Hypatia_Alexandria
Well-known member
It was a perfectly reasonable response premised on the comment that:Your response has nothing to do with his ppst.
"Science doesn't reach conclusions. People do."
It was a perfectly reasonable response premised on the comment that:Your response has nothing to do with his ppst.
They'll do NOTHING of significance one way or another - just like they've BEEN DOING. But HEY!!! It's all a scam anyway.Not an overly "Christian" reply. You are alright and close to the end of your life but what about others on this planet and what of future generations?
Science is not a thinking entity. He was correct.It was a perfectly reasonable response premised on the comment that:
"Science doesn't reach conclusions. People do."
The understanding of the natural world [i.e. science] is the product of thinking entities.Science is not a thinking entity. He was correct.
Nice to know you have such concern for the future of your grand and great-grandchildren.They'll do NOTHING of significance one way or another - just like they've BEEN DOING. But HEY!!! It's all a scam anyway.
Next question???
Frankly, I'm more concerned by what the Democrats will do/have done to the country, than I am with "Natural Phenomena"Nice to know you have such concern for the future of your grand and great-grandchildren.
Which are only people.The understanding of the natural world [i.e. science] is the product of thinking entities.
Do you take the same dismissive view of Paul and the other various NT writers? They likewise were "only people"Which are only people.
Explain, how is Paul dosmissive.Do you take the same dismissive view of Paul and the other various NT writers? They likewise were "only people"
I see, so this is the first time in 4.5 billion years that the Rhine River had a low water level?...it's so bad that water levels on the Rhine River are decreasing enough to affect nuclear power generation and coal transport. Sometimes, people don't respond to scientific analysis until it begins to affect their pocketbook.
Rhine River (German Federal Institute of Hydrology graph)
"Given that global climate change could increase the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events in the future (IPCC 2018), assessing their economic consequences is becoming increasingly relevant, also for macroeconomic analyses and economic policy. In this vein, several central banks have started to evaluate the consequences of climate change for the conduct of monetary policy and acknowledge that weather-related supply shocks, for instance due to droughts and heatwaves, can generate a trade-off between stabilizing inflation or output (Coeuré 2018)."
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I wonder what the climate was out west a couple of million years ago? I bet it was awful hot then too and that caused all kinds of problems. Species have come and gone during the whole life cycle of the planet, nothing that is happening now is anything new.....it is the worst in the American west in 1,200 years.
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I see, so this is the first time in 4.5 billion years that the Rhine River had a low water level?
I wonder what the climate was out west a couple of million years ago? I bet it was awful hot then too and that caused all kinds of problems. Species have come and gone during the whole life cycle of the planet, nothing that is happening now is anything new.
I disagree. Every time the climate got hot, then cold, then got hot again in the past happened without man being the prime factor. The earth that is basically alive with constant change is the prime factor. You folks have lost it concerning this issue. Man as a species will be long gone, but the planet will still remain, constantly changing.
Political will wont be easy because people are selfish. .. and politics usually has other agendasNo perhaps about it. We also, and most importantly, have to cut emissions drastically to prevent further disaster.
What has already been pumped into our atmosphere and the impact that will have cannot be stopped, but humans need to reconsider how they wish to proceed in the future and that requires political will.
But not at its estuary where the sea level is rising?I see, so this is the first time in 4.5 billion years that the Rhine River had a low water level?
Mass extinctions have certainly occurred in the past and life has come back often more diversely than previously - the last 65 million years or so is a good example. And as long as our star keeps giving out enough heat life will continue.I disagree. Every time the climate got hot, then cold, then got hot again in the past happened without man being the prime factor. The earth that is basically alive with constant change is the prime factor. You folks have lost it concerning this issue. Man as a species will be long gone, but the planet will still remain, constantly changing.
You do not seem overly concerned about the impact on humans [nor indeed on other organisms] concerning climate changeI see, so this is the first time in 4.5 billion years that the Rhine River had a low water level?