Northeast Stinger
Helluva Engineer
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OK. It seems that I've been unclear. I think open discussion on science to be about scientific data not about opinion of scientists.
That you are framing the question as one of discussing objects of faith is the problem. Which of these do you trust, ie, put your faith in is not a science question.
FYI:
https://judithcurry.com/2013/11/10/the-52-consensus/
My problem is that whenever you want to show that this should be about scientific data and not scientific opinion, you resort to a source who happens to have an opinion. For instance you seem rather fond of Judith Curry.
Is she a better source than the over one dozen organizations I listed? Apparently if she agrees with you, then she is.
As I have said to you before, your threshold for proof would make it very hard for me to prove to you the earth is round. I could give several anecdotal experiences and explain how I think these correlate with what my old elementary text books said, as well as photos from space. But if you are convinced these are all part of a conspiracy, that the data has been doctored or the photos faked, then I've got nothing because I cannot prove direct knowledge of the earth's spheroid shape.
I have not read the 5000 or so emails from the so called climategate debate. In the past I have read the ones in question and found them to be either blown out of proportion or taken out of context. That was my experience of them. Honestly. When I further read that 8 different investigations found nothing to the "conspiracy," that jived with my reading. To me it sounds more like an article of faith to believe this was some big conspiracy.
At the risk of getting off on a tangent and regretting it, let me put it this way. I was a young child when JFK was assassinated. It was a very paranoid and suspicious time to be alive.
In my youth I began to read everything from the Warren Report to every theory that came up. I watched TV shows, documentaries and news stories. I found lots of anomalies in the traditional accounts of the assassination. Lots of suspicious things. I don't care to go into detail so I will put it this way. I ended up with a 90% belief, after examining all the evidence, that the assassination happened just as the conventional interpretation says. I found that most of the conspiracy theories did not hold water. But then I also was left with about a 10% possibility that some of the unexplained aspects of the case might lead to some bombshell. What was really worrisome was that some of the unexplained aspects of the shooting still do not have an airtight explanation.
But the problem with that 10% alternative view was this. For that 10% possibility to be the true interpretation it required that I maintain a "conspiracy mindset." In other words, I had to be on a mission. I had to start with an alternative interpretation, believe that it was true, and then dare the known facts to refute the conclusion that I started with. But even if I did that there was no way to make all the pieces fit into a grand alternative story.
I don't know if this makes sense or not but I guess what I am trying to say is that at some point I learned that you have to step back from the alternative story and just ask yourself if it really makes sense for something true to be hidden in plain sight for so long that it can only be discovered by uncovering a conspiracy so big that it touches almost every area of our public life. I concluded that to do that was a bad bet, if one wanted to remain rational.