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 Location:  Home » Books » Environmental Science » Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming  
Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming
Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming
Author: Bjorn Lomborg
Publisher: Knopf
Category: Book

List Price: $21.00
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 95 reviews
Sales Rank: 22357

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 4.9 x 1.2

ISBN: 0307266923
Dewey Decimal Number: 363.73874
EAN: 9780307266927
ASIN: 0307266923

Publication Date: September 4, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Ships from Kentucky. Some books contain writing/highlighting from the previous student. The cover has normal wear from class use. Your book may not include the CD/Access code. If you need this material please e-mail me before you order so I can check the book. Just let us know if you have a question and thank you for your order.

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 95
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5 out of 5 stars Government is the solution !   September 30, 2008
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

With the financial system collapsing due to deregulation, greed and irrational hubris, this short book is the latest fad for all who believe government is a problem, not the solution.

Granted, Lomberg admits, "humanity has caused a substantial rise in atmospheric carbon-dioxide levels over the past centuries, thereby contributing to global warming."

His solution? Let's cure AIDs, malaria, hunger and poverty first. Dealing with what we know rather than facing unknown unknowns is a noble approach that has motivated mankind for centuries. When people did not know how to cure smallpox, to cite an example, the alternative was to make the king and nobles uselessly rich and let most peasants live without clean water, sewage disposal and other basic necessities. The impact of global warming is as unknown today as was the cause of smallpox two centuries ago.

Today we need a president in the style of Abraham Lincoln who believed government can do things collectively that people cannot do individually. He was far more rational than modern fools who say taxes are only a form of "greed" and the true key to a better community is personal riches grabbed by any means possible.

Keeping these two ideas in mind, this book is a good analysis of the global warming debate. It is concise (164 pages of text, the rest is notes and sources), beautifully intelligent, blue skies clear and skeptical. No great idea should exist without rigorous challenge, questioning and alternatives. Think of the impact had some "Lomborg" 25 years ago offered similar questions about Reagan's rush to financial deregulation.

Lomborg doesn't deny global warming (the t-shirt mentality says "Al Gore didn't invent the Internet; he did invent Global Warming"). Instead, he suggests cost effective solutions such as carbon dioxide taxes. He'll properly infuriate climate change doers, doubters, deniers and dimbulbs.

Consider: What if Henry Ford was as concerned about pollution as he was about inventing the Model T and the moving assembly line? Or, what if horses were still the favoured means of transport for goods and people? A brilliant innovation may create a problem, but every solution must be dealt with in the context of the problem it solved.

Consider: Bottled water is sold because some people fear "polluted" municipal water. But, what if today's "natural" water was similar to that of 200 years ago when it might contain smallpox (instead of chlorine?) and other bacteria?

Consider: Lomborg raises a string of relevant issues that every intelligent person should consider before plunging into any climate change debate. All in all, this is a fine introduction to pollution, climate change, hype, hysteria and hope.

Consider: As with the financial industry, government is a solution and not the problem.




5 out of 5 stars An incredibly important book   September 23, 2008
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

Well researched and thoughtful. Bjorn Lomborg extracts the issue of global climate change policy from the layers of emotionalism and hysteria in which it is usually wrapped with the skill and precision of a surgeon. In cool, measured logical steps on the basis of well-established research, he elegantly illustrates how best to craft a climate change policy for the real world.


4 out of 5 stars A much welcome, balanced and clear-headed argument   September 23, 2008
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book is excellent in that it is neither written from the point of view of an alarmist nor of a denier. This middle ground is sadly lacking from the climate change debate in this day and age. Non-economists might find the constant cost-benefit analysis somewhat hard to fathom, but there are very few hard-to-understand parts.

Obviously, the science used to justify Lomborg's claims have, and will continue to be, challenged. Nevertheless, it is useful just to point out the danger of climate change hysteria that predominates the media.

My only problem with this book is the disproportionately large section at the back of the book denoted to notes. While this is necessary, it means the book is substantially shorter than it appears. I enjoyed the book and a little disappointed that so much of it is bibliography. But I still highly recommend it.



5 out of 5 stars Putting Things in Perspective   September 18, 2008
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book puts the current global warming crisis in perspective. While the author admits that global warming is a problem and that solutions should be thoughtfully considered and implemented across the world, the problem is not as imminent or destructive as some would have us believe. Moreover, the author continues, the real affects of global warming may still not be felt for many years. Meanwhile, there are more pressing issues that the world is dealing with and can be fixed by humanity. Global resources should be spent in the areas that we can make a difference in and that affect us today, such as food and water shortages, disease, poverty, energy consumption, population growth and infrastructure development. These are problems that are solvable, but can only be fixed by us if we work together. If the above are not addressed and truly resolved by our generation, it really won't matter if the ocean rises a few centimeters worldwide fifty years from now, as then too, the world may have bigger problems to worry about.


4 out of 5 stars he has the right idea   August 4, 2008
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

He has the right idea in that we need to be looking at climate change in terms of costs and benefits. Not in terms of the hysterics that we are force fed daily.

Are all his facts and numbers correct? I don't know. I've seen some webpages that have gone through point-by-point and refuted Lomborgs claims. Lomberg supposedly has rebuttals (though they're in Danish).

Regardless I like and buy the gist of Lomborg's argument: there are things we can do in the short run to mitigate the adverse effects of global warming. These measures are vastly cheaper than Kyoto and high carbon taxes (for one, let's not subsidize people to live in hurricane prone areas...duh). Expensive carbon taxing can make us much worse off than global warming. Killing our economies is not the answer. In the long run, Lomborg proposes that sufficient R&D could give us solutions to our energy needs. Thus we should fund R&D on a massive scale.

The author takes anthropogenic global warming to be a given. Whether he actually believes that to be the case or is just making the claim for the sake of argument, I'm not sure. However, this is not a book about whether anthropogenic GW is true or not - it's about the costs and benefits of stopping GW.

This book is 'footnoted' but not in a convenient or transparent way. And I think this is awful. You have no idea where footnotes are unless you peer into the Notes section in the back. I have no idea why this is done.



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