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Old July 18, 2001, 18:54   #31
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I'm trying a fully automated game right now (standard rules,
huge random map, citizen difficulty)

I chose the Hive for this experiment. I will set SE to Police State/Planned Economics/Power/Thought Control when I can, which is what I think Yang would choose. That militant bastard.

This is a COMPLETELY automated game: every unit that is built gets a SHIFT+A, including colony pods and military units, I'm not giving my governors any priorities, just letting em build what they want.

The only part that isn't automated is the conversations with other factions. I'm trying to act as much like Yang as possible: basically, being an ******* to everyone.

I wonder how far the AI will get (or how bored I will get).
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Old July 19, 2001, 13:45   #32
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No reason at all to use governors for production when you have ten production queue templates available.
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Old July 19, 2001, 16:55   #33
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Corbo, there's no reason if playing the game at all if you keep playing on like that. It fights against the basis of PC games; suffering your a§§ off for trying to manage.
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Old July 19, 2001, 17:30   #34
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Why don't you just set yourself to permanent pact and watch the others fight it out instead?
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Old July 19, 2001, 20:24   #35
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kassiopeia it's not how I play, usually I am a control freak like the rest of you: the whole reason I even read this thread.

It's just an experiment, wanted to see how far the AI would go, and some stupid mistakes aside, they aren't doing too bad...

But then again it's citizen level, maybe I should try Trancend and see how far the AI makes it. *gets out stopwatch*
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Old July 19, 2001, 23:21   #36
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I'm sure you know this Corb 01772, but you can fully automate the whole game. Start a game. Press the cheat button, Command-K. Yep yep, scenario editor ON! Menu..scenario..switch sides change factions. Click on ol Yang. Choose 'Watch Faction' instead of play. Turn off the Editor. Turn ON end of turn prompt. Place something heavy and fitting on the enter key.

Two hours later...oh, take the object of the enter key and momentarily you will be given a bit of control. You will be prompted for diplomacy and such, but no matter what you do, the AI will make the actual decision in this mode. Fun Fun! Play whole games while you're at work: 'Gee, I won, again? That's not so hard'. The major difference is that the AI you watch gets all the benefits of an AI faction, but you can interupt that and take over whenever you want.

-Happy Crawlering,

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Old July 20, 2001, 00:22   #37
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Yeah Smack, but I am wondering though if player automated AI differs from the AI of the computer factions.

It would be interesting to find out if there is any strategy difference between a completely computer controlled faction, and a faction that is technically human controlled, but has all the units on fully automated.
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Old July 20, 2001, 10:54   #38
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Interesting experiment, Corbo. Keep it up, if you can stand it -- as a fellow manager, I'm sure the temptation to intervene must be great

And it would be different from being an AI (as smack suggested), since your faction wouldn't enjoy the benefit of the same AI cheats.
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Old July 20, 2001, 12:14   #39
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Isn't that how they balanced the game?
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Old July 20, 2001, 23:09   #40
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Death Head, They say they balanced the factions by running them on automatic to see if any one consistently became more powerful than the others. However, despite trying numbers of games on full automatic, I have never seen a game actually complete other than by running out of time. Usually the factions stabalize and pound on each other without significant effect. They never seem to research all the technologies, despite the year being 2500. But in virtually every similation I ran, the game became a flooded mess due to numerous global warming events. It was sickening to behold.

(BTW, and this is a little off topic here, while in Japan last week, I understood the reason the Japanese support the Kyoto treaty is the fear that the Artic Ocean and the sea glaciers surrounding Antarctica would melt, raising sea levels and flooding Japan. One question: How does melting sea ice raise ocean levels? Isn't this contrary to fundamental physics?)
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Old July 20, 2001, 23:55   #41
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Antarctica is a rocky landmass, so when the glaciers on Antarctica melt the runoff raises the sea levels, the same effect shouldn't happen at the "north pole" icecap, seeing it is floating, although no doubt there are plenty of glaciers in countries like Greenland which are just waiting to melt and raise the sea levels.

Melting sea ice cant directely raise the sea levels (although often sea ice tends to be fresh... not sure what effect that has on displacement...), presumably the melting sea ice is more of a warning sign, if the sea ice is melting the glaciers cant be far away...

