No announcement on November UAH from Roy yet. I hope nothing is wrong with him or his equipment and a temperature emerges…. I’m going to open bets on Dec. UAH anyway. Bets are open through 11/14/2012:
[sockulator(../musings/wp-content/plugins/BettingScripts/UAHBets5.php?Metric=UAH TTL?Units=C?cutOffMonth=12?cutOffDay=15?cutOffYear=2012?DateMetric=December, 2012?)sockulator]
Bets Close 12/14/2012
You know the drill. If you don’t know, ask! (If UAH doesn’t come out by Monday, we’ll do bets on GISTemp in parallel. For betting the ‘bets’ agencies are those that issue their results early, consistently, and with as many significant figures as possible! Those who complain that’s not “science”: this betting.)
Open thread!
For those wondering about the pause.
- I’ve been engaged in inspecting bot data that I started collecting in April. Eli accused me of rather enjoying that– which is true.
- I also noticed that my knitting blog was being framed. That’s a pain because even though it is totally unmaintained, I do make a bit of Google ad money on that site and framing interferes with that. I have a frame buster buster buster plugin for WordPress posted. It is a slight extension of the javascript I wrote when Newsblur was framing (in one pane) and copying and framing their copying (in another frame) — but the message posted doesn’t involve the word “ass-hat”. Plugin testing was is limited to making sure it works at my blog. Nothing more. I’m not entirely sure how to submit a to WordPress as a plugin, and I don’t plan to do it if they really require people to identify the earliest version of WordPress for which it works. People can find the plugin and use it… or not.
- During various evenings weekends, I’ve crocheted a lot of things. Slippers. Big cozy sweater. Hats. I had several hand-warmer requests.
Anyway, feel free to talk about whatever you like– provided it’s fairly polite. Yes, there is a backlog of papers I need to look at. 🙂
No joy from RSS either..
RSS is now out:
2012 11 0.195
Down ~0.1 from 0.294. People who bet on a drop have a decent chance at getting the quatloos.
ftp://ftp.ssmi.com/msu/monthly_time_series/rss_monthly_msu_amsu_channel_tlt_anomalies_land_and_ocean_v03_3.txt
The good Doc is killing me with his late in the month update. MV model works pretty good, but data move too much :O( Ces’t la vie.
Ooo. I may be swimming in Quatloos this month!
I mentioned last month that Roy Spencer’s blog has a graph of recent UAH v5.5 anomalies. The most recent update is still from 5 November 2012, going through October 2012.
In related news, here’s a recent post from Randall Parker, Why We Do Not Demand Prediction Accuracy.
AMac, that Randall Parker post sounded interesting, but your link did not go where you wanted, I think.
Kenneth Fritsch (Comment #107212) —
Thanks for spotting my error. Talk about circular reasoning, LOL! The correct link is here.
On the thread where Zeke is presenting his AGU poster, there’s a side discussion concerning some oft-discussed general issues with climate science, and the conduct of mainstream scientists and technically-minded skeptics. Picking up part of the back-and-forth in the middle:
bugs (Comment #107243)
Steven Mosher (Comment #107245)
bugs (Comment #107250)
Steven Mosher (Comment #107260)
.
Earlier today, Steve Sailer posted Two modes of intellectual discourse: Taking everything personally v. debate as sport, wherein he quotes extensively from a U.K. theology-and-morality-themed blog by Alastair Roberts.
Roberts’ description of two conflicting approaches to ethical and religious controversies are quite relevant to the debates over AGW, IPCC, climate modeling, paleoclimate, and so forth. This is surprising… or perhaps not.
Roberts on the formerly-accepted debating method, stemming from traditional, male-oriented values —
Describing the ascendant feminine-centered approach to discussion —
It is worth scanning Sailer’s essay, though Roberts’ original posts are… long!
I’m not groking the “male/female” aspect. Seems to me that an awful lot of guys participate in echo chambers.
lucia, that is one of a number of things Roberts gets wrong. Typically,when you see a long-winded essay saying there are two groups and one group is better, you should distrust everything it says.
The male/female aspect isn’t based on actual males and females. It’s based on stereotypical views of what males and females are.
Brandon Shollenberger (Comment #107273)
> The male/female aspect [of Roberts’ essay is] based on stereotypical views of what males and females are.
That’s my sense as well.
I’ve listened to the British Parliament’s “Question Time” on the U.S. C-SPAN network, and it is as Roberts describes — characterized by spirited challenges to opposing positions, hyperbolic and histrionic rhetoric, assertive presentations of one’s beliefs, with hyperbolic and unbalanced expressions commonplace.
I don’t think this is the best approach to technical issues — e.g. I try in my comments to write carefully and dispassionately, and to act as though there is great potential for literate and numerate people of good will to find much common ground. Sometimes this proves to be the case, at other times not.
On the other hand, I think there have been numerous incidents over the past few years where “sensitivity-driven discourse” has been a major driver of mainstream consensus climate scientists and advocates. This has led to the sorts of outcomes Roberts described in the final paragraph quoted in #107266 supra.
AMac, his descriptions are accurate to an extent. That is what makes his writing so deceptive. Over-simplifications rely on telling partial truths to provide an air of accuracy.
