Gothmog said:
gene90, I posted those plots to show how many factors are involved. Factors that we currently have good data on, but do not for even 200 years ago.
I am not totally insensitive to your plight, GothMog. I have at least a faint understanding of how complex climate is, and for your models to be effective you have a lot of variables to deal with.
Unfortunately, this does not absolve you from testing your models just like any other science would.
Now, previously you said that a 150-year prediction is not testable until 150 years have elapsed. Bull!
Unless you are claiming that the average global temperature is going to jump from the present temperature to however much you predict at midnight on December 31, 2154, it is testable. Every ten years you could measure how much progress you have made toward the final result. If twenty years in, you don't get the rise, that would make the 2155 prediction kind of questionable, now wouldn't it?
This was to get you to stop with your 'please correlate CO2 and temperature' ballony. You will note that volcanos are a large global source of atmospheric cooling, etc. etc.
I am not responsible for having to deal with "random" phenomena in climate, you are. If you can't test your models, then it is your fault for choosing to model a system that is too complex. I am unwilling to change the burden of proof for you.
Also to show why we can explain current climate better than climate of 200 years ago or longer.
I will try to further look into it as time permits. This is interesting stuff.
You may be shocked to learn that I was running a distributed networking climate model on my computer recently. I ended participation when it suddenly lost a rather large workunit. I forget the name of it, it was a Monte Carlo simulation. Interesting, but like other models, a methodology that was potentially flawed.