bookmark_borderDoubling Time

Doubling-Time-Best-Of.mp3
Doubling-Time-Best-Of.mp4
Doubling-Time.mp3
Doubling-Time.mp4
Doubling-Time-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Acceleration
(Becomes a thing of the past)
At last at last
(The past piles up so fast)

[Bridge]
Our you sure
(Of a future?)

[Chorus]
The trouble with doubling time
Is it’s half of half-the-time
(All the time)
Like per second per second… I reckon…
It just keeps going and growing
(Shorter and shorter)

[Bridge]
Faster and faster
(Into disaster)

[Verse 2]
100 years goes to 10
(Then… to two)
Not a matter of when
(It’s happening to you)

[Bridge]
Our you sure
(Of a future?)

[Chorus]
The trouble with doubling time
Is it’s half of half-the-time
(All the time)
Like per second per second… I reckon…
It just keeps going and growing
(Shorter and shorter)

[Bridge]
Drastic (disorder)
Faster and faster
(Into disaster)

[Chorus]
The trouble with doubling time
Is it’s half of half-the-time
(All the time)
Like per second per second… I reckon…
It just keeps going and growing
(Shorter and shorter)

[Outro]
Drastic (disorder)
Faster and faster
(Into disaster)
[Instrumental, Whistle Solo]

A SCIENCE NOTE

Beyond Linear Change: The Reality of Exponential Acceleration

When we began our climate experiments in the 1990s, we assumed significant change would occur over millennia. If climate change progressed linearly, this would hold. However, by the late 1990s, our findings–and global observations–began to show that climate impacts were accelerating exponentially.

Doubling time — the period required for a quantity to double — is a critical marker of exponential growth. For anthropogenic climate impacts, this period has collapsed at an alarming rate. By 2020, the doubling time for key impacts such as sea level rise had shrunk from 100 years to just 10 years, with rates increasing from about 1.5 mm/year to over 3 mm/year. If left unchecked, this trajectory could result in sea-level increases of up to one foot per year by 2050.

Doubling Time Formula

Extreme Events: The New Normal

Extreme weather events are intensifying and occurring with alarming frequency as warming oceans, disrupted jet streams, and accelerating atmospheric rivers destabilize the climate system. What were once “500-year” events now occur every 5-10 years, and in many places, annually.

  • Heatwaves are now 5x more likely, projected to become 10x more likely within 5 years and 20x within a decade, consistent with the shrinking climate doubling period.
  • Storms and flooding are not only more frequent but also exponentially more destructive due to physics: wind and water forces scale with the square of velocity (v²) and, in the case of water, with 800x the density of air, making even modest increases in flow speed dramatically more damaging.
  • Wildfires, fueled by heat, lightning, and brown carbon feedback loops, are igniting with greater speed and ferocity, as seen during Canada’s record-breaking 2023 wildfire season.

Non-linear acceleration is now confirmed: The 2-7°F rise in temperatures during recent European heatwaves translated to a tripling of heat deaths, demonstrating the amplified sensitivity of human and natural systems to seemingly small increases in mean temperatures. For every 1°C (1.8°F) increase, the atmosphere can hold 7% more water vapor, intensifying storms and the humidity of heatwaves, compounding mortality risk.

2025 Update: Doubling Period Shrinks Further

Originally estimated at 100 years, the climate doubling period–how quickly climate impacts double in intensity–contracted to 10 years. By 2024, new observations confirmed the doubling period had shortened further to just 2 years. 100 years → 10 years → 2 years. This means the damage caused by climate change today is already double what it was just two years ago. If this trend continues, it could be four times worse in two years, eight times worse in four years, and up to 64 times worse within a decade. Critically, these estimates are conservative, assuming the doubling period does not continue to shrink even further as tipping points and feedback loops accelerate the crisis.

The surge in persistent heat domes and resonance patterns in the jet stream confirms that critical thresholds in the climate system are being crossed faster than models predicted. As warming oceans and a destabilized jet stream lock in planetary wave patterns, heat domes and extreme weather events persist longer, amplifying both frequency and intensity.

In 2023, Earth’s surface temperatures averaged over 3°C above pre-industrial levels–double the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C ceiling. Scientists agree that a 2°C rise will trigger tipping points and feedback loops, releasing carbon from permafrost, weakening the AMOC, and destabilizing polar ice sheets. This cascading “Domino Effect” could push global temperatures toward 6°C, rendering large regions of the planet uninhabitable within this century.

