Andre said:
No it is not. The essence is the predominance of negative feedback, which precludes the "amplification" of the basic Planck reaction of some 1.1 - 1.2 degrees per doubling CO2 as per
Lindzen and Choi 2009 and diverse publications of http://www.aai.ee/~olavi/
As opposed to the predominance of positive feedback, which means the lower bound of sensitivity for doubling CO2 is well above 1.2 degrees as per http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2006/2005GL025259.shtml,
Wigley et al. (2005),
Schneider von Deimling et al. (2006), http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/310/5749/841, http://geotest.tamu.edu/userfiles/216/dessler09.pdf ,
Forster et al. (2006), http://www.iop.org/EJ/article/1748-9326/3/1/014001/erl8_1_014001.pdf?request-id=7ffdbae3-8892-4567-8067-33a2055ffc40, http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/325/5939/460 ,
Gregory et al. (2002),
Bony et al. (2006), http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2008/2008GL035333.shtml, and
Minschwaner et al. (2006).
And by the way. Just to anticipate a repeat of not-so-subtle hints by some other contributors (not Andre, I hasten to add!) that anyone claiming to know too much is merely googling; this was not obtained by google. These are all papers already on my own computer, which I have obtained and checked out for myself well before writing this, and some of which I have discussed already in various threads. Had I used google I would expect to find a lot more, even if I limited myself to stuff published in the last 12 months. As long as we are going to drop papers into threads without discussion as a some kind of authority argument, this helps indicate what that technique would really show.
This is becoming a science based discussion, rather than political discussion. I think it would be more appropriate, given the focus of PF on actually learning about the science, not to merely dump references as some way of closing off discussion or overwhelming it; but to actually discuss the content of particular methods for inferring feedback (there are many different independent methods giving support to the same conclusion represented in the above papers) in a more focused science thread, with one or two papers as a backup for more detail.
Cheers -- sylas