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Overstating the effects of anthropogenic climate change? A critical assessment of attribution methods in climate science. European Journal for Philosophy of Science. 2023 García-Portela, Laura, Maraun, Douglas

Attribution

Cites (5)

Citations in the corpus, listed by decreasing publication date.

  1. The value of values in climate science. Nature Climate Change. 2022 Pulkkinen, Karoliina, Undorf, Sabine, Bender, Frida, Wikman-Svahn, Per, Doblas-Reyes, Francisco, Flynn, Clare, Hegerl, Gabriele C., Jönsson, Aiden, Leung, Gah-Kai, Roussos, Joe, Shepherd, Theodore G., Thompson, Erica

    Value-free ideal, Values

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    Note

    One of the first papers outside the philosophy of science literature explicitly acknowledging the role of non-epistemic values in climate science and climate modelling.

  2. Climate scientists set the bar of proof too high. Climatic Change. 2021 Lloyd, Elisabeth A., Oreskes, Naomi, Seneviratne, Sonia I., Larson, Edward J.

    Attribution, Climate change communication, Values

  3. Severe weather event attribution: Why values won't go away. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A. 2020 Winsberg, Eric, Oreskes, Naomi, Lloyd, Elisabeth

    Attribution, Extreme events, Values

  4. Climate Change Attribution: When Is It Appropriate to Accept New Methods? Earth's Future. 2018 Lloyd, Elisabeth A., Oreskes, Naomi

    Attribution, Extreme events, Storylines

  5. The social utility of event attribution: liability, adaptation, and justice-based loss and damage. Climatic Change. 2017 Lusk, Greg

    Adaptation, Attribution, Climate-policy, Decision-making, Extreme events

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