One thing melting sea ice does do is put more water in the atmosphere, which increases the green house effect, also ice is reflective so that means with less ice more heat is absorbed, in the short term this could accelerate the warming process (= more land ice melting), in the longer run the increase in cloud cover acts to cool the earth, and the process reverses, possibly starting an ice age. (wouldn't that be ironical).
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Old July 21, 2001, 02:22   #42
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Blake, Thanks for the comeback. I was pretty sure the Japanese were talking about ice shelfs in Antarctica and the North Pole ice. This makes sense b/c Antarctic ice shelfs could break off, drift North and melt in a matter of decades. In contrast, there is a known 50,000 year response time between change in climate and affects on the massive land glaciers on Greenland and on Antarctica itself. In other words, Global Warming, as we know it, can only affect sea ice in the next millenia or two. But that should have no effect on sea levels. So what are the Japanese afraid of?

BTW, the paper I was reading in Japan stated that fear that some of the Antarctic ice sheets were melting were not supported by the evidence. In fact, due to increased snow (more water in the warmer atmosphere?), the ice shelfs were apparently growing.

Also, Blake, if you know, the Ozone holes over Antarctica appear to be growing. In part, these holes are caused by severely cold weather. Doesn't this indicate that the air above Antarctica is growing colder?

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Old July 21, 2001, 02:59   #43
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Smack said...

"In a similar vein: "Hence one who attains power by favor of the people must keep the people always friendly to him, which will indeed be a simple matter, since all they ask is not to be oppressed; but one who, against the people [...] by favor of the nobles, must above all seek to win the friendship of the people, which will also be easy if he extends his protection to them." This one's easier, 50 EC's to the source of the source!"

That sounds like Machevelli's The Prince. Am I right? BTW, was I right about your other quote coming from 1984?

Blake, you were dead on about global warming. Do you study astronomy by any chance?

Ned, I've never heard of cold air contributing to the ozone hole, but I conceed that it is possible. The holes appear over the caps primarily because the earth's magnetic fields pulls free radicals (such as those created by CFCs) to the poles.
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Old July 21, 2001, 05:34   #44
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Ah, no WONDER I feel a pull to the poles...

Anyways, FILO, Toka, the first power quote was from Gibbon's 'The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'. This one's from the Prince, you got it a couple hours after Kassiopeia. Both books are quite entertaining..humorous in fact, but I don't think I ever had the concentration to read them until this year, though I'm older than that sounds. I'm going to have to find a tougher one for my next quote.

I just have to jump in here, having trained a bit in the sciences. Ditto Toka r/e Ozone. Ditto Blake r/e sea ice vs. land ice, though any ice melting will raise the ocean levels to a degree, well, except the ice in my drink here. As to the 50000 year cycles and/or delay in glacial effects, this is very much up in the air in the scientific community. Most climatologists on the cosmic scale would agree that the earth is actually in an Ice Age right now...in one of the Long-cycles (50-250 thousand years). Within the long cycles are smaller cycles apparently, hence the recent what we call Ice Age was really a small-cycle iceage within a large one. Does that make any sense? Been awhile..and as to delays in effect. That's just questionable...some say 8-10 years, some say 100, but I've never heard of 50000 years, unless you are referring to maybe their foundation or movements? Many scientists would, and do, argue that climatic changes within this century have been mirrored in glacial changes-melting-shifting-growing somewhere else-retreating, what have you. There was a report about a town in Alaska going underwater just this week on NPR, not that that news agency is objective.
Rant--read at your own risk...
Prattling on.. I think the biggest thing about global warming that is misunderstood, beside the mechanisms, which Blake alludes to, is that there are facts, and there are opinions, and there are disputes of facts. Science is like Geometry in the sense that most 'facts' remain unproveable in the final sense. But the Theory of Gravity doesn't get questioned very often. Most scientists agree that global warming is occurring, they have 'proof', and indeed, the industrialist scientists have pretty much had to agree. Furthermore, most scientists agree that current warming trends are indeed linked and partially caused by atmospheric pollution. 99%. But it's perfectly legitimate to say you have 'proof' to the contrary, as it's all just a theory, like the theory of gravity, or that parallel lines never intersect. ('We were unable to disprove our Null Hypothesis....blah) Finally, most agree that Earth's ice is melting and will continue to melt. To me, asking if the seas will rise is like asking if the sun will rise. No, it's not as solid as the theory of Gravity, but it's similar. What annoys me no-end is that the public does not seem to grasp that these 'facts' are entirely in the interest of Big Business to dispute, and to 'Environmental' groups to support. The wanton abuse scientific evidence to support and to justify political positions is not a new game, it's just an annoying one.

