There's more than one path to policy — if Science's Next Wave teaches anything, it's that when it comes to careers there's never just one way of doing things — but if you want to make the transition as painless as possible you should try to make
the change in a sensible way.
Not exact matches
«We're not going to see a complete redo of Dodd - Frank, nor should we... We're going to see some
sensible, pragmatic common - sense
changes to eight years of regulation... Things won't happen
in a dramatic
way, but it will definitely happen.»
Yet, says botanist Jan Pokorny of Charles University
in Prague, these snippets from Kenya are not about greenhouse gases, but rather the
way that land - use
changes — specifically deforestation — affect climate; newly tree - free ground «represents huge amounts of solar energy
changed into
sensible heat, i.e. hot air.»
2014 «Work Order,
Change Order» MITCHELL - INNES & NASH, New York 2013 «Some End of Things» Kunstmuseum Basel, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel «Despite our differences», Fondation Hippocrène, Paris «Avant de Rentrer, Il Faut Incendier la Maison», Thomas Duncan Gallery, Los Angeles «Some Redemptions», Soloway, New York «I knOw yoU», Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin «Version Control», Arnolfini, Bristol 2012 «Social Scarecrows Printing Fields» (with Ei Arakawa), Reena Spaulings Fine Arts, New York «Ecstatic Alphabets / Heaps of Language», MoMA, Museum of Modern Art, New York 2011 ArtlBasellMiami Beachl with Scott Lyall and Clément Rodzielski «That's The
Way We Do It», Kunsthaus Bregenz «Fax», Carpenter Center, Harvard «Faces», two - man exhibition, Gallery Dependance, Brussels Project curated by Mousse magazine, Art Brussels Exhibition of scholarship holders, Villa Romana, Florence 2009 «Non-Solo Show, Non-group show», with Ei Arakawa, Nicolas Gambaroff and Nick Mauss, Kunsthalle, Zurich Two person exhibition with Pernille Kapper Williams, Grazer Kunstverein, Austria «Collatéral» (with Liz Deschenes, Sam Lewitt, Scott Lyall, Sean Paul, Eileen Quinlan, Blake Rayne, Cheyney Thompson), Le Confort Moderne - Centre pour l'Art Contemporain, Poitiers 2008 «Idealismusstudio», Grazer Kunstverein, Graz, Austria «On Interchange - Zwischenspiele einer Sammlung», Museum Kurhaus, Kleve, Germany «Non-Solo show, Non-group show», with Ei Arakawa und Henning Bohl, Galleria Franco Soffiantino, Turin «One Season
in Hell», Mehringdamm 72, Berlin 2007 «24 November - 22 December», Sutton Lane (Campoli Presti), Paris «The Four Colour Contingency», The Approach, London «For the People of Paris», Sutton Lane (Campoli Presti) Paris «kjubh: The New Domestic Landscape 2007», curated by Caroline Nathusius, kjubh, Köln «The Re-distribution of the
Sensible», curated by Warren Neidich, Magnus Mueller, Berlin «Dependance», Galerie Neu, Berlin «Tension, Sex, Despair, Wow / So What?»
The
sensible has therefore been redistributed, with the purpose of looking at the
ways in which objects, not only humans anymore, influence and inform
changes in the politics of a system.
However, it is not hard to see that some of those who have attempted to perpetrate this tale about man - made global warming are more interested
in climate
change as a
way of increasing the power of government over all of our lives instead of implementing a
sensible energy policy.
However, it is not hard to see that some of those who have attempted to perpetrate the concept of man - made global warming are more interested
in climate
change as a
way of increasing the power of government over all of our lives instead of implementing a
sensible energy policy.
To point out just a couple of things: — oceans warming slower (or cooling slower) than lands on long - time trends is absolutely normal, because water is more difficult both to warm or to cool (I mean, we require both a bigger heat flow and more time); at the contrary, I see as a non-sense theory (made by some serrist, but don't know who) that oceans are storing up heat, and that suddenly they will release such heat as a positive feedback: or the water warms than no heat can be considered ad «stored» (we have no phase
change inside oceans, so no latent heat) or oceans begin to release heat but
in the same time they have to cool (because they are losing heat); so, I don't feel strange that
in last years land temperatures for some series (NCDC and GISS) can be heating up while oceans are slightly cooling, but I feel strange that they are heating up so much to reverse global trend from slightly negative / stable to slightly positive; but,
in the end, all this is not an evidence that lands» warming is led by UHI (but, this effect, I would not exclude it from having a small part
in temperature trends for some regional area, but just small); both because, as writtend, it is normal to have waters warming slower than lands, and because lands» temperatures are often measured
in a not so precise
way (despite they continue to give us a global uncertainity
in TT values which is barely the instrumental's one)-- but, to point out, HadCRU and MSU of last years (I mean always 2002 - 2006) follow much better waters» temperatures trend; — metropolis and larger cities temperature trends actually show an increase
in UHI effect, but I think the sites are few, and the covered area is very small worldwide, so the global effect is very poor (but it still can be
sensible for regional effects); but I would not run out a small warming trend for airport measurements due mainly to three things: increasing jet planes traffic, enlarging airports (then more buildings and more asphalt — if you follow motor sports, or simply live
in a town / city, you will know how easy they get very warmer than air during day, and how much it can slow night - time cooling) and overall having airports nearer to cities (if not becoming an area inside the city after some decade of hurban growth, e.g. Milan - Linate); — I found no point about UHI
in towns and villages; you will tell me they are not large cities; but,
in comparison with 20-40-60 years ago when they were «countryside», many small towns and villages have become part of larger hurban areas (at least
in Europe and Asia) so examining just larger cities would not be enough
in my opinion to get a full view of UHI effect (still remembering that it has a small global effect: we can say many matters are due to UHI instead of GW, maybe even that a small part of measured GW is due to UHI, and that GW measurements are not so precise to make us able to make good analisyses and predictions, but not that GW is due to UHI).
This is an absolutely
sensible way of proceeding
in order to reduce our carbon footprints and also to develop and
change with what is clearly an evolving situation across the globe and
in the EU and
in the UK.
On the basis of that apparent correlation and the absence of any non solar cause having gone into reverse I prefer the idea that
in some
way the
change in solar activity levels is responsible and the simplest explanation is the one I have advanced but I remain open to
sensible alternative suggestions of which there are precisely none.
The short and lazy answer to Matthew Marler's question about the column energetics that bring the system back to equilibrium is that GCMs do of course represent evaporation,
sensible heating, etc
in ways that are undoubtedly imperfect (e.g., via «bulk formulas» that transfer energy down - gradient of temperature or humidity differences between the surface and air aloft), but they are free to evolve
in climate
change scenarios
in ways that are physically self - consistent.
Note, these two different
ways of treating the
sensible and latent heat fluxes tell you different things about sensitivity (without allowing the evaporative flux
in # 2 to
change the radiative flux).
Finally, there are baby steps being taken by lawmakers, both at the State and D.C.. But, make no mistake, we need a radical
change in the
way we approach
sensible gun control.
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