As climate change accelerates, what was once a 1,000-year flood now occurs as a 100-year or even 10-year event. Violent rain, flash flooding, and catastrophic water events are rewriting our understanding of “normal,” with Chapel Hill’s recent “1,000-year” flood serving as a stark warning that the climate system is entering a phase of nonlinear, runaway change that threatens human systems, infrastructure, and global stability.

Ignite a Domino Effect: Albedo, Brown Carbon, AMOC, Permafrost, Amazon Rainforest Dieback, Sea Level Rise Pulses, Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

Tipping Cascades: The Nonlinear Dominoes of Climate Collapse Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

The Domino Collapse: Amazon Rainforest Dieback and the Ozone Feedback Loop Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

Climate Change, Doubling Time, and the Eroding Value of Jersey Shore Real Estate Brouse (2025)

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is toppled and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderIn the Eye

In-the-Eye-Best-Of.mp3
In-the-Eye-Best-Of.mp4
In-the-Eye.mp3
In-the-Eye.mp4
In-the-Eye-intro.mp3

[Intro]
On the edge…
(In the eye)
I…

[Verse 1]
(Oh, well) How can you tell
On the edge
Of a hurricane
Where to begin
And come to know within

[Bridge]
The urge
(On the ledge)
Surge

[Chorus]
To observe (from afar)
Bizarre (the nerve)
Struck (as by luck)
All falls into place
(In space)

[Verse 2]
(Thick in chaotic)
Unordered system
(I am)
We are so far
In to the eye
(Of I)

[Bridge]
On the edge
Of a hurricane
Where to begin
And come to know within

[Bridge]
The urge
(On the ledge)
Surge

[Chorus]
To observe (from afar)
Bizarre (the nerve)
Struck (as by luck)
All falls into place
(In space)

[Outro]
To observe (from afar)
Bizarre (the nerve)
Struck (as by luck)
All falls into place
(In space)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Tipping Points Igniting a Domino Effect

We knew tipping points in the climate system would eventually trigger self-sustaining feedback loops—and now, they have arrived. That part, I was prepared for.

What I could not fully envision was how rapidly the interplay among these tipping points would ignite a domino effect across Earth’s systems—so, so fast.

Now, I see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems is unfolding in real time. Abstract models are transforming into undeniable, measurable reality before our eyes, each cascading shock amplifying the next, each destabilization eroding the buffers we once relied upon.

If you are new to the concept of “unordered systems,” think of a hurricane. When you stand at the edge of an approaching storm, you have no idea what this system will bring. Even inside the eye, hovering on the edge of calm, you cannot comprehend the full scope of what is happening. It is only when you pull back—way back—that you recognize the system’s structure, the magnitude of the forces at play, and the multitude of interconnected subsystems spiraling within it.

Then, and only then, can you begin to see how simple this complexity truly is.

Chaos theory in climate physics reveals that small perturbations—like incremental emissions, deforestation, or a regional heatwave—can escalate rapidly, interacting with larger systemic instabilities to produce abrupt, unpredictable changes. This is not just theoretical; we are seeing ice sheet destabilization, jet stream fragmentation, and ocean current disruptions accelerating far faster than models predicted. It is in this nonlinear acceleration, driven by reinforcing feedback loops, that the true scale of the crisis comes into focus.

We are no longer discussing distant projections or theoretical risk curves. We are witnessing the planetary system cross thresholds where the rate of change itself doubles in shorter and shorter intervals, transforming manageable problems into cascading disasters. This is the reality of living within a chaotic system: tipping points are not isolated events but triggers in a global chain reaction now fully underway.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is toppled and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSo, So Fast

So-So-Fast-Best-Of.mp3
So-So-Fast-Best-Of.mp4
So-So-Fast.mp3
So-So-Fast.mp4
So-So-Fast-intro.mp3

[Intro]
So (so fast)
Not (so-so) fast
(Does the past last?)

[Verse 1]
The rapid way
The interplay
Among these tipping points…
You know… tip the domino — so, so fast.

