the psychological evidence, you don't have a leg to stand on, do you? Because you lack anything remotely resembling objectivity."
Saturday, November 13, 2010 11:03 AM
Quote:You've been called out on this attitude before and you keep saying that is not your intent, and yet you don't change your behavior. It's a little bit like if a person says, "Hey, you're standing on my foot!" and you reply, "Oh, I assure you, that was not my intention!" but you don't remove your foot!
Quote:communication is not unilateral; it is collaborative, dependant on a meeting of minds. We all need to try our best to at least see the context in which our words are received, if not share that context for the sake of the discussion. Your intended meaning is only part of the story, and if you ignore, as I think you continue to do here, the inflammatory emotional context of the discussion, claiming to be "plain" and "objective," pushing all the emotional responsibility onto others, you're just gonna keep alienating people.
Saturday, November 13, 2010 12:20 PM
Saturday, November 13, 2010 12:38 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Because if I bring something real to the table, only to get jerked around time and time again,...
Saturday, November 13, 2010 12:50 PM
Saturday, November 13, 2010 12:58 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: And, as an aside, when it comes to the terms RWA and AF, I never thought you were attacking me personally, I'm just frustrated that you dismiss these concepts out of hand and rely on your opinion that they are biased, ergo totally invalid. And you didn't "imply" that my assertions were not objective, when it came to RWA, you said it straight out, in pretty derrogatory terms...not just about my assertions, but to the point of dismissing Altemeyer completely in a distinctly negative way. You may not agree with him--obviously you don't--but that doesn't automatically mean his theories are bullshit; it's your opinion, that's all.
Saturday, November 13, 2010 1:09 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: While there are some, I think I would change it to "calling SCIENTISTS" idiots, not just fellow scientists. One can rationally disagree with scientists, and some of them are overbearing louts for sure, to dismiss them isn't logical, to me; to refute their theories or methods or something is valid, but to just call them idiots is wrong. Becoming a scientist pretty much precludes being an "idiot" as the term is understood, doesn't it?
Quote:And, as an aside, when it comes to the terms RWA and AF, I never thought you were attacking me personally, I'm just frustrated that you dismiss these concepts out of hand and rely on your opinion that they are biased, ergo totally invalid.
Saturday, November 13, 2010 1:10 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: A scientist's job is to figure out what the evidence is telling her,
Quote: not to put preconditions on what she will or will not accept
Quote:However, let me assure you that the data you are seeking exists.
Quote:that unless you can see the raw data FOR YOURSELF....
Quote: www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/data/temperature/
Saturday, November 13, 2010 1:20 PM
Saturday, November 13, 2010 1:37 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Nope. I've told you 2x now, I have never asked to see raw data. I want to see THE MEAN that is calculated from raw data. The mean only, not the raw data. If I ask for a lasagna made out of 5 cheeses, I don't want to be taken to a cheese cave. I want the lasagna, the end product. Go to the other thread. I even wrote out a fictitious answer in the format I would accept, as an example. No raw data in it.
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