Well, you're just getting nasty now, which is a pretty good indication that you don't have anything constructive to add to the conversation. In your previous post, you referred to a theory as a "guess" or a "hypothesis"--neither of which seem to be anywhere in your dictionary definition. You're just making stuff up.
Here it is again. Let me highlight the words you seem to not notice.
the·o·ry [thee-uh-ree, theer-ee]
a proposed explanation whose status is still
conjectural and subject to experimentation, in contrast to well-established propositions that are regarded as reporting matters of actual fact. Synonyms:
idea, notion hypothesis, postulate. Antonyms: practice, verification, corroboration, substantiation.
Now if you are too stupid to see hypothesis and do not comprehend that notion and postulate are synonymous with guess you are beyond hope. Go put your head back into a textbook and leave the real world to those of us that know what it is.
Here is the definition of a scientific theory according to the US National Academy of Sciences.
Of course, I forgot, the US academy of sciences writes the dictionary.:roll: No need to rely on the dictionary definitions when you can make up your own to suit your purpose. Now who is making sh*t up?
Let me know when you get fed up with being wrong.
This from a moron who thinks HVAC techs put cooling towers and A/C units inside a building. :roll:
It's not surprsing you buy into global cooling given that you believe a room will cool down if you leave the fridge door open. Becasue in the real world, fridges cool things down, right. Never mind these fancy theory science guys telling you about teh Second Law of Thermodynamics and a bunch of bafflegab like that, right?
I buy into it because that is what the data shows. Are you that close-minded or just plain retarded? The average temperature has been dropping and ice-caps are growing but your theory says it is getting hotter so screw the data damn it it's getting hotter. :roll:
Just like you believe all fridges are in completely sealed rooms with no other variable to influence heat transfer in any way. I suppose you don't believe that some of the newer fridges and A/C systems and the refrigerant they use haven't got the efficiency down to such a negligible difference you get more heat from the compressor pump than from the condenser itself.