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Climate Change: A Wicked Problem: Complexity and Uncertainty at the Intersection of Science, Economics, Politics, and Human Behavior 1st Edition, Kindle Edition

4.1 out of 5 stars 20 ratings

Under one cover, Frank P. Incropera provides a comprehensive, objective and critical assessment of all issues germane to the climate change debate: science, technology options, economic ramifications, cultural and behavioural issues, the influence of special interests and public policy, geopolitics and ethical dimensions. The underlying science is treated in depth, but in an approachable and accessible manner. A strong case is made for the reality of anthropogenic climate change, while confronting the range of issues that remain uncertain and deconstructing opposing views. Incropera assesses the strengths and weaknesses of technology options for mitigating the effects of climate change, analyzes nontechnical factors - economic, cultural and political - and provides an in-depth treatment of ethical implications. This book is intended for those wishing to become fully informed about climate change and is designed to provide the reader with a firm foundation for drawing his or her own conclusions.

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'… [does] a masterful job of making the case for taking action now to reduce the impact of greenhouse gases attributable to human activity. [Incropera] does it in a way that even the most ardent skeptics will have to acknowledge is a persuasive and balanced case that respects counterarguments but engages them thoroughly and convincingly … required reading for every public policy student, legislator, regulator, and business decision maker in the energy space.' Anthony F. Earley, Jr, Chairman, CEO, and President, PG&E Corporation, from the Foreword

'This remarkable book … offers [a] most balanced, unbiased and holistic view … respect[s] the reader's prerogative to make up their own mind … As we enter a period of intense global and national discourse on this important topic, the timing of this book could not be better. People worldwide need to read Dr Incropera's book to map out for themselves the panoramic view of this multidimensional complex issue.' Arun Majumdar, Jay Precourt Professor, Stanford University; Former Vice President for Energy, Google; Founding Director, US Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy (ARPA-E); and Former US Acting Undersecretary of Energy, Department of Energy, from the Foreword

'… thorough and thoughtful, offering something to those already knowledgeable about the topic, while simultaneously remaining accessible to students approaching climate change for the first time.' Jeffrey A. Cunningham, University of South Florida

'I can think of no better source of information than this book that presents - in a straightforward manner - many of the complex choices and trade-offs ahead of us as a society. It will challenge readers' preconceived notions intellectually, but they will walk away with a much better appreciation for what is really at stake.' Michael O'Sullivan, Senior Vice President, NextEra Energy

'… [does] a masterful job of bringing the reader on a journey through the science and debate.' Suresh V. Garimella, Goodson Distinguished Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University

'Who is this book written for? For anyone who is earnestly seeking to increase the breadth of his or her knowledge and understanding of one of the twenty-first century's most contentious issues … Whether the reader is a climate change novice or an experienced hand, a scientist or an interested layman, Climate Change: A Wicked Problem provides invaluable information and insights with which to intelligently engage in shaping the future of this monumental challenge. It will challenge your thinking regardless of your starting point.' G. P. 'Bud' Peterson, President, Georgia Institute of Technology, from the Foreword

'Many debate the existence of climate change or global warming and use the two terms interchangeably. However, they are not the same. … Incropera explains how changes in the Earth's biosphere … and cryosphere … create changes in the Earth's climate. The dialogue makes sense and Incropera adds facts and comparisons from the ice sheets during and after the ice age to those melting on Antartica and Greenland. … I found this a very interesting and enlightening read because I have had an interest in climate change and was under the mistaken assumption that climate change and global warming [were] one and the same. If you care about our planet and want to know what we need to do to reverse the effects of climate change this is a read for you.' Michelle Kaye Malsbury, Bookpleasures.com (www.bookpleasures.com)

'A masterful job, comprehensively, objectively, and convincingly covering the different aspects of the important subject … written in a lucid, approachable style intended for 'anyone who is earnestly seeking to increase the breadth of his or her knowledge and understanding of one of the twenty-first century's most contentious issues'. … The three forewords … rightly praise the author's tenacity, objectivity, and foresight in studying the 'wicked' problem, offering an elective course on the broad subject, then writing the remarkable book. … Frank's labor of love is praiseworthy messianic. In my opinion, this book deserves much more attention than the one it has already garnered. A New York Times' review, a best-seller listing, and readership that approached that of an autobiography penned by a celebrity would all be warranted. The treatise is superbly researched, organized, written, and presented. I enthusiastically recommend the book for all who care about the future of our planet.' Mohamed Gad-el-Hak, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Journal

