Grist Magazine has turned up another excellent climate change piece โ this time an excerpt from โAmericans and Climate Change: Closing the Gap Between Science and Actionโ (PDF) a report synthesizing the insights of 110 leading thinkers on how to educate and motivate the American public on the subject of global warming.
The report strays into the an arena more typically occupied by public relations professionals, talking about the weight, meaning and persuasive power of language and the weighty, confusing and dismaying language that scientists most often employ. For example, the article points out:
โThe (climate change) issue has been loaded up with an impenetrable construct of jargon โ ranging from the scientistsโ โpositive feedback loopsโ or โpositive radiative forcingโ (โpositiveโ in these cases actually refers to something bad) to the policy-makersโ tradable emissions permits denominated in โtonsโ of carbon dioxide-equivalent (to the average American, โtonsโ presumably connote elephants more than invisible air molecules). Scientists say โanthropogenicโ when โman- madeโ would be more widely understood.โ
Typically, the whole piece is a little dense (which is to say โheavy going,โ not โthickโ), but well worth the read.
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