Let's just assume there's competing narratives. How do you tell which one to subscribe to? Assuming it's not false reporting, a majority of scientists state there's a climate crisis and biodiversity crisis looming or already there. Obviously, from a purely logical standpoint I can't claim "the climate crisis is happening because almost all scientists say so" but heuristically that's how we tend to have to operate. And to an important extent the IPCC reports do try to make the science understandable to laymen, if you've read it.
So I kind of miss what exactly is the relevance of pointing out that it's a narrative to assume the science in favour of the global warming hypothese is right or a "fact"? Technically those claims go to far but for the purposes of discussion I've found alternative narratives easy to disprove. — Benkei
The end-of-the-world narrative is an Indo-European motif. The climate crisis is Armageddon. Capitalism is the Antichrist. I'm talking about the emotional form of it, not the scientific part. — frank
That doesn't mean the end isn't really near. In fact the world is ending all the time. And that's what it's really about: time.
Any good textbook on global warming will have a section on the philosophical challenge of climate change: that this problem will always be with us as long as coal is around to burn. As a species, we have no experience addressing a problem that extends beyond about a hundred years. This problem extends for thousands upon thousands. The real problem is time. — frank
One explanation for the abundance of scientists who support for the official narrative is because there is not much of a career left for them if they go rogue. [...] — Merkwurdichliebe
That makes sense. The human lifespan is less than 100 years. And within that time everyone has plenty of problems to deal with on a daily basis, which makes it hard to justify the investment of limited time and energy on a problem that is predicted (rightly or wrongly) to arise after you are dead. — Merkwurdichliebe
Transmitting an imperative to people a thousand years in the future is just beyond anything we've ever done. — frank
you take a class in global warming at a university, they go over this. It's part of comprehending the true dimensions of the problem. — frank
Is that possible in the slightest. Parents can barely impart their ethics to their children. Maybe if time travel were invented. But that would mean it has already been invented. — Merkwurdichliebe
The topic is not as cut and dried as the official narrative portrays it. — Merkwurdichliebe
Alternatively, there's sufficient/overwhelming evidence of anthropogenic climate change. After all, scientists point at available evidence, not at "narratives" or "whatever people's opinions". — jorndoe
Notice how the quote, or something similar, could be raised on any topic with a general consensus, to pseudo-level an unlevel world. Casting it as a truth-independent or conspiracy'esque game instead, has become trendy I guess. — jorndoe
humans all over the place, population growth, deforestation, pollution, nature/wildlife displacement, extinctions, renewability, — jorndoe
The rising of global temperature is due to burning fossil fuels, deforestation and agricultural practices. That exacerbates flooding, draughts, wildfires, stronger hurricanes, icecap melting, sea level rise, etc. — Mikie
The people who live underground have a static social order and they routinely blitz the surface dwellers so they can never advance and start doing crazy stuff like burning coal. This goes on for thousands of years until Yellowstone blows up and initiates the Age of Insects where ant supercolonies develop intellectual sophistication and pizza that isn't fattening. — frank
How do you know? — frank
if it looks like bullshit, talks like bullshit, walks like bullshit, and smells like bullshit, it is most likely bullshit. — Merkwurdichliebe
This analysis holds up. Life has evolved over billions of years. Evolution isn’t a fact— it’s an official narrative. Scientists are forced into conforming. — Mikie
The most believable bullshit always has a kernel of truth. It is propaganda 101. And anytime i see alarmist bullshit being utilized to centralize power and impose greater control over the multitudes, i get real suspicious. — Merkwurdichliebe
Insect supercolonies don't have this problem. It's why they end up taking over the world. — frank
The bird race that feeds on the insects.?.? — Merkwurdichliebe
Evolutionist aren't attempting — Merkwurdichliebe
Scientists are not infallible, they are human like everyone else. And the human urge to go along with the popular trend is quite strong, especially when doing so would help in furthering one's career. Hence, to think that scientists at large would orient their scientific labor in support of an official narrative is not at all unreasonable to consider. — Merkwurdichliebe
Not ureasonable I suppose for someone with a lack of experience with science and scientists. However, regardless of how reasonably understood it might be that you hold that view (being as ignorant as you demonstrate yourself to be) ignorant conspiracy theory rationalization is what it is. — wonderer1
Exactly— forget the evidence, and forget understanding the science. Just apply said analysis and presto— sit back and feel good about yourself. — Mikie
One explanation for the abundance of scientists who support for the official narrative is because there is not much of a career left for them if they go rogue. [...] — Merkwurdichliebe
Scientists are not infallible, they are human like everyone else. [...] — Merkwurdichliebe
Alternatively, there's sufficient/overwhelming evidence of anthropogenic climate change. After all, scientists point at available evidence, not at "narratives" or "whatever people's opinions". — jorndoe
In my case, my conspiracy theory is called skepticism — Merkwurdichliebe
There is a definite religious zealotry to it all. Makes me all the more justified in rejecting it. — Merkwurdichliebe
Isn't that a genetic fallacy? No, not quite. Maybe ad odium? Or an association fallacy. — jorndoe
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