global warming
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On hubris and climate change.
I probably should’ve known this already, but climate science is REALLY hard!
atmosphere, atmospheric carbon, atmospheric modeling, atmospheric science, burden of proof, carbon dioxide, chaos engines, climate, climate alarmist, climate alarmists, climate change, climate change alarmists, climate change education, climate change skeptics, climate destabilization, climate education, climate research, climate science, climate science education, climate simulation, climate skeptic, climate skeptics, education, environment, environmentalism, extinction, feedback loops, global warming, Global Warming Policy Foundation, greenhouse effect, greenhouse gas, human extinction, ice core, ice core data, ice cores, Jonathan Safran Foer, Lindzen, meteorology, political correctness, Richard Lindzen, science education, science teaching, simulation data, teaching, teaching climate, teaching climate change, thermodynamics, thermodynamics of life, two degrees, two degrees Celsius, uninhabitable Earth, vegan, veganism, Venus, warming planet, was Venus habitable, We Are the Weather, weather -
On Jonathan Safran Foer’s ‘We Are the Weather.’
A lot of climate change is caused by cheeseburgers. Killer superbugs are, too.
animal agriculture, antibiotic resistance, antibiotic resistant bacterial, antibiotic use in animal agriculture, antibiotics, antibiotics in animal agriculture, carbon emissions, climate change, climate destabilization, cognitive bias, cognitive biases, concentrated animal feeding operation, cutting carbon, emotional understanding, energy conservation, energy use, energy use in animal agriculture, environmental veganism, environmentalism, ethical diet, ethical veganism, ethics of eating, existentialism, global warming, greenhouse gas emissions, human cognition, human extinction, Jonathan Safran Foer, low carbon diet, meaning of life, moral diet, MRSA, philosophy, plant-based diet, Saving the planet begins at breakfast, vegan, veganism, vegetarian, vegetarianism, We Are the Weather -
On national borders and the disappearance of our universe’s only known habitable planet.
We all share one planet, but selfish decisions made within a single nation’s borders could destroy it.
45, addiction, Amazon, Amazon Rainforest, Animal Man, biological abundance, biological diversity, biological fecundity, Brazil, Brazilian presidency, caterpillar, climate change, climate refuges, David Wallace-Wells, DC comics, deforestation, Donald Trump, environment, environmentalism, falling insect populations, fatherhood, fossil fuels, GBI, global warming, global wealth tax, Grant Morrison, guaranteed basic income, immigration, immigration crisis, inequality, insect populations, Jair Bolsonaro, Mexico, Michael McCarthy, Michoacan, Midwest, milkweed, mining in Michoacan, mining in the Amazon, Molly Crabapple, monarch wintering sites, national borders, oil, oil companies, parenting, pesticides, President Trump, raising caterpillars, raising monarch butterflies, raising Monarchs, refugee crisis, renewable energy, solar energy, The Moth Snowstorm, The Uninhabitable Earth, Trump, vegan, vegan comic books, vegan comics, vegan superhero, vegan superheroes, veganism, vegetarian comic books, vegetarian comics, vegetarian superhero, vegetarian superheroes, vegetarianism, Where Else Can They Go -
On perspective.
If we didn’t believe that the passage of time allows us to make a better world, then why would we try?
Book of Shem, Christianity, climate change, climate destabilization, club-winged manakins, cycles of time, cyclical time, David Kishik, death, direction of time, entropy, ents, evolution, evolutionary pressure, extinction, fall of man, global warming, good stewards of the Earth, hebrew, Hinduism, human evolution, improvement, Judaism, male nipples, manakins, mythology, optimism, originalism, perspective, progress, religion, Sapiens, the myth of progress, time, time’s arrow, tree communication, tree people, treents, trees, why do men have nipples, why does time move forward, Yuval Noah Harari -
On suboptimal optimization.
If you’re hoping that self-driving cars will prevent traffic jams, think again. They might be designed to make traffic worse.
Adam Millard-Ball, AI, artificial intelligence, atomic weapons, automation, capitalism, carbon costs, carbon emissions, carbon emissions from driving, carbon tax, climate change, cost benefit analysis, cost to park, did Heisenberg know linear algebra, driving, economics, finite, finite mathematics, general education requirements, global warming, graffiti that confuses self-driving cars, Heisenberg, Heisenberg and linear algebra, Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, intentionally causing traffic jams, linear algebra, linear optimization, math, math panic, matrices, matrix, maximizing utility, minimizing costs, negative externalities, nuclear weapons, parking, parking fees, parking in cities, philosophy, pollution, pollution is free, pricing carbon, pricing externalities, public utility, quantum mechanics, robot cars, robot drivers, self-driving car, self-driving cars causing traffic jams, taxing carbon, taxing emissions, taxing pollution, teaching math, traffic, traffic laws, traffic patterns, trolley problem, university degree, university policies, university policy, usage fees, Werner Heisenberg, why didn’t Germany have atomic weapons, why is it free to pollute, why isn’t pollution taxed