[Chorus]
Clearer nonlinear
(Dynamic dance)
Unfolding in real time
(Reason and rhyme)

[Bridge]
(Alas)
Watch the past (pass) past
You know
(There you go)
Domino

[Verse 2]
In a chain-reaction
(The dominoes fall)
Dues of self-satisfaction
(The collectors call)

[Chorus]
Clearer nonlinear
(Dynamic dance)
Unfolding in real time
(Reason and rhyme)

[Bridge]
(Alas)
Watch the past (pass) past
You know
(There you go)
Domino

[Chorus]
Clearer nonlinear
(Dynamic dance)
Unfolding in real time
(Reason and rhyme)

[Outro]
(Think fast)
As the past (passes) past
Could not ignore
(Future could not endure)
You know
(There we go)
Domino
(You know)
Domino (no-no)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Tipping Points Igniting a Domino Effect

We knew tipping points would eventually trigger self-sustaining feedback loops in the climate system–and now, they have arrived. I was prepared for that part.

What I could not fully envision was how rapidly the interplay among these tipping points would ignite a domino effect–so, so fast.

Now, I see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems unfolding in real time. Abstract models are transforming into undeniable, measurable reality before our eyes.

Cascading System Failures

The breakdown of climate subsystems will not follow a smooth, linear decline. Instead, as one subsystem fails, it accelerates the failure of others, creating cascading, compounding effects across the entire climate system.

There are too many interconnected subsystems to list exhaustively, but consider one example:
The collapse of the AMOC slows ocean circulation, leading to hotter tropics and a warmer Arctic. This accelerates polar ice melt, causing sea levels to rise more rapidly while injecting large volumes of freshwater into the North Atlantic, further destabilizing the AMOC in a reinforcing loop.

At the same time, a disrupted climate system increases droughts in the Amazon, pushing the rainforest toward dieback and desertification. As the Amazon loses its ability to recycle rainfall and sequester carbon, it further amplifies global warming, which then accelerates ice melt, sea level rise, and AMOC collapse.

This example is just one piece of a much larger mosaic of cascading feedback loops already unfolding, shifting the climate system from a stable state to a chaotic, accelerating collapse.:

Ignite a Domino Effect: Albedo, Brown Carbon, AMOC, Permafrost, Amazon Rainforest Dieback, Sea Level Rise Pulses, Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

Tipping Cascades: The Nonlinear Dominoes of Climate Collapse Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

The Domino Collapse: Amazon Rainforest Dieback and the Ozone Feedback Loop Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderBreaking Capitalism

Breaking-Capitalism-Best-Of.mp3
Breaking-Capitalism-Best-Of.mp4
Breaking-Capitalism.mp3
Breaking-Capitalism.mp4
Breaking-Capitalism-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
No extreme whether
(Extreme weather)
I’m talking violent rain
(A reign of pain)

[Chorus]
Breaking the bank
Who else to thank…
But us
Optimism to pessimism
Breaking capitalism
Notorious

[Bridge]
Consume to excess
(Resume our mess)
His story
(Going down in history)
Down, down, down

[Verse 2]
Holler:
Live by the dollar
(Die by the dollar)
Holler:
No rational (at all)

[Chorus]
Breaking the bank
Who else to thank…
But us
Optimism to pessimism
Breaking capitalism
Notorious

[Bridge]
Consume to excess
(Resume our mess)
His story
(Going down in history)
Down, down, down

[Outro]
Our story
(Going down in history)
Down, down, down
(Just look around)
Down, down, down

A SCIENCE NOTE

As extreme weather accelerates, the world is nearing a tipping point where insurance — and capitalism itself — can no longer function.

The climate crisis is on track to destabilize and ultimately destroy global capitalism, according to a stark warning from one of the world’s largest insurers. Allianz SE board member Gunther Thallinger has sounded the alarm: the growing cost of climate-driven disasters threatens to break the financial sector’s ability to operate — starting with insurance.

Speaking as both a top executive of Allianz and chair of its investment board, Thallinger said the world is fast approaching temperature thresholds beyond which many climate risks will simply become uninsurable. And without insurance, critical sectors of modern finance — from mortgages and real estate to infrastructure and industry — will cease to function.

“Heat and water destroy capital,” Thallinger wrote. “Flooded homes lose value. Overheated cities become uninhabitable. Entire asset classes are degrading in real time.”

The Math No Longer Works

“As temperatures rise to 1.5°C, 2°C, 3°C, insurers will no longer be able to offer coverage for many of these risks,” Thallinger said. “The math breaks down: the premiums required exceed what people or companies can pay. This is already happening.”

Our updated climate model, now integrating complex social-ecological factors as part of a dynamic and non-linear system, shows that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C within this century–far beyond previous predictions of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years. This level of warming will render much of the world uninhabitable within this century.