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Old July 21, 2001, 08:31   #45
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Thread Hijacking
Just to add to Smacks rant, the thing which REALLY annoys me is that all these businesses and governments are willing to gamble on the future of EARTH, and why? Greed, pure and simple (I'm a nice person, so I'll assume that no-one wants to melt the ice-caps for malicious purposes).

There are the facts, and the opinions, but the simple fact remains that we are gambling the fate of humankind on these opinions. That is probably why japan is so worried, they have everything to lose in this gamble.

Fact: If the opinions are wrong, then a lot of people are going to suffer.


There are two sides to global warming, the more spectacular sea level rising, and the more real climatic change.
My home country New Zealand is at the mercy of global weather patterns (being too small to have continental weather) and over the past century the climate has changed, crops and native species can now grow much further south, the weather has become more extreme, with longer droughts, in some areas there are harder frosts, which have caused more agricultural problems.

Unlike sea level change, climatic change WILL effect everyone, some countries for the better, but most for the worse. Changing temperature and rainfall will make hostile conditions for "traditional" crop, which will screw up agriculture and possible cause food shortages while new, hardier crops are introduced.

Using technology to fix problems caused by technology:
(how I expect the powers intend (the future generation) to solve the problems caused by global warming)

Luckily humans are adaptable, and whatever happens I expect that civilization will continue, in fact technology may make it possible to continue life as normal even with fairly radical changes, some technologies which will help include:

Genetic Engineering:
Like it or loath it, GE crops will be the way food is grown in the future, basically it should be possibly to work around almost any climate change by introducing new GE'd crops, if this is planned in advance even radical climate change should have minimal impact on food production.

Ocean farming: Fairly self explanatory, we'll have more ocean in the future, and as farmland is destroyed by climate change or rising seas sustainable ocean farming could continue to feed the masses.

Sea Cities: Guess Japan and Florida will be pioneering construction of these, in it's simplest form just build sky scrapers on big pillars so they poke out the water, or just use some sort of (super-tensile) seal on existing buildings to prevent water entering the lower stories, then use tunnels / walkways to connect them. Roads would be one thing which would have to be phased out in a sea city, and replaced by forms of public transport. Due to it's technological construction sea cities would tend to be wired, and people wouldn't really need to regularly travel large distances.

Local Weather control: Slightly beyond our current technology, but IMO less than you may expect, quite possibly climatic change due to global warming could be nullified by weather control devices.

Global Climate Control: Probably implemented by space mirrors, or perhaps by changing the ratio of gasses in the atmosphere, basically just cool the earth if it gets too hot, space mirrors could possibly be useful for deflecting hurricanes from sea cities. Ofcourse in order to have Global Climate control, global co-operation between nations would be necessary, which would probably be as large a hurdle as the technological details.


While fixing technology with technology is great, it is very expensive, and tends to leave poor nations up the creek without a paddle, and in any case fixing a global problem with technology requires very large scale co-operation, which quite frankly is not something humans are very good at it, if large scale global warming does happen then new "social engineering" (ahem) will be required, with the major requirement being a lot less emphasis on "self" and more on "community". Basically a move away from capitalism to a more socialist society, if such a change doesn't happen (and it would take a couple of generations to occur anyway) then humankind can look forward to a bleak future, where an elite few live in technological comfort, and the hungry masses, don't.

wow, long post. I must be putting off doing something constructive.
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Old July 21, 2001, 16:04   #46
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Quote:
Originally posted by Tokamak
That sounds like Machevelli's The Prince.
Sorry Tokamak, first come first served (or something).
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Old July 21, 2001, 16:17   #47
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Blake, et al. Interesting. I was unaware that there was a real dispute concerning the time lag between a rise in temperature and a noticeable, let alone, significant effect on the massive glaciers in Antarctica and Greenland. So there are some scientists who have evidence? that this ice could all melt in a relatively short time due to a small rise in Earth's temperature.

