Speaking of word games...
And still you don't give an answer. If you claim that 'natural causes' is a scientific thesis, you should be able to expound on it. But you can't and you won't.
Fact is that the scientific community, the IPCC, NASA, the NAOA, etc. etc. see AGW as the dominant factor in the current climate change and your only defense is to call them liars.
In the Netherlands survey of climate researchers' views, nearly 12 per cent of respondents said natural factors are at least as significant -- or more significant -- than man-made emissions. Another 9.9 per cent said it is unknown how much of the warming that has occurred can be attributed to greenhouse gases:
http://jo.nova.s3.amazonaws.com/graph/psychology/consensus/pbl-1a.jpg
The survey of American Meteorological Society members found that 15 per cent of respondents believe natural factors are either an equal or dominant cause of warming, while another 20 per cent of respondents said there is insufficient evidence to determine the cause of warming.
The idea that natural factors -- such as solar activity -- have been a significant or even dominant cause of the warming in the late 20th century has not been rejected by climate researchers. Some believe it. Others don't. Many say we don't understand the climate well enough to determine what caused the warming in the late 20th century.
The most recent warming occurred from the late 1970s to the 1990s. Yet, in 1995, climate scientists told the IPCC there was no evidence of any human influence. Surely, the IPCC's climate scientists
must have believed something caused the warming that was occurring at that time.
Indeed, the IPCC's own graphs prior to 2001 showed temperatures had increased more significantly in the Medieval Warm Period. That was well before the Industrial Revolution. The IPCC scientists who believed the Medieval Warm Period was global
must have believed the climate can be affected by natural causes.
As for your claim that the "scientific community" supports AGW, there is no reason to believe that.
Consider the IPCC's headline-grabbing prediction in 2007 that the Himalayan glaciers would disappear by 2035. That fairy-tale claim made international headlines and the IPCC spent more than two years defending it.
According to you, the "scientific community" would speak out if the IPCC and its followers were saying things that were as obviously preposterous as the Himalayan glaciers prediction. But as we all know, that didn't happen. For the most part, it was only climate skeptics who said anything at all, even though any person who knows anything about science knew it was total B.S.
The reality is the "scientific community" has mostly been quiet on AGW. Indeed,
not a single scientist on the planet -- climate researcher or otherwise -- provided an amicus brief in support of Michael Mann in his lawsuits against Mark Steyn.
The silence of the "scientific community" doesn't prove that scientists don't believe in it. But the assertion that the "scientific community" supports AGW is completely baseless.