> It would've taken you all of two seconds to google this.
And yet, in years of academic research in the field of climate science, I've never encountered anything written by Lewis. The book you reference is popular media; it's not a technical article or a novel scientific contribution.
Referring to someone as "one of the greatest minds in climate science" suggests they made important, novel contributions to the field which allowed us to better understand how climate works. Lewis did not do that. The sorts of people that come to mind when you write "greatest minds in climate science" are Syukuro Manabe, Richard Wetherald, Jule Charney, Bernhard Haurwitz, etc.
> And no, APS data is NOT transparent and is only released on its own schedule via research journals
The American Physical Society doesn't have "data"; it doesn't do science. Its members conduct novel research, and the APS runs journals which provide them - and others - the opportunity to publish their research following peer review.
> It would've taken you all of two seconds to google this.
And yet, in years of academic research in the field of climate science, I've never encountered anything written by Lewis. The book you reference is popular media; it's not a technical article or a novel scientific contribution.
Referring to someone as "one of the greatest minds in climate science" suggests they made important, novel contributions to the field which allowed us to better understand how climate works. Lewis did not do that. The sorts of people that come to mind when you write "greatest minds in climate science" are Syukuro Manabe, Richard Wetherald, Jule Charney, Bernhard Haurwitz, etc.
> And no, APS data is NOT transparent and is only released on its own schedule via research journals
The American Physical Society doesn't have "data"; it doesn't do science. Its members conduct novel research, and the APS runs journals which provide them - and others - the opportunity to publish their research following peer review.