Guest guest Posted December 31, 2006 Report Share Posted December 31, 2006 Researchers in the area of global warming believe that it's the result of a greenhouse effect that is solely caused by the carbon emissions from human activity, dating from the time of the industrial revolution. Global warming is a real phenomenon and is most definitely the result of a greenhouse effect. However, the fundamental cause of this effect goes far beyond that of human activity. I recently asked a number of experts in the field of atmosphere research how the earth retains its atmosphere. A simple enough question, you might think. Does the atmosphere simply hang there, enveloping the Earth? I received no response to my question. I knew the answer before posing the question. The atmosphere of the Earth is retained through it interacting with the emission field of the Earth. Interaction, in this case, means a process of absorption and emission. I had come to this conclusion by investigating establishment physics and deciding that it was an abstractionist paradigm. This paradigm is not a truly fundamental perspective of the Universe, and as a result is limited in its capacity to express the detailed and connected nature of the Universe. As a consequence I developed the materialist paradigm of physics that is located on the Internet at http://members.westnet.com.au/paradigm/essay.pdf Everything has an emission field, which at the longer wavelengths part of the spectrum is also a gravitational field. The emission/gravitational field of the Earth decreases in density with the distance from the surface of the Earth in precisely the same way as the atmosphere of the Earth decreases in density with the distance from the surface of the Earth. Over time, the density of the emission/gravitational field of increases resulting is greater retention of carbon emissions that results in an increase in the average temperature of the Earth. The increase in the average temperature of the Earth due to the carbon emission from human activity is "in addition" to that which occurs as a result of the increase in the density of the emission/gravitational field of the Earth. The reduction in all carbon emissions will need to be an increasing factor, and not simply a given and static percentage of our present carbon emissions. Stephen Mooney Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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