I must admit that I am having a really hard time understanding the mechanisms for this. If there is an article on the topic somewhere on the Web, I would love to read it.

As to solutions for the rise in air temperatures, I suggest that we will have to look to technology to help us. Simply mandating reductions in emissions without relatively low cost alternatives is politically unacceptable. I give you California, where I live. If improving the envirnoment is a largely low cost excercise, people will support it. But once the power goes out because California has not built any power plants in living memory, then attitudes change.

I see in Japan a possible future solution: massive investiment in electric railways with electricity provided by clean power plants, wind farms, tidal harnesses and the like. However, America is structured on the car. This implies then that the short term solution here is alternative fuels or electric cars. Again, the problem is cost. Today the average America can afford two cars. They would be unlikely to support a government mandate that so raised the cost of cars to make this impossible.

Then there are countries like China and India. They are not today supportive of Kyoto because of the cost issue. This again suggests that we really need a technological breakthrough.

A lot of the other things mentioned in your post, Blake, simply will not happen. Therefore, I suggest, if there is no low cost way of reducing emissions, we are simply going to have to adapt to the changes.

Pessimistically, Ned
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Old July 21, 2001, 19:43   #48
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There are some things that can be done.

First off, CONSERVATION! Energy conservation maks too much sense to not use, unless you're a ultilities provider. The Bush administration has been more or less completely ignoring conservation, choosing instead to exploit our wildnerness and national monuments for more oil. Fortunatley, with the crisis in California abating, this policy is losing support, and both sides of Congress are looking at energy conservation.

The new hybrid-electric cars are a major step forward. In a few years, in will be cost effective for even your average Joe-Shmoe to buy one (I hope). Also, the gas-guzzling SUVs are going to be put onto a stricter emisions standard (they were previously being held to the same standards required for 16-wheeler trucks!).

Also, WIND POWER! Wind power is simply great. It's clean, cheap to set up, and is more durable than solar power. The relatively low overhead makes wind power the perfect choice for small isolated places (such as farms), which are far away from the national power grid. It costs electricity to move electricty, so the closer your power source is to you, the more efficient the transfer.

Vel has a forum devoted to these very topics in his webpage. look for the "environmental thinktank" forum.
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Old July 21, 2001, 20:42   #49
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Indeed, the cost could be huge. The question is, ultimately, can the cost be justified? What price do you put on a ruined planet?

Well, my answer is firstly that the cost of changing to "green" would be affordable, ie it would be possible to stop polluting. BUT quality of life would have to go down, with restrictions on travel, power metering, and an increase on taxes. Ultimately, would the cost of change now by lower than the cost of repairing/adapting to new earth? I dont think anyone can answer that question.

Just noticed Tokamaks post:
Yes, there are alternatives, BUT they are expensive, and I'm not sure if they can ever be affordable to everyone in a"user pays" society, at a minimum clean technology will need to be subsidised (or dirty technology taxed), while both of these would be considered a "step backwards" in todays society I think that for clean technology they would be justified, because said technology works for the greater good of mankind.


This is something I grabbed out of a FAQ on global warming which I found on the net (via a google search), if interested the URL is:
http://www.epa.gov/globalwarming/pub...ach/gw_faq.pdf
Note it's a pdf.

Quote:
Q. How will global warming affect the polar ice caps?
A. Polar ice caps are some of the largest surface features on our planet and any changes to them, however small, could have far-reaching effects. Melting due to global warming is expected to reduce the size and extent of the polar ice caps, even after taking into account the potential for more snow and ice accumulation atop the ice sheets due to increased precipitation. Melting of polar ice and land-based glaciers is expected to contribute to the one half foot to three-feet sea level rise projected by the IPCC for the 21st century. Shrinking ice caps may also cause changes in ocean circulation and even storm tracks. To be sure, not all of the melting currently occurring is due to global warming, and the melting of floating sea ice does not affect sea level. Further warming will likely accelerate the shrinkage of ice caps and glaciers, however.
Of particular concern is the stability of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. A sudden collapse would raise sea levels 16–20 feet but the IPCC considers the likelihood of such a collapse before the year 2100 low.
That last paragraph should be of some interest, because if the unstable ice sheet collpases it is a sudden rise, with no time to prepare, probably resulting in a massive loss of life and farmland.
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Old July 21, 2001, 21:27   #50
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Quote:
Originally posted by Blake

