mike777, on 2014-September-10, 18:40, said:
so it sounds like you agree with what Bill stated. All your points support his position.
For any decision, the unknown will preponderate on one side more than the other. It sounds like you went with the evidence that you found convincing.
Edit: I would consider it a favor if no one read this. I'll leave it for the record.
No.
I went with expert opinion. If you wish to call expert opinion evidence, then you can say I went with the evidence that I found convincing. But your previous note, and I think I understood it correctly, was advising against going with expert opinion.
My views on many matters fall into tis pattern: I do not expect to be able to debate medical matters with experts. I do not expect to be able to debate climate change with experts. There are m any areas where I do not expect to be able to debate with experts. I expect to be able to judge well enough whose advice I should listen to, or at least I accept that I will have to judge whose advice to listen to.
Although this thread is devoted to climate change, I can better illustrate my approach with my medical issue. What do I understand? not a lot. I understand that I have a partial blockage in my right carotid, not in the neck where people usually think of the carotid but inside my brain. Maybe it has been there forever, the rest of my cardiovascular system is fine.But now it is causing a problem and this problem has to be addresses. Three surgeons have told me that surgery is inadvisable. To quote one of them "If a neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins advises you that surgery is not a realistic option, you should not try surgery". I went with this advice. If three neurosurgeons recommended surgery, I would have gone with surgery. I call this going with expert opinion rather than going with evidence. Basically, I ask their opinion, check with others, and when others agree, I follow their advice. If you want to call this going with the evidence you of course can, but. It twists words a bit. You quoted, approvingly, the advice "Not because they are experts, no. You should believe them if they produce information or arguments that you find persuasive. But to believe them BECAUSE THEY ARE EXPERTS--absolutely not." Well, I think it must be clear that I am saying I went with their advice precisely because they are experts. I did not at all consult medical literature or in any way try to match my knowledge against theirs. I picked experts, I asked their advice, i went with expert advice.
Back to climate change. I am no expert (yes, a severe understatement) and I have no intention of taking several years of serious study to become an expert. Just as I do not intend to become an expert on neurosurgery. Climate change is a glob ally important issue just as my troubled carotid is a personally important issue. So we must choose. I choose.
I choose to go with expert opinion. I imagine that I could, if I put in years of study, have a fully informed opinion. Lacking the time or the inclination to do so, I go with expert opinion.
So: I am not prepared to hold my own in a debate with a determined skeptic on global warming. Nor on who really shot JFK. Nor with someone totally committed to God having made the universe in six days. These folks have spent more time than I have on gathering their arguments, and when one argument fails they have another one at the ready. I just go with the experts. Mostly, not always, this seems to work.
But please, if you advise " BECAUSE THEY ARE EXPERTS--absolutely not." and, in response, I say that I did base an important decision on expert opinion because they were experts, don't call that agreeing with what you, or. Bill James, said. I don't mind being disagreed with, I don't all that much being called dumb, but I don't like having my words twisted.