Without insurance, the ripple effects spread rapidly through the financial system. Mortgages, infrastructure investment, agriculture, and transportation all rely on insurance to manage risk. Remove that foundation, and the global credit system starts to seize up — a “climate-induced credit crunch.”

“This is a systemic risk threatening the very foundation of the financial sector,” Thallinger warned.

Nick Robins, chair of the Just Transition Finance Lab at the London School of Economics, called the analysis “devastating,” adding that it highlights not only a financial crisis but a civilizational one.

Disease vectors, violent rain, and deadly humid heat are driving an exponential rise in climate-related deaths. This lethal triad–infectious disease, extreme heat, and intense rainfall–demonstrates that climate change is not a distant concern but a present, accelerating force behind rising mortality worldwide. Together, these threats magnify each other’s impacts, underscoring the urgent need to address climate change as a health crisis already unfolding.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

What I could not fully envision was how rapidly the interplay among these tipping points would ignite a domino effect–so, so fast.

Now, I see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems unfolding in real time. Abstract models are transforming into undeniable, measurable reality before our eyes.

What you can do today. How to save the planet.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThe Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Best-Of.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Best-Of.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-1.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-1.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-2.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Pt-2.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Reggae.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Reggae.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-UU-XXIII.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-UU-XXIII.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Unplugged.mp3
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-Unplugged.mp4
The-Human-Induced-Climate-Change-Experiment-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Man, man’s damned demand
No longer can rely on supply
Time we come to understand
Getting tougher to get by

[Bridge]
Let’s investigate
(How to mediate)
[Instrumental]

[Chorus]
Research and development
(Is what I meant)
Into the way we live
(A lot less take and much more give)

[Verse 2]
Complex Social-Ecological
(Feedback Loops)
Within a dynamic, non-linear system
(Whoops… I am)

[Bridge]
Let’s investigate
(How to navigate)

[Chorus]
Research and development
(Is what I meant)
Into the way we live
(A lot less take and much more give)

[Bridge]
Let’s investigate
(How to evacuate)

[Chorus]
Research and development
(Is what I meant)
Into the way we live
(A lot less take and much more give)

[Outro]
Let’s investigate
(How to negate)

A SCIENCE NOTE
We knew tipping points would eventually trigger self-sustaining feedback loops in the climate system–and now, they have arrived. I was prepared for that part. What I could not fully envision was how rapidly the interplay among these tipping points would ignite a domino effect–so, so fast. Now, I see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems unfolding in real time. Abstract models are transforming into undeniable, measurable reality before our eyes.

In the 1990s, we first hypothesized the non-linear acceleration of climate change. By the early 2000s, this hypothesis had evolved into an established climate theory, now widely recognized as scientific fact. My lab partner, a Doctor of Physics from Ohio State, and I collaborated to provide the key evidence creating this theory. Over the years, we have observed a dramatic reduction in the doubling time of climate change impacts—the rate at which these effects intensify. Initially, the doubling time was approximately 100 years, but it has since decreased to 10 years and, more recently, to just 2 years. This trend implies that the damage caused by climate change today is double what it was two years ago. In two years, it could be four times worse; in four years, eight times worse; and within a decade, potentially 64 times worse. These projections are conservative, assuming the doubling period does not continue to shrink further. Alarmingly, this rapid acceleration does not appear to be an anomaly. If this trajectory persists, the consequences will likely be far more catastrophic than previously anticipated.

Disease vectors, violent rain, and deadly humid heat are driving an exponential rise in climate-related deaths. This lethal triad–infectious disease, extreme heat, and intense rainfall–demonstrates that climate change is not a distant concern but a present, accelerating force behind rising mortality worldwide. Together, these threats magnify each other’s impacts, underscoring the urgent need to address climate change as a health crisis already unfolding.

* Our climate model — which incorporates complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, signaling a dramatic acceleration of warming.