Just noticed Tokamaks post:
Yes, there are alternatives, BUT they are expensive, and I'm not sure if they can ever be affordable to everyone in a"user pays" society, at a minimum clean technology will need to be subsidised (or dirty technology taxed), while both of these would be considered a "step backwards" in todays society I think that for clean technology they would be justified, because said technology works for the greater good of mankind.
Currently, renewable emergy sources receive minimal subsidies, whereas fossil-fuel-based interests receive HUGE tax breaks.

The government already intervenes quite a bit in our society's energy policy. I think a more even-handed, long-term policy by the White House would go a long way.

If solar industries recevied the same kind of backing that oil does now, I bey that photovlotaic cells would be much better than they are now (currently, they are really not a viable mass-energy source ).
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Old July 21, 2001, 21:49   #51
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Blake, Thanks for the link. That last paragraph concerning the collapse of he West Antarctic ice sheet is apparently what worries the Japanese. Thank god that my house is about 50 feet above sea level.

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Old July 21, 2001, 23:05   #52
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Wowies! While I put the finishing touches on the structure of 'Aldebaran 1.beta.1', my new sequel to smac, some great posts! I am constantly amazed at the bright minds here on Apolyton. I felt I was gambling with my rant, but I'm glad Blake backed me up to a degree. Some good friends of mine own property, lived, on one of the Atlantic barrier islands, Ocracoke, for 23 years. They are selling out. The mean land hight is 5 feet above sea level. We share another friend who is a soon-to-retire geologist. She prompted them to sell out. In her opinion, sea levels will rise 3-8 feet over the next 50 years. That is really really fast. But whether it is 50 years or 250 years, it's going to happen. Unfortunately many of the worlds great cities are coastal, and quite a few are on level-coastal terrain. Just in the US, think about Miami, NYC, LA, Boston, even Chicago (if water tables follow the rise).
I can't say enough that I concur with Blake about the probable effects of global warming. On the other hand, I have to differ with everyone on the solutions. Long ago I was an idealist. Then I became a field scientist. One of my jobs was in 'Ecological Restoration', which I did for two years. Basically, my company (my boss's company..chuckle) uses the government laws about Wetland Preservation to make a profit doing glorified landscaping. When a company has to inflict damage on wetlands in the US, it is required, by law, to help create or restore 2-4 times the acreage of wetlands somewhere else. So, when a power company needs to wipe out 10 acres here for their new mega-power lines, they have to 'make' 40 acres somewhere else. What they do is buy an old farm and have a company like ours come in and 'restore' the area into wetlands. I thought that was just great. But then, while driving a bulldozer across a completely barren landscape with a B+B (Balled and Burlaped Tree) in the scoop, I had a realization. Here we were, using petroleum fuels (dozer), and lots of other resources, to wipe out a perfectly good 'old field habitat' and replace it with a terraformed landscape full of planted trees, seeded wild grasses and weeds, and irrigation channels. Nature surely would have done just fine if the land was simply 'set aside' instead of being terraformed. True, we made wetlands, in some cases changing back what was a landfilled farm into the swamp it once had been, but the naivite, the gall, to try to play god with nature, to expend resources to create resources, claiming to be 'Green', just shook me to the core. I quit.
Piecing those experiences with my early childhood conclusion that 'All human acts are selfish', I came to the conclusion that 'Modern' civilization is going to smash it's way forward no matter what the consequences. All the solutions you present Toka and Blake are possible. They just aren't going to happen.
It's like a Green paradox. While we are imperialist bastards, we have the knowledge and resources to affect great changes on the world, but we can't make them without becoming something other than imperialist bastards.:banned:
The White House isn't going to stand up to the mega-industries. It works For those industries. The more long-sighted a policy, the less practical in a political sense. The only changes that will be made are ones that increase profits in the short term, and hence the wealth of the few for the long term. I was glad when the US declined to sign Kyoto. It was a moment of inevitable honesty for the military-industrial complex variously called the 'US of A'. I was shocked in a way that there weren't more Green protests in the US, but really, underneath it all, most liberals know they owe their very existence to barbarous imperialism and are loathe to make anything but token challenges to the hand that feeds them. Don't get me wrong, I hate it. Simply, it would/will take a total revolution in this country (US) to overthrough the control of industry. I won't go point by point, but take 'clean cars' for example. The solution, in the short term, would be to Tax the hell out of cars, rebuild the rail system, encourage people to live next to where they work with incentives, and banish the rude sport 'Auto-Racing' from the planet (giggle). No one suggests that. The taxes wouldn't pass. We have a major problem in this country that people don't suggest the solutions they believe in, for fear of 'losing', or losing votes, or business, heaven forbid. In the long term, clean energy, population reduction, and sustainable agriculture. I just have to say agian...this country, under the current government, will never do these things. Now, I'm not going to be a hypocrite. I'm a coward and a liberal in lifestyle, if not in beliefs (which I think are actually considered radical). I'm not going to go out and start a revolution, but I'm telling you, that's what it will take.
As to science curing science....it's a Gordion knot. Worse. It's the myth of secular humanism. Worse still, it's mathematically unjustified. Almost all processes in nature are limited by the fourth dimension, time. What goes forward does not go backward! Complexities are not unraveled by simply reversing their order...rather they expand exponentially. I'm not saying that's what you propose in your technological solutions, just that it's the myth, and that the problems we take out of Pandora's box aren't going to be solved easily. They may be addressed, but it's like bandaging soldiers in a war of attrition. I'll just leave it at that.

