Quote:
Originally Posted by freebeard
There have been recent flares that if the Earth had been 3 months earlier (or later?) in it's orbit we'd have already been toast.
I confuse easily. Your Permalink #288 was a response to a direct quote from Permalink #286 - Assertion #1 It's all one thing.
- Assertion #2 Science and philosophy used to be one thing as well.
Climate, as such, is limited to a thin layer between the Lithosphere and the Karmann Line. Are you saying it's insulated on both interfaces, or scientists are just myopic.
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* I was addressing things that oilpan4 mentioned.
* We have about two days notice of annihilation, and there's no place to go, so we just have to live with the risk of being close to a star.
* I think meteorologists would argue that terrestrial weather and space weather are in leagues of there own.
* Academia still ends at a PhD, so in science, philosophy is still intertwined.
* What happens in the troposphere is, by definition our climate. Climatology, however, is an extremely interdisciplinary field of study, bringing dozens and dozens of highly specialized groups together. Lots of word salad. Their vision is extremely microscopic, macroscopic, panavision. It takes more than a village.