The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Best-Of.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Best-Of.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-1.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-1.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-2.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-2.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Reggae.mp3
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The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-UU-XXIII.mp3
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The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Unplugged.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Unplugged.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Man, man’s damned demand
No longer can rely on supply
Time we come to understand
Getting tougher to get by

[Bridge]
Let’s investigate
(How to mediate)
[Instrumental]

[Chorus]
Research and development
(Is what I meant)
Into the way we live
(A lot less take and much more give)

[Verse 2]
Complex Social-Ecological
(Feedback Loops)
Within a dynamic, non-linear system
(Whoops… I am)

[Bridge]
Let’s investigate
(How to navigate)

[Chorus]
Research and development
(Is what I meant)
Into the way we live
(A lot less take and much more give)

[Bridge]
Let’s investigate
(How to evacuate)

[Chorus]
Research and development
(Is what I meant)
Into the way we live
(A lot less take and much more give)

[Outro]
Let’s investigate
(How to negate)

A SCIENCE NOTE
We knew tipping points would eventually trigger self-sustaining feedback loops in the climate system–and now, they have arrived. I was prepared for that part. What I could not fully envision was how rapidly the interplay among these tipping points would ignite a domino effect–so, so fast. Now, I see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems unfolding in real time. Abstract models are transforming into undeniable, measurable reality before our eyes.

In the 1990s, we first hypothesized the non-linear acceleration of climate change. By the early 2000s, this hypothesis had evolved into an established climate theory, now widely recognized as scientific fact. My lab partner, a Doctor of Physics from Ohio State, and I collaborated to provide the key evidence creating this theory. Over the years, we have observed a dramatic reduction in the doubling time of climate change impacts—the rate at which these effects intensify. Initially, the doubling time was approximately 100 years, but it has since decreased to 10 years and, more recently, to just 2 years. This trend implies that the damage caused by climate change today is double what it was two years ago. In two years, it could be four times worse; in four years, eight times worse; and within a decade, potentially 64 times worse. These projections are conservative, assuming the doubling period does not continue to shrink further. Alarmingly, this rapid acceleration does not appear to be an anomaly. If this trajectory persists, the consequences will likely be far more catastrophic than previously anticipated.

Disease vectors, violent rain, and deadly humid heat are driving an exponential rise in climate-related deaths. This lethal triad–infectious disease, extreme heat, and intense rainfall–demonstrates that climate change is not a distant concern but a present, accelerating force behind rising mortality worldwide. Together, these threats magnify each other’s impacts, underscoring the urgent need to address climate change as a health crisis already unfolding.

* Our climate model — which incorporates complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, signaling a dramatic acceleration of warming.

We analyze how human activities (such as deforestation, fossil fuel use, and land development) interact with ecological processes (including carbon cycling, water availability, and biodiversity loss) in ways that amplify one another. These interactions do not follow simple cause-and-effect patterns; instead, they create cascading, interconnected impacts that can rapidly accelerate system-wide change, sometimes abruptly. Understanding these dynamics is essential for assessing risks and designing effective climate adaptation and mitigation strategies.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

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