While he praises the combative style for bringing out the strengths and weaknesses of arguments, he overlooks the fact that very same combativeness often hides the truth. That style focusing on winning, not on being right. Often, the two don’t go hand in hand. Even worse, the style encourages deceit. To win, you should try to get people to overlook flaws in your position. This practically necessitates dishonesty. So forth and so on.
There are also benefits to the other style, and the two styles aren’t actually disjoint. It’s more of a spectrum. And the best place to be on that spectrum is the middle, which (perhaps not so) coincidentally is the style you promote.
Brandon:
I find the forced dichotomy of either “taking everything personally” or “debate as a sport” to be completely silly. That may be 2 out of 200 different “modes of intellectual discourse” out there, with any given person engaging in as much as a 1/3 of them.
IMHO it was better in tone and content when such discourse took place in bars over several pitchers of beer. Less chafe and less chaff.
Carrick, I don’t think there are that many distinct “modes of intellectual discourse.” If nothing else, most of the differences in modes have nothing to do with intellectual matters.
mwgrant, I usually don’t find conversations at bars to be intellectually stimulating. Maybe I need to try new bars.
Brandon —
Note the use of past tense and the use of the phrase “such discourse.” However, your point is taken. A further point here, however, is that you have to take your conversation partners with you to the right bar.
BTW I agree with your comment to Carrick:
This is reflected in the character or flavor of the different blog sites, e.g., The Blackboard, Climate Etc., and die Klimazwiebel.
Lucia,
Could we do a parallel bet with RSS?
They publish early, with 3 significant figures… and personally, I prefer betting on satellite based anomalies.
The November UAH figure has now been published at 0.281c
http://www.drroyspencer.com/2012/12/uah-v5-5-global-temperature-update-for-november-2012-0-28-deg-c/
I bet +0.28
AMac
there are people who like to turn debates into issues of intelligence because they have no facts to deal with, only emotions. So Bugs, for whatever reason, feels an empathy with sociopaths such as Mann. He cannot help it because the conclusions that Mann reaches appeal to him, regardless of how they are derived. Every attack on Mann’s work is like an attack on Mann the person for him. And it works in reverse for people who cannot separate personalities from issues.
0.281…that’s better. One can live with that.
mwgrant– It’s dinner time here. I’ll get that up tomorrow!
lucia
No hurry re betting from this quarter. I am fine just knowing the numbers. I already know I’m out of the money. It’s all the prediction game for me…and crawling thru the numbers each month–they really are a great tease when playing with stats and graphics. As long as I have I reasonable predictor I’m a happy camper. The earlier RSS value of 0.195 for Nov suggested my UAH predictor might be too much out of wack sans reason–well, other than Mother Nature.
Hope dinner was nice.
lucia (Comment #107269)
“I’m not groking the “male/female†aspect. Seems to me that an awful lot of guys participate in echo chambers.”
I would heartily have to agree. In fact some, such as myself, are so far out there that they have their own individual chambers where they bounce ideas off themselves.
Surely some of the conversation within the climate community, as witnessed by the climategate emails and mostly between guys, would appear to be intent on avoiding conflict. The few that expressed an individual and unique point of view on an issue were exceptional and refreshing. Of course, I do not believe the email venue or the back and forth posts on a blog are necessarily very intellectual in nature. There just is not the space and time to properly develop ideas and thoughts. I do, however, think that blogs can create interest that approaches intellectual curiosity and do a decent job of sorting out facts and doing enlightening analyses.
I guess the excerpt that AMac presented above was an either or proposition of group think versus some higher level debating approach. I would agree with Brandon that neither is the optimum approach, but I would never say the optimum is the middle way as that way could be adopting the worse of both worlds.
The phony debates that we have between our politicians in the US are certainly exemplar of something that is at best a waste of time and at worse anti-intellectual.
Some of it looked like “enforcing group norms”. It makes me think of the behavior often claimed to be typical of “mean girls” groups. But we see it in male groups often enough.
Here is my analysis of the December betting:
NO. OF BETS 39
MAX 0.42
MIN -0.14
MEAN 0.218
MEDIAN 0.241
STD DEV 0.121
MEAN 1-20 0.193
MEAN 20-39 0.236
MEAN PLUS 1 SD 0.339
MEAN MINUS 1 SD 0.097
WITHIN +/- 1 SD (%) 79.49
ABOVE MEAN (%) 58.97
BELOW MEAN (%) 41.03
Both the mean and median figures suggest a fall since last month.
After going too high last month, I find myself in the high end of the betting again this month.
Unfortunately the November winners don’t seem to have entered bets this month, but I am slightly alarmed by this month’s bet of – 0.14c from ScottBasinger.
Ray – having ‘picked’ a very similar anomaly to you, I suggest we appear at the high end of the betting simply because most people are betting too low…
…Think positively! 🙂
Anteros,
As you can see, I was going lower, but bumped mine up at the last minute.
Unfortunately, I still haven’t found the correct relationship between aqua ch5 and UAH v5.5, (even though aqua ch5 isn’t used for UAH any more).
Anteros, my positive thinking is that you and Ray bet a little bit too low. 😛