Two points below. 

1) Ken's comment that "we are already interfering in Earth's climate system 
in a major way". 

I liked Ben Hale's response to this line of argumentation in April 2012 
(although the context was somewhat different):

"If you have such a wide view of GE, then there is no ethical question 
about GE. It’s either permissible or obligatory or forbidden or a foregone 
conclusion (depending on your view of such actions). In other words, you’re 
begging the question. Ought we to geoengineer? Your answer to this question 
cannot be: geoengineering is permissible because everything we do is 
geoengineering.


2) Greg Rau's comment that "Ethics, economics, and politics should enter 
the equation once research tells us if we actually have any technically and 
environmentally viable options."

This rather anachronistic view of research does not account for the 
interests, biases, presuppositions and motivations of researchers and their 
funders (be it governments or corporations). Research isn't politically or 
ethically neutral, which is why it cannot be insulated from those 
considerations. This group might want to read this Ruha Benjamin piece in 
the Huffington Post: 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ruha-benjamin-phd/beyond-tokenistic-inclusi_b_2950515.html?utm_hp_ref=tw

3) Finally, regarding some group members' penchant for analogies - you may 
want to have a look at www.skepticsfieldguide.net/2012/09/false-analogy.html

Ninad


On Tuesday, May 14, 2013 5:57:16 PM UTC+2, Greg Rau wrote:
>
> Just to follow up, we may not entirely understand the system but we know 
> that elevated air CO2 (sand) is not good for it. Job 1 is then to stop air 
> CO2 from increasing. Given that we have thus far failed to do this, what 
> are the ethics of actively discouraging research on any CO2 management 
> methods (engineering or otherwise) that might help us in this task? 
>  Ethics, economics, and politics should enter the equation once research 
> tells us if we actually have any technically and environmentally viable 
> options. Or is SRM the only ethics target here? Or simply any 
> "engineering"? Or anything that disturbs pre-1750 BAU?
> Greg 
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* Ken Caldeira <[email protected] <javascript:>>
> *To:* [email protected] <javascript:>
> *Cc:* geoengineering <[email protected] <javascript:>>
> *Sent:* Tue, May 14, 2013 7:48:25 AM
> *Subject:* Re: [geo] Grist magazine on geoengineering
>
> The context of course is that we are already interfering in Earth's 
> climate system in a major way ... we are already throwing sand in the gears.
>
> Model results indicate that throwing some oil on the gears will help make 
> the clock run smoothly, despite not knowing how all the gears really fit 
> together.
>
> When efforts to stop throwing sand fail, where does hubris lie? Does it 
> reside in the person who wants to consider oiling the gears or in the 
> person who claims a priori that their heightened ethical sensitivity 
> demands that the gears not be oiled (as we watch the clockwork mechanism 
> grind to a halt)?
>
>
> On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 6:45 AM, Fred Zimmerman 
> <[email protected]<javascript:>
> > wrote:
>
>> From scott Rosenberg, who moderated last week's Caldeira/Hamilton event:
>>
>> http://grist.org/climate-energy/geoengineering-research-never-or-now/
>>
>> Hamilton’s *Earthmasters* book quotes Lawrence Livermore Labs scientist 
>> Lowell Wood: “We’ve engineered every other environment we live in — why not 
>> the planet?”
>>
>> If the hubris there is too much for you, Hamilton balances it with a line 
>> from another scientist, Ron Prinn: “How can you engineer a system you don’t 
>> understand?”
>>
>> ---
>> Fred Zimmerman
>> Geoengineering IT!   
>> Bringing together the worlds of geoengineering and information technology
>> GE NewsFilter: http://geoengineeringIT.net:8080 
>>   
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