About the Author

Frank P. Incropera is Clifford and Evelyn Brosey Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Notre Dame, where he also served as Dean of Engineering from 1998 until 2006. He spent a majority of his career at Purdue University, becoming a professor in 1973 and Head of the School of Mechanical Engineering from 1989 to 1998. Among his many honors, Professor Incropera has received the American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE) Ralph Coats Roe Award for excellence in teaching (1982), the ASEE George Westinghouse Award for contributions to education (1983), the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Heat Transfer Memorial Award (1988), the Melville Medal for the best original paper published by ASME (1988) and the Worcester Reed Warner Medal of ASME (1995). He received the Senior Scientist Award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1988, and in 1996 was elected to the US National Academy of Engineering. In 2001 he was named by the Institute for Scientific Information as one of the 100 most frequently cited engineering researchers in the world. He is a Fellow of ASME and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Professor Incropera has had a long-standing interest in heat and mass transfer. He has authored or co-authored numerous books on the subject, including Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer, which has become the premier textbook in the field. He has also authored more than 200 journal articles. His work has addressed numerous fundamental issues, as well as applications dealing with energy conversion, biomedical engineering, electronics cooling and material processing. In the past ten years, his interests have turned to the broad range of technical and nontechnical issues associated with transition to a sustainable energy future. As well as academic research, he has worked extensively with members of the energy industry and business community.

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    4.1 out of 5 stars 20 ratings

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  • Dan Hemsworth
    5.0 out of 5 stars This is the 1 book you must have in your library
    Reviewed in Canada on 2 March 2020
    Succinct. No crusading. Just the hard facts presented effectively. We all need to wake up people. Thankyou Mr. Incropera.
  • Gretar Tryggvason
    5.0 out of 5 stars Comprehensive and concise
    Reviewed in the United States on 6 January 2016
    Professor Incropera’s has written a book on a complex topic that succeeds in being accessible, balanced, quantitative, comprehensive and concise. He examines global warming from multiple angles, starting by pointing out that energy is vital to our way of living. The first five chapters are thoroughly scientific and deal with the Earth’s climate, the nature of greenhouse gases, how they affect the climate, and what the consequences of global warming would be. The next five chapters address less technical, but just as important, aspects. Options for mitigation and the need for adaption are presented and the enormous risks, and ultimate futility, of various geoengineering proposals are examined. Policy and politics get one chapter each and so do dissenters. It is clear that the author is not overly sympathetic, but the arguments against anthropogenic warming, or alternative interpretations of the data, are addressed in a specific, technical and unemotional way. The ethical aspects are then examined, including religious perspectives. The book ends with a discussion of what is likely to happen and what we can do about global warming. The overall conclusion is rather bleak and the author finds it unlikely that we can slow down climate change without major and universal changes in how we live and consume. I cannot argue with the logic, but in a world where a few enterprising individuals can have enormous impact (shipping containers, social media and fracking are just three random examples) we cannot exclude the possibility of technology that could have major impact. I feel that speculations about such possibilities should be part of the discussion, but it is not fair of me to expect it here. Incropera’s book is thoroughly grounded in reality and his conclusion about fusion, for example, is that it is “not likely to be achieved in this century, if ever.” Thus, for hypothetical and magical solutions we have to go elsewhere. However, for a comprehensive discussion about the many complex aspects of global warming it is hard to imagine a better book.
  • R^5
    4.0 out of 5 stars Not an easy read but a really worthwhile one even for a ...
    Reviewed in Canada on 21 November 2016
    Not an easy read but a really worthwhile one even for a non-scientist (accountant) like me. I actually read it while also reading the Pope Francis Encyclical on climate change (and poverty issues) - even though I am not Catholic. It was a useful combination in some ways - one more facts, the other more values. I would recommend both of them to anyone interested in these difficult and demanding issues.
  • Joseph M. Powers
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fine book on a challenging topic
    Reviewed in the United States on 27 November 2015
    My colleague and friend Frank Incropera has written a fine book on a challenging topic. Its strengths include 1) a thermal engineer’s informed pragmatism applied to the earth as a system as well as to the man-made technologies influencing the larger system, 2) a careful summary of the best of the scientific literature and institutional reports dealing with climate change, and 3) a keen analysis of today’s ongoing debate, informed within a variety of frameworks of both ethics and religion. His style is to give a clinical, sanguine exposition of the problems we face, explore the strengths and weaknesses of various remedies, and make his own recommendations. In Summer 1982, as an engineering student, I learned the subject of heat transfer largely through absorbing Frank Incropera’s fine heat transfer textbook. The clarity of style in that book carries over to the present. The new book echoes topics presented by the author in a class in Energy, Technology and Policy taught for several years at Notre Dame. I now better understand why the class was eagerly sought out by many of our best students: it taught them to appreciate a topic of fundamental importance to the world where deep challenges exist at the intersection of human and technological values.
  • Jim Rhodes
    5.0 out of 5 stars My favorite book on the topic
    Reviewed in the United States on 5 November 2017
    This is possibly the best book on the topic. I only say "possibly" as there are many books out there and I haven't read them all. But I have looked through quite a few and this one is the most comprehensive book that I've seen. It isn't an easy read but the topic is not a simple one and this book covers the subject in a fair amount of depth but it is still possible for the ordinary person to read it.

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