We analyze how human activities (such as deforestation, fossil fuel use, and land development) interact with ecological processes (including carbon cycling, water availability, and biodiversity loss) in ways that amplify one another. These interactions do not follow simple cause-and-effect patterns; instead, they create cascading, interconnected impacts that can rapidly accelerate system-wide change, sometimes abruptly. Understanding these dynamics is essential for assessing risks and designing effective climate adaptation and mitigation strategies.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderCool, Cool Air

Cool-Cool-Air.mp3
Cool-Cool-Air.mp4
Cool-Cool-Air-Reggae.mp3
Cool-Cool-Air-Reggae.mp4
Cool-Cool-Air-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
What I need
(Is some cool, cool air to breathe)
Hear me plead
(I need cool, cool air to breathe)

[Bridge]
(Woah, oh, oh)
I need to breathe, please

[Chorus]
Heat and humidity
(Raise the difficulty)
With no solution
(To air pollution)

[Bridge]
(Woah, oh, oh)
I need to breathe, please

[Verse 2]
How to create
(Cool, cool air to breathe)
Getting desperate
(For cool, cool air to breathe)

[Bridge]
(Woah, oh, oh)
I need to breathe, please

[Chorus]
Heat and humidity
(Raise the difficulty)
With no solution
(To air pollution)

[Bridge]
(Woah, oh, oh)
I need to breathe, please

[Chorus]
Heat and humidity
(Raise the difficulty)
With no solution
(To air pollution)

[Outro]
(Oh, you know)
We need to breathe before we seize
(Please.)

A SCIENCE NOTE
Climate change is accelerating the rise in both the heat and humidity in the air. Here are some ways to help slow climate change ans save money with cool, cool air:

  • Energy, Cooling, and Air Purification:
    • Use natural cooling and air purification strategies to reduce energy demand.
    • Insulate your home while ensuring proper ventilation to maintain air quality.
    • Practice zone cooling: keep main living areas at 80–85°F and cool only occupied rooms as needed.
    • Paint exterior walls and roofs white or light colors to reflect heat and lower indoor temperatures.
    • Plant shade trees around your home to block direct sunlight and reduce cooling needs.
    • Create a small “movable forest” of potted trees that can be repositioned around your foundation to maximize shade throughout the seasons.
    • Build Corsi-Rosenthal Boxes for each floor to filter and circulate air effectively without energy-intensive systems.
    • Improve indoor air quality while cooling naturally by using air-purifying indoor plants.

What you can do today. How to save the planet.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderCascading System Failures

Cascading-System-Failures-Best-Of.mp3
Cascading-System-Failures-Best-Of.mp4
Cascading-System-Failures.mp3
Cascading-System-Failures.mp4
Cascading-System-Failures-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
The foot bone’s connected to the mouth
The mouth… connected to the two faced
Watch as the humans race (to the bottom)
Here we come! (Dumb, dee, dumb)

[Bridge]
I don’t believe
(Because I can’t conceive)

[Chorus]
Cascading system failures
(Reigning down on me)
Crazy train disrailures
(The wheels of for real)
Have come off the track
(Fact: we’re legendary)

[Verse 2]
The A-mock’s connected to the jet stream
(Know what I mean?)
The jet stream’s connected to the ice melt
(Soon to be felt)

[Bridge]
I don’t believe
(Because I can’t conceive)

[Chorus]
Cascading system failures
(Reigning down on me)
Crazy train disrailures
(The wheels of for real)
Have come off the track
(Fact: we’re legendary)

[Verse 3]
The A-mock’s gone amuck caused an Fph up
(You know the tidal flow will go)
Connected to the Amazon Rain Forest
(Desertified land due to man’s damned demand)
U.S.A. “We’re the best”
Understand?

[Bridge]
(A strain to connect to the brain)
I don’t believe
(Because I can’t conceive)

[Chorus]
Cascading system failures
(Reigning down on me)
Crazy train disrailures
(The wheels of for real)
Have come off the track
(Fact: we’re legendary)

[Outro]
(A strain to connect to the brain)
Can’t conceive
(Won’t believe)
Can’t conceive
(Won’t believe)
Can’t conceive
(Won’t believe)

A SCIENCE NOTE
Research and development incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system is profoundly challenging. A small window into this complexity can be seen in the interactions among the Albedo Feedback Loop, Brown Carbon Feedback Loop, Freshwater-AMOC Disruption Loop, Permafrost-Methane Feedback Loop, Amazon Rainforest Dieback Feedback Loop, Sudden Sea Level Rise Pulses (“Cork Release” Events), Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Feedback. A microcosm of a much larger and more complex climate system.

Combined Consequences

These interlinked, reinforcing feedbacks can:

  • Drive non-linear, abrupt climate shifts.

  • Cause sudden sea level rise pulses (feet per year for consecutive years).

