“… a refreshing read on a topic of great societal importance…because the authors evaluate key predictions and controversies of the global warming debate using logic and science.”
The media release is below.
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Written from a geological perspective, Dr. Robinson’s book emphasizes key findings and conclusions from peer-reviewed science journals rather than attempting to smear the politics and motives of those with differing views. Its fourteen chapters use an easy-to-understand question and answer format to cover the entire climate-change-global-warming spectrum including the physics of the greenhouse effect, the carbon cycle and why the science of geology is key to understanding global warming. References and a short summary are provided at the end of each chapter and many graphs and charts are included. The book is about the science of global warming, not the politics or various policy directions the U.S. government might choose. It is not intended to lambaste any political party, branch of government, way of thinking or person. It presents the science in a straight forward manner in everyday language without uncalled for political bias. It is the authoritative, concise guide to the global warming controversy that has long been needed.
Dr. Craig D. Idso, founder and chairman of the board of the Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change, says the book “…is a refreshing read on a topic of great societal importance…because the authors evaluate key predictions and controversies of the global warming debate using logic and science.”
Professor Robert M. Carter, Marine Geophysical Laboratory, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia, says “Writing in an easily accessible style for all readers, and using Socratic dialogue, Robinson leads us systematically through the simple science information that is needed to answer the question, ‘Are human carbon dioxide emissions causing dangerous global warming?’ And the more surprised you are that the answer to this question is ‘no,’ then the more you need to read this excellent book.”
G Dedrick Robinson Ph.D., author of nearly fifty science journal articles, is based in the Appalachian foothills region of South Carolina. He has closely followed the climate change debate during the course of his thirty-year career as a geology professor at James Madison University in Virginia.
Gene D. Robinson III Esquire has been practicing law in Virginia since 2007. A graduate of the University of Florida, Levin College of Law, he worked as an associate for a law firm in Fairfax, Virginia until 2009 when he established his own law practice.