<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7723870#post7723870 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by eckrynock
Thank you everyone. Now, Hippie, there is something wrong. MCary has been saying it since the beginning. We all learned it in 7th grade:
Make an observation.
Formulate a question that is answerable.
Propose a hypothesis, an educated guess as to what the answer is. The hypothesis must be one that you can reject.
Make a prediction or a way to test the hypothesis. This is a type of if, then, when statement.
Experiment, test the prediction.
Analyze and evaluate the test.
Make a decision, did the test support or reject the hypothesis?
You can not "test" global warming. You have a hypothesis, but there is no way to verify it. Without a control (the most important part of a scientific experiment) there is no way to prove your hypothesis. If global warming could be tested in a lab, or if CO2 emmisions could be completed eradicated in the US, then maybe you would have a control. And sad but true, GW has become a huge political issue and is now driven by money and political agendas. What are we to do when one scientist says a glacier has grown over the last ten years when we are told he is being funded by Exxon? What are we to do when another scientist says a glacier has shrunk in the last ten years and are told they are funded by some supporter trying to get AG in office? Let science be science and leave politics out of it. That's what I say.
Randy, what's disappointing about a good debate on current issues?
I guess I was looking at the pH drop in the oceans more as a dilution problem from melting freshwater in the icecaps than a CO2 intake problem?