Quote:
Blake Indeed, the cost could be huge. The question is, ultimately, can the cost be justified? What price do you put on a ruined planet?

Well, my answer is firstly that the cost of changing to "green" would be affordable, ie it would be possible to stop polluting. BUT quality of life would have to go down, with restrictions on travel, power metering, and an increase on taxes. Ultimately, would the cost of change now by lower than the cost of repairing/adapting to new earth? I dont think anyone can answer that question.
I'll hazard an answer: Yes.
All these things are true. It's like in medicine..if you don't know the cause, treat the symptom first. First we reduce what we know and think are causing the problems, then we look for a solution. But that would require great sacrifices if done effectively. I don't think we're up to it. Government is simply not that powerful. You can't tell Joe Redneck not to have anymore brushfires...look at the Amazon. If we were a true Despotism, perhaps, not that I'm signing up!

Er, um, one more thing. Na, I'd better get back to Aldebaran...

-Smack
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Old July 22, 2001, 01:15   #53
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Blake, If you flip to the very next page on the article you linked, you will find that Ozone depletion is indeed cooling the upper atmosphere. This is consistent with the observed increase in snow on the Antarctic ice sheet. So what is actually going on is rather weird. The temperate areas of the world appear to be getting warmer while the South Pole appears to be getting colder - with more snow and ice buildup. What this portends is a fall in sea levels as ice builds up in Antarctica because, even if the North Polar Sea melts, this is sea ice. It adds nothing to sea levels.

Where this will all lead, I don't have a clue. But obviously, this is a lot more complicated that is presented in the press.

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Old July 22, 2001, 01:59   #54
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erm, not exactly.
Upper Atmosphere cooler = Less heat absorbed in upper atmosphere
= more heat absorbed at surface. So in fact that suggests that more heat is getting to the poles, which will result in more rapid melting.

This quote is about the increased snowfall (my bold):
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Melting due to global warming is expected to reduce the size and extent of the polar ice caps, even after taking into account the potential for more snow and ice accumulation atop the ice sheets due to increased precipitation.
While the distinct possibility exists of an ice age being caused by global warming, I imagine that we'll continue to pollute fast enough that things just keep getting hotter. Altough your right about it being more complicated...

One thing I find quite disturbing is that global warming and sea level rises are talked about as fact, suggesting that global warming is now accepted as something which is going to happen. And, if your in low lying areas (or work the land) then tough, your screwed. Guess I was a little naive about the current reality of global warming.
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Old July 22, 2001, 03:11   #55
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In the long run will any of this make any difference? For much more than the last 12 thousand years we have been in an Intergalacial period and most likely will be for more than another 12 thousand. During that time the mean global temperature has been rising overall. Yes, there have been some local variations at both the upper and lower extremes but overall gobal temperatures have been going up and sea levels have been rising. The English channel once harbored great forests and it is now under water. Many former coastal cities in the mediterranian are now submerged. And many areas in Canada and Scandinavia that once were at sea level or under water are now dry land or well above the sea level because of rebound from the melting of the great Ice Sheets.

