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Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her!(Read 12244 times)
Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #30 on: October 15, 2009, 04:01:03 AM
I think what will happen is a developing nation will develop and release an electric car for about $5,000. Their government will cut a bunch of resource consents and taxes once they realize the massive trade surplus this would mean for their economy
Loaded-Gun.com - I don't know what the hell they are talking about or why they are even there. They don't make serious points and they don't joke, but they still manage to make a lot of posts somehow.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #31 on: October 15, 2009, 05:15:08 AM
Quote
So UV light doesnt hit the south?

 During a large chunk of the year, no. Ditto the North Pole. There is also a rather conspicuous year-round lack of atmospheric electrical discharges.

 And all that cold weather doesn't help either.

 The CFC ban, like the Man Made Ice Age Global Warming Climate Change song-and-dance is just another example of science following politics, and the less scrupulous scientists following grant money those politics scare up.


Quote
I think what will happen is a developing nation will develop and release an electric car for about $5,000.

 As much as I like the idea of electric cars, both for their potential for making cities cleaner, and because they could have some wicked performance if the power density problem was ever solved... manufacturing them still requires a crazy expenditure of energy and expensive materials that have to be mined out of the earth. Let's not kid ourselves about them being some magical silver bullet of conservation.

 And $5,000 probably wouldn't even cover the cost of the drive train.

It's truly a shame I am no longer there to yell at girls to make out with you.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #32 on: October 15, 2009, 09:15:18 AM
Quote
So UV light doesnt hit the south?

 During a large chunk of the year, no. Ditto the North Pole. There is also a rather conspicuous year-round lack of atmospheric electrical discharges.


So you admit your info is wrong, good. Now...why do you believe the rest of your info ?
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Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #33 on: October 15, 2009, 10:19:11 AM
Quote
So UV light doesnt hit the south?

 During a large chunk of the year, no.

So, what you're saying is, we should see a drop in the area of the ozone hole during winter months, if ozone reactivity is directly impacted by the amount of UV light in the region?



that's an interesting hypothesis, Wozz!  We should get some scientists to measure that!
Like yours.  Only different.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #34 on: October 15, 2009, 10:48:10 AM
The CFC ban, like the Man Made Ice Age Global Warming Climate Change song-and-dance is just another example of science following politics, and the less scrupulous scientists following grant money those politics scare up.
Fixed (because climate change is quite obviously not just a song-and-dance as you can see from ice cores, tree rings, and Roman records...).
I disagree with even the fixed portion, though, since just by simple logic it's obvious that man is having an effect on the climate given our CO2 output alone.
The question is not whether or not man made climate change real, but rather whether or not it's is a bad thing.
Given the records, and given our capacity with modern technology to make serious changes to either the albedo or greenhouse gas content of the atmosphere, I think it's next to impossible to say that what climate change we are creating is a bad thing.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #35 on: October 15, 2009, 11:15:52 AM
eitje: Now youre going to have to point out that the months at the bottom are for north or south earth.  ( Sorry, but you are open. )

MightyMouse: Yes, impossible ... if you ignore the finite state of rescources being consumed driving the change. ( We do tend to invent some cool stuff during times of war though... the downside is lots of people die. )
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Look dude, there's only one thing I like that starts with Hot Black Co- and it doesn't end in 'ffee'.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #36 on: October 15, 2009, 12:52:31 PM
Re: Electric cars, most of what I've read/seen/heard says that most electric cars, even hydrogen cells, would probably be worse on the environment than running a 1-ton dually, considering the environmental costs of producing that much electricity, either through coal or nuclear power, or for the hydrogen cell cars, producing the massive amounts of hydrogen.
No one mourns the wicked.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #37 on: October 15, 2009, 01:47:14 PM
All systems go for geothermal and coal seam gas.
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Look dude, there's only one thing I like that starts with Hot Black Co- and it doesn't end in 'ffee'.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #38 on: October 16, 2009, 09:21:08 AM
eitje: Now youre going to have to point out that the months at the bottom are for north or south earth.  ( Sorry, but you are open. )

The chart tops with "Southern Hemisphere"...?
Like yours.  Only different.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #39 on: October 16, 2009, 11:50:02 AM
Yes...

 Remember who you were posting too ?
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Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #40 on: October 16, 2009, 10:23:19 PM
My climate change argument goes like this:

Humans do not have a good understanding of how all of the earth's feedback mechanisms operate.  As such, it is better to err on the side of caution when considering how we interact with that system.

Minimizing human CO2 output is at worst a waste of time, but at best might prevent catastrophic climate change.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #41 on: October 17, 2009, 12:55:27 AM
So what should we do?
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Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #42 on: October 17, 2009, 02:24:31 AM
As such, it is better to err on the side of caution when considering how we interact with that system.
I would agree. In fact I used to agree, but I think that from an evolutionary perspective this argument is too conservative.
I don't believe that even if we fucked up the environment so badly that humanity perished that life would cease to exist.
Heck, call me a rebel but I even think that intelligent life could re-establish itself.

