There are cycles within cycles, and by their very nature they can appear to keep reversing and they do affect the climate. If we took notice of them, we might…
Category: Uncertainty
A Bad Recipe for Science
Climate change has become a secular religion, rife with dogma, heretics and moral-tribal communities. The secular religion of climate change raises concerns that are far more fundamental than the risks…
Patrick Frank: Nobody understands climate | Tom Nelson Pod #139
He also has peer-reviewed publications on the intelligent design myth, the science is philosophy myth, the noble savage myth, the human-caused global warming myth, and the academic STEM culture of…
CLIMATE UNCERTAINTY and RISK: An Interview With Climatologist Dr. Judith Curry. Watch Live at Noon CT/ 1PM Eastern
Tune in to the show for a review by the Dr. Curry herself. We’ll also take a look at some of the silliest climate news of the week!
Judith Curry Part 1: Presentation about her new book | Tom Nelson Podcast #77
.Tom Nelson Dr. Judith Curry is President and co-founder of CFAN. Following an influential career in academic research and administration, Curry founded CFAN to support the management of weather and…
Climate Uncertainty & Risk: the presentation
The IPCC’s manufacture of consensus has done incalculable harm to climate science and the policy making that is informed by climate science.
Uncertainty Estimates for Routine Temperature Data Sets Part Two.
In short, what is the proper magnitude of the uncertainty associated with such routine daily temperature measurements?
Model Madness – Parallels Between Failed Climate Models And Failed Coronavirus Models
PODCAST with Dr. Roy Spencer – Climate models and coronavirus models are being used to set public policy. Both have proven to be failures. It’s that old “uncertainty monster” again.…
Sarewitz’s Science Smörgåsbord
Guest Essay by Kip Hansen What is a smörgåsbord? And who is Sarewitz? From the top, a smörgåsbord is “a buffet meal of various hot and cold hors d’oeuvres,…
Climate’s uncertainty principle
Reposted from Dr. Judith Curry’s Blog, Climate Etc. by Garth Paltridge On the costs and benefits of climate action. Whether we should do anything now to limit our impact on…
100 Years Later: The Flu
Guest Essay by Kip Hansen One hundred years have passed since the Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918 swept around the world, circumnavigating at least twice between 1918 and 1920, killing…
SIGNAL CONVOLUTION, MIDPOINT OF RANGE, AND ALL THAT
KEVIN KILTY Introduction A guest blogger recently1 made an analysis of the twice per day sampling of maximum and minimum temperature and its relationship to Nyquist rate, in an attempt…
Nyquist, sampling, anomalies and all that
Guest post by Nick Stokes, Every now and then, in climate blogging, one hears a refrain that the traditional min/max daily temperature can’t be used because it “violates Nyquist”. In…
New study attempts to “squeeze out” uncertainty in climate models
From the “we’re gonna need a bigger computer” department. Climate model uncertainties ripe to be squeezed The latest climate models and observations offer unprecedented opportunities to reduce the remaining uncertainties…
Philosophy, uncertainty, probability, consensus, the IPCC, and all that…
So What Happened to the Philosophy? Guest essay by John Ridgway Many years ago, when I was studying at university, an old joke was doing the rounds in the corridors…
Durable Original Measurement Uncertainty
Guest Essay by Kip Hansen Introduction: Temperature and Water Level (MSL) are two hot topic measurements being widely bandied about and vast sums of money are being invested in…
Modern Scientific Controversies Part 1: The Salt Wars
This is the first in a series of several essays that will discuss ongoing scientific controversies, a specific type of which are often referred to in the science press and…
Chaos & Climate – Part 2: Chaos = Stability
Guest Essay by Kip Hansen “…we should recognise that we are dealing with a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore that the long-term prediction of future climate states…
Quote of the Week: 'Climate Hawk' says [it's] 'insane to try to predict what’s going to happen in 2100'
WUWT readers may remember ultra climate activist David Roberts, a self described “climate hawk” who wrote regularly for Grist, and became so burned out he had to take a year…
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