Eventually the cycle will complete and we will enter another period of glaciation and the Australian Desert will become a thriving grassland or an Ice Encrusted Plain or possibly both before the next interglacial period starts again.

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Old July 22, 2001, 03:18   #56
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On the long run we all get vaporized in the death throes of the sun

On the scale of human generations (about 30-50 years), yes, it does matter.
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Old July 22, 2001, 03:54   #57
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Stephen J. Gould once dismantled an assumption of mine that species extinction matters. Matters to what? Will life go on? Yep.
Frankly, I don't understand where you were going with that Ken. On the one hand, yes, the recent ice age and it's end changed as much or more of the surface of the planet than we are talking about seeing in the next 50 years. On the other hand, if some or most of the near-future changes are human-induced, we will be stepping out of 'pattern'. The implication, at least to me, is that we are only seeing the tip of the iceberg, so to speak. If what we 'know' is that CO2 emmissions, etc. are contributing to global warming, and we have a theory about that, and we further have many tangential ideas about what we might be affecting, that's the visible part of the 'berg. What lies beneath is the vastness of our myopic understanding, all the things we affect, but can't know.
Going back to species extinction...Most of the world's amphibian species live in the SE USA, due to some odd twist of fate. What happens if they, or some of them, harbor bacteria that would be crucial to the survival of related species in the future? By wiping out the amphibians, we preclude that possibility. Ok, that wasn't a good example. The points I'm trying to make are that:
1. Though the Earth has been battered by asteroids, frozen from head to toe, had several different atmospheres, it may not have ever seen this kind of change. Not that that 'matters', it's just quite possibly new.
2. There will never be enough evidence of the past to, in the present, predict the future. On the human scale, we can't make policy that will guarantee anything, but what we can try to do is limit the variables. I think that in the end, after fulfilling our biological imperatives, we desire the hope of a future for our progeny. Perhaps too often we wish that future to be 'better' for them, but just as often stubbornly want things to stay the same to preserve what we have..as if we can know that this X will be better than that Y yet to be.

It all makes a difference, but to whom, and for what?

The Earth will surely burn in the sun if we don't manage to dismantle it first. I'd just rather put that off as long as possible, eh?

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Old July 22, 2001, 14:08   #58
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I understand the current split among countries other than the US on the Kyoto treaty is the insistance by the Europeans that Nuclear Power not be an option to reduce green house gasses.

The given is that Nuclear Power is the "cleanest" way, in the short term without the invention of some new technology, to produce massive amounts of power without otherwise harming the environment.

So on its face, the position of the Europeans appears absurd.

But it brings me to another point raised by Blake that I have been thinking about. He suggested that the solution to Global Warming is the acceptance of Socialism or other forms of totalitarianism and/or a significant reduction in standard of living by the currently developed countries. However, if the enviromentalists appear to be unwilling to make hard choices, how does one expect anyone else to accept reductions in freedom or quality of life to achieve the enviromentalist's goals.

Ask yourself this question: If someone told you you had to convert to a religion of their choice in order to solve the Global Warming problem, you probably would say the person was a lunatic. There are some things more important than saving the environment for "some forgotten future generation." In my view, since I am an American, at least one of these things is freedom.

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Old July 22, 2001, 18:25   #59
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.......mumbles.....'Secular Humanism'........'constructed premises'..........'our downfall'.
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Old July 23, 2001, 17:05   #60
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Ned! I absolutely agree with you!
Young people pretending to be "ecological" resist the use of nuclear power, though currently it is the only at least in some manner ecological thin politicians would actually agree to do. Nuclear waste is a pronlem at some degree, but if it's buried in rock it's at least less harmful then loads of greenhouse gases. Currently the only cost-effective way to prevent more gh-gases released to the atmosphere is nuclear power.
PS. Also it would be reasonable to fund fusion research. The way of the sun is the best way.
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