  • Collapse the AMOC, disrupting weather, food systems, and rainfall patterns.

  • Trigger Amazon dieback, increasing global CO2.

  • Result in mass displacement, famine, and water crises.

Tipping Points Igniting a Domino Effect

We knew tipping points would eventually trigger self-sustaining feedback loops in the climate system–and now, they have arrived. I was prepared for that part.

What I could not fully envision was how rapidly the interplay among these tipping points would ignite a domino effect–so, so fast.

Now, I see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems unfolding in real time. Abstract models are transforming into undeniable, measurable reality before our eyes.

Cascading System Failures

The breakdown of climate subsystems will not follow a smooth, linear decline. Instead, as one subsystem fails, it accelerates the failure of others, creating cascading, compounding effects across the entire climate system.

* Our climate model — incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates, which predicted a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, and signals a dramatic acceleration of warming.

What you can do today. How to save the planet.

Recent Articles

The Optimism Paradox: Climate Collapse and Capitalism Collapse Brouse (2025)

The Great Race Against Time: Trump vs. Mother Nature Brouse (2025)

The Sustainability Challenge: Walk the Poop Before You Talk the Transition Brouse (2025)

Climate Change and the Surging Threat of Pathogen Vectors Brouse (2025)

Ignite a Domino Effect: Albedo, Brown Carbon, AMOC, Permafrost, Amazon Rainforest Dieback, Sea Level Rise Pulses, Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

Tipping Cascades: The Nonlinear Dominoes of Climate Collapse Brouse and Mukherjee (2025)

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderKing of the Universe

King-of-the-Universe-Best-Of.mp3
King-of-the-Universe-Best-Of.mp4
King-of-the-Universe-intro.mp3
King-of-the-Universe.mp3
King-of-the-Universe.mp4

[Intro]
Albedo… (so….) here we go

[Verse 1]
Warmly, we’ve come to no
(Albedo)
Cautiously, I’ve come to be
(Obviously)

[Bridge]
Albedo… (so….) here we go

[Chorus]
Sudden sea level pulses
(The pulse of the universe)
What’s it going to take
(To break the climate)

[Bridge]
An exceptional primate
(King of the Universe is us?)
Pop my cork
(Stick it with a fork]

[Verse 2]
Back for seconds
(At the feedback loop)
The me in me I reckon
(Will take a second scoop)

[Bridge]
Albedo… (so….) here we go

[Chorus]
Sudden sea level pulses
(The pulse of the universe)
What’s it going to take
(To break the climate)

[Bridge]
An exceptional primate
(King of the Universe is us?)
Pop my cork
(Stick it with a fork]

[Chorus]
Sudden sea level pulses
(The pulse of the universe)
What’s it going to take
(To break the climate)

[Outro]
I ass-ume the prime primate
(Lives in all of us)
Popped your cork
(Stuck it with a fork]

A SCIENCE NOTE: Albedo Feedback and Ice Melt
As ice melts, darker surfaces are exposed, absorbing more heat and causing further melt. Sea ice melt increases ocean heat but does not directly raise sea levels, whereas land ice melt in Greenland and Antarctica not only raises sea levels but alters ocean salinity and temperature, destabilizing the AMOC.

Greenland and Antarctica contain “corks” holding vast meltwater reservoirs. Once these corks break, sudden sea level pulses of 1-3 feet per year for multiple years could occur, with unpredictable impacts on the AMOC and global climate systems.

* Our climate model — incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates, which predicted a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, and signals a dramatic acceleration of warming.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderIgniting the Domino Effect

Igniting-the-Domino-Effect.mp3
Igniting-the-Domino-Effect.mp4
Igniting-the-Domino-Effect-Unplugged-Underground-XXIII.mp3
Igniting-the-Domino-Effect-Unplugged-Underground-XXIII.mp4
Igniting-the-Domino-Effect-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
The tip of the iceberg
(Of what’s to come)
Or haven’t you heard
(It’s coming undone)

[Chorus]
Lit the match
(Light the fuse)
We’ll dispatch
(How to lose)

[Bridge]
Igniting the domino effect
(What the heck?!?!)

[Verse 2]
Just look outside
(It’s plain as day)
No longer can hide
(And it’s coming this way)

[Chorus]
Lit the match
(Light the fuse)
We’ll dispatch
(How to lose)

[Bridge]
Igniting the domino effect
(What the heck?!?!)

