Audrey2Katrina wrote:Everyone is entitled their "personal" opinion
But this doesn't mean that every opinion is equal.
jazzfan1247 wrote:Personally, I think it's disrespectful to disagree without sound reasoning or evidence, especially when the scientists have devoted a lot of time and energy to their work.
I'll explain myself a little further on this. I asked myself: if I were the one involved with the data and research behind this report, and I devoted say 100 hours to this, and I used all the modern knowledge and techniques that I could, and I put all of my graduate and doctorate, etc work to use........what if some civilians came up to me and just said "I disagree. I know there's a lot of evidence pointing to your conclusion, but there is still some doubt, so I just disagree." Would I feel disrespected? Yes, of course I would. I would feel like all the hard work I did, the education I've received...was all for nothing, because some decide to disagree without the proper science to back it up. And I suspect this is what's driving Derek nuts.
Audrey2Katrina wrote:Well good luck in your pursuits; but that while making you more qualified in respect to knowledge of meteorology, it will render you no less fallible.
So basically, no matter how much education I get in meteorology, my opinion will still be more or less equal to someone who doesn't have any met education? Maybe I should just quit pursuing the profession right now...I mean what's the point of getting a met degree and doing graduate work if my opinion doesn't garner any more credibility than a mere weather hobbyist's?
Audrey2Katrina wrote:What it states is that, for the time being, (and we KNOW those can change--and have) the plurality of what is present supports your position. Again, this does not signify that your position is THE most accurate one--only the one currently most widely accepted--as was the Cat 4 eval given Andrew in '92.
I'll agree with this. It is possible, however, to support one conclusion, but acknowledge there is a range of doubt...and express your willingness to go where the evidence leads you.
Your argument, as far as I can tell, is centered around the presence of some doubt....not on any actual hard scientific data. You could say "there's some doubt" about virtually anything in the world, but this is still not real evidence, and hence is not a good practice of science.
"Reasonable" doubt is really subjective. I'll admit that there is some amount of doubt, exactly how much I don't know. But to have an opinion, you must have real, objective evidence to back it up. You can't just back it up by saying "there's still *some* doubt, so I'll believe what I want to believe"...because that's not real evidence. If that kind of reasoning were applied everywhere else, nothing would get done.
I'll just end this post by saying...it is very possible to accept the findings of NHC, but acknowledge the inevitable presence of some doubt at the same time. Since there is nothing any of us can do about that doubt, though, no conclusions should be drawn from that doubt itself.