Planet Gore

Friday Night with Doc Spencer

The Oldest Scientific Society of Washington

Founded 1871                     www.philsoc.org

The Philosophical Society of Washington is pleased to announce its 2232nd meeting will feature as guest speaker:

Dr. Roy W. Spencer, University of Alabama in Huntsville

 

“Manmade Global Warming: A Pending Catastrophe, or False Alarm?”

 

Friday; January 25, 2008 at 8:15pm

 

Public Invited – Free – No Reservations Required

 

The John Wesley Powell Auditorium; 2170 Florida Avenue NW, Washington DC (Attached to the Cosmos Club)

 

While popular press reports would lead one to believe that all reputable scientists now agree that manmade global warming will be a serious problem, there is a sizeable minority of reputable scientists who disagree.  They have published peer reviewed papers on the subject, yet they are largely ignored by mainstream climate scientists.  Dr. Spencer will explain some of the reasons why so many scientists are so quick to believe that mankind is causing our current period of warmth.  While there is some scientific justification for it, the scientists who hold this view implicitly assume that we understand fairly well the processes by which the climate system is maintained.  Dr. Spencer will present recent evidence supporting the view that our climate is relatively immune to mankind’s emissions of carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere, and a few alternative reasons for recent warming.  He will also discuss the widely held — but seriously mistaken — notion that, even if global warming is the fault of mankind, we can do anything substantial about it in the near future.
Roy W. Spencer is a Principal Research Scientist at the University of Alabama in Huntsville  Hereceived his Ph.D. in Meteorology from the University of Wisconsin in 1981, and was formerly a Senior Scientist for Climate Studies at NASA.  Dr. Spencer also serves as the U.S. Science Team Leader for the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for EOS flying on NASA’s Aqua satellite.  He is co-developer of the original satellite method for precise monitoring of global temperatures from Earth-orbiting satellites, for which he received NASA’s Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement.   He has authored numerous weather and climate research articles in scientific journals, and has provided congressional testimony several times on the subject of global warming. where he directs a variety of climate research projects.
Kenneth A. Haapala, President
The Philosophical Society of Washington

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