The only forceful argument I've seen come from the "green" side of the argument is that global warming reduces biodiversity. My counterargument would be that biodiversity is extremely capable of reestablishing itself via evolution.

The only valid arguments I can see that support the cautious approach are humanistic in nature, and you wouldn't want to be labeled a speciesist, would you Emp?
« Last Edit: October 17, 2009, 02:36:30 AM by Doormouse »



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #43 on: October 17, 2009, 08:24:48 AM
As such, it is better to err on the side of caution when considering how we interact with that system.
I would agree. In fact I used to agree, but I think that from an evolutionary perspective this argument is too conservative.
I don't believe that even if we fucked up the environment so badly that humanity perished that life would cease to exist.
Heck, call me a rebel but I even think that intelligent life could re-establish itself.

The only forceful argument I've seen come from the "green" side of the argument is that global warming reduces biodiversity. My counterargument would be that biodiversity is extremely capable of reestablishing itself via evolution.

The only valid arguments I can see that support the cautious approach are humanistic in nature, and you wouldn't want to be labeled a speciesist, would you Emp?

Ha!  Sounds like something James Lovelock would say.

My counter-argument is that the vast majority of human decisions are for the benefit of humans, or some subset thereof.  The decision to keep pumping CO2 out at increasing rates will be based entirely on either concern for future generations of humans, or a refusal to give up the more immediate economic benefits of ignoring any problems associated with CO2 output.

If I were king, what I would do is this: I would start phasing in taxes on carbon output (among all of the other externalities for which I would impose a tax).  I would invest heavily in building more public rail/electrifying said rail, modernizing the electric grid, and making other infrastructure upgrades.  And fuck free trade, I would put prohibitive tariffs on goods based on a country's environmental policies (among other policies that I would rate in order to apply tariffs).



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #44 on: October 18, 2009, 11:01:50 AM
The only valid arguments I can see that support the cautious approach are humanistic in nature, and you wouldn't want to be labeled a speciesist, would you Emp?

Survival of the fittest, mouse, and we've got the fucking guns.  Are you really arguing for evolution as a resolution, but then saying that we should not try to preserve our own species?
Like yours.  Only different.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #45 on: October 18, 2009, 11:14:21 AM
Pathetic humans.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #46 on: October 18, 2009, 03:53:58 PM
If there was a bug destroying Texas you'd want it eradicated. Well we're the bug. We need to pare down. The stupid need to go. Eugenics? Get over it. Desperate measures...
No Nyarlathotep, no chaos...
KNOW NYARLATHOTEP, KNOW CHAOS!



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #47 on: October 18, 2009, 06:05:27 PM
If the bug could be convinced to not destroy Texas and - instead - do something useful for Texas, then I'd be all about convincing the bug to go do that useful thing.
Like yours.  Only different.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #48 on: October 18, 2009, 06:38:50 PM
If there was a bug destroying Texas you'd want it eradicated move to SoCal.
ever tried. ever failed. no matter. try again. fail again. fail better.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #49 on: October 18, 2009, 07:02:03 PM
Yeah, there is that...
No Nyarlathotep, no chaos...
KNOW NYARLATHOTEP, KNOW CHAOS!



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #50 on: October 20, 2009, 10:56:18 PM



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #51 on: October 21, 2009, 12:07:57 AM
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Scientists can disagree.  It's part of what makes science great - nothing is believed just because it is said, and everything should be testable.  In this case, these fools have come up with a non-testable

Ahh but you see their theory is testable. For if the thing comes online next time without a hitch then it will have been proven false. If however the thing can be rebuilt perfectly and crashes over and over again with no discernible cause then perhaps it could be possible.

The operation of the device one way or the other will provide the proof.
But they were obviously just taking the piss.
Reality; A shared narrative we all agree to believe.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #52 on: October 21, 2009, 09:24:52 AM
I made this post three days from now.
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Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #53 on: October 21, 2009, 10:05:45 AM
Ahh but you see their theory is testable. For if the thing comes online next time without a hitch then it will have been proven false. If however the thing can be rebuilt perfectly and crashes over and over again with no discernible cause then perhaps it could be possible.

That's not emperical!
Like yours.  Only different.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #54 on: October 21, 2009, 12:57:02 PM
But is it hypothetico-deductive?

I made this post three days from now.
PM me the results of the Thursday and Friday Keeneland G3s?
I'll make it very worth your 3-days-in-the-past-self's while.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #55 on: October 21, 2009, 03:32:37 PM
So you can place the same bets as me and screw up my payout odds?

No way.
Go to these sites, and don't forget to tell your friends!
KimboFever.com
MyWebTrash.com
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Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #56 on: October 21, 2009, 05:57:51 PM
That reminds me of an excellent and legal horse betting scam that's been going on... now I could just fucking remember exactly how it went, or find a link. Ugh.
ever tried. ever failed. no matter. try again. fail again. fail better.



Re: Large Hadron Collider? I Hardly Knew Her! Reply #57 on: November 08, 2009, 05:49:02 AM
BRING BACK POLIO!

FUCK SALK!
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