[Chorus]
Lit the match
(Light the fuse)
We’ll dispatch
(How to lose)

[Outro]
Igniting the domino effect
(What the heck?!?!)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Research and development incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system is profoundly challenging. A small window into this complexity can be seen in the interactions among the Albedo Feedback Loop, Brown Carbon Feedback Loop, Freshwater-AMOC Disruption Loop, Permafrost-Methane Feedback Loop, Amazon Rainforest Dieback Feedback Loop, Sudden Sea Level Rise Pulses (“Cork Release” Events), Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Feedback.

Combined Consequences

These interlinked, reinforcing feedbacks can:

  • Drive non-linear, abrupt climate shifts.

  • Cause sudden sea level rise pulses (feet per year for consecutive years).

  • Collapse the AMOC, disrupting weather, food systems, and rainfall patterns.

  • Trigger Amazon dieback, increasing global CO2.

  • Result in mass displacement, famine, and water crises.

Tipping Points Igniting a Domino Effect

We knew tipping points would eventually trigger self-sustaining feedback loops in the climate system–and now, they have arrived. I was prepared for that part.

What I could not fully envision was how rapidly the interplay among these tipping points would ignite a domino effect–so, so fast.

Now, I see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems unfolding in real time. Abstract models are transforming into undeniable, measurable reality before our eyes.

Cascading System Failures

The breakdown of climate subsystems will not follow a smooth, linear decline. Instead, as one subsystem fails, it accelerates the failure of others, creating cascading, compounding effects across the entire climate system.

There are too many interconnected subsystems to list exhaustively, but consider one example:
The collapse of the AMOC slows ocean circulation, leading to hotter tropics and a warmer Arctic. This accelerates polar ice melt, causing sea levels to rise more rapidly while injecting large volumes of freshwater into the North Atlantic, further destabilizing the AMOC in a reinforcing loop.

At the same time, a disrupted climate system increases droughts in the Amazon, pushing the rainforest toward dieback and desertification. As the Amazon loses its ability to recycle rainfall and sequester carbon, it further amplifies global warming, which then accelerates ice melt, sea level rise, and AMOC collapse.

This example is just one piece of a much larger mosaic of cascading feedback loops already unfolding, shifting the climate system from a stable state to a chaotic, accelerating collapse.:

* Our climate model — incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates, which predicted a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, and signals a dramatic acceleration of warming.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderEdge of Chaos

Edge-of-Chaos-Best-Of.mp3
Edge-of-Chaos-Best-Of.mp4
Edge-of-Chaos.mp3
Edge-of-Chaos.mp4
Edge-of-Chaos-Pt-2.mp3
Edge-of-Chaos-Pt-2.mp4
Edge-of-Chaos-Prequel.mp3
Edge-of-Chaos-Prequel.mp4
Edge-of-Chaos-intro.mp3

[Intro]
There’s chaos amongst us
(On the edge of chaos)

[Verse 1]
Now, I can see it clearly
The nonlinear, dynamic dance
Physical (ecological)
Unfolding (transforming)

[Bridge]
There’s chaos amongst us
(On the edge of chaos)

[Chorus]
Jumping through hoops
(Feedback loops)
Dynamic (music)
Whiplash (think fast)

[Verse 2]
A nonlinear, dynamic dance
(Something more than a chance)
Oh, well (Oh, well)
Hot has hell (in a nutshell)

[Bridge]
There’s chaos amongst us
(On the edge of chaos)

[Chorus]
Jumping through hoops
(Feedback loops)
Dynamic (music)
Whiplash (think fast)

[Bridge]
There’s chaos amongst us
(On the edge of chaos)

[Chorus]
Jumping through hoops
(Feedback loops)
Dynamic (music)
Whiplash (think fast)

[Outro]
There’s chaos amongst us
(On the edge of chaos)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
Now, I can see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems in real time. This is pure math and science visibly unfolding, transforming abstract models into undeniable, measurable reality.

How can the climate breakdown and collapse of the climate system be explained through chaos theory?

Great question — this is one of those rare cases where chaos theory isn’t just useful — it’s necessary to understand what’s happening with the climate system.

In a nutshell:

The climate system is a non-linear, complex, feedback-driven system — exactly the kind of system chaos theory was developed to describe.

Chaos Theory Basics (quick refresher)

Chaos theory studies how small changes in initial conditions can lead to wildly different outcomes in complex systems. This is often called sensitive dependence on initial conditions — or famously, the butterfly effect.

In chaotic systems:

  • Behavior looks random, but is deterministic underneath.

  • Predictability breaks down over time.

  • Feedback loops accelerate instability.

  • Thresholds or tipping points matter more than averages.

Edge of Chaos: Chaos Theory Basics

Disease vectors, violent rain, and deadly humid heat are driving an exponential rise in climate-related deaths. This lethal triad–infectious disease, extreme heat, and intense rainfall–demonstrates that climate change is not a distant concern but a present, accelerating force behind rising mortality worldwide. Together, these threats magnify each other’s impacts, underscoring the urgent need to address climate change as a health crisis already unfolding.

* Our climate model — which incorporates complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, signaling a dramatic acceleration of warming.

We analyze how human activities (such as deforestation, fossil fuel use, and land development) interact with ecological processes (including carbon cycling, water availability, and biodiversity loss) in ways that amplify one another. These interactions do not follow simple cause-and-effect patterns; instead, they create cascading, interconnected impacts that can rapidly accelerate system-wide change, sometimes abruptly. Understanding these dynamics is essential for assessing risks and designing effective climate adaptation and mitigation strategies.

From the album “Edge of Chaos

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderCrystals

Crystals-Best-Of.mp3
Crystals-Best-Of.mp4
Crystals.mp3
Crystals.mp4
Crystals-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Reflection and cooling
(Cirrus clouds scream aloud)
We need more schooling
(Absorption and warming warning)

[Chorus]
Ice nucleating particles
(Crystals in the sky)
Endorsing radiative forcing
(Causing the sky to cry)

[Bridge]
Leading to uncertainty
(For humanity)

[Verse 2]
Influencing and influenced
(Looking to be balanced)
More heat in the atmosphere
(Not clear around here)

[Chorus]
Ice nucleating particles
(Crystals in the sky)
Endorsing radiative forcing
(Causing the sky to cry)

[Bridge]
Leading to uncertainty
(For humanity)

[Chorus]
Ice nucleating particles
(Crystals in the sky)
Endorsing radiative forcing
(Causing the sky to cry)

[Outro]
Leading to uncertainty
(For humanity)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
Ice crystals in the atmosphere play a complex and crucial role in Earth’s climate system, both influencing and being influenced by climate change. Their size, shape, and concentration affect how much solar radiation is reflected back into space and how much heat is trapped within the atmosphere. Changes in these ice crystal properties, driven by factors like pollution and temperature variations, can lead to feedback loops that either amplify or mitigate the effects of climate change.

1. Ice Crystals and Radiative Forcing
Reflection and Cooling:
Ice crystals, especially in cirrus clouds, can reflect incoming solar radiation back into space, contributing to a cooling effect on the planet.

Absorption and Warming:
These same ice crystals can also absorb and re-emit infrared radiation, trapping heat within the atmosphere and leading to warming.

Size Matters:
The size and concentration of ice crystals within a cloud determine whether the overall effect is cooling or warming.

Cloud Phase Feedback:
The balance between ice and liquid water within clouds, influenced by factors like temperature and ice nucleating particles, can significantly impact the Earth’s climate by affecting the amount of solar radiation reflected back into space.

2. Ice Nucleation and Climate Change
Ice Nucleation:
The process by which ice crystals form in clouds is called ice nucleation.

Ice Nucleating Particles (INPs):
Various particles in the atmosphere, both natural (like dust, sea spray, and biological particles) and human-caused (like pollution from burning fossil fuels), can act as INPs, influencing ice crystal formation.

Impact on Precipitation:
The number and type of INPs affect how much precipitation falls from clouds, which in turn impacts the overall water cycle and climate.

Climate Model Uncertainty:
Understanding ice nucleation is crucial for accurate climate modeling, as it directly affects the simulated amount of warming.

3. Human Influence
Pollution:
Human activities like deforestation and burning fossil fuels can release particles into the atmosphere that act as INPs, potentially altering cloud properties and affecting climate.

Contrails:
Airplane contrails, which are essentially artificial cirrus clouds, can also influence the radiative balance of the atmosphere, potentially leading to both cooling and warming effects.

Sea Ice:
Sea ice plays a role in climate, not only by reflecting sunlight but also by influencing heat transfer between the ocean and atmosphere.

The Climate Crisis

Disease