If I said that Cape Kennedy should not be under 60 meters of ocean,
the NASA Administrator would accuse me of arrogantly setting myself up
as the arbiter of what the Earth's sea level should be.

He does not acknowledge the practical problems that arise from rapid
climate change.

On May 31, 3:13 am, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Maybe he's being a little provocative by using the word "arrogant",
> and by not saying something about why people believe that stasis is
> better than change, but fundamentally I think he's making a valuable
> point. Science and scientists should tell us about facts, and as an
> aside about their personal opinions and values, but in a democratic
> society it is not scientists who should decide for the rest of us
> what's worth having and what's not worth having.
>
> And this cuts both ways. It's fair enough for economists to talk about
> carbon taxes, but how much people wish to value polar bears or the
> fate of developing countries, or how high we judge the likelihood of
> continued economic growth / poverty / war over the next 100 years, is
> something they can maybe describe, but shouldn't attempt to
> proscribe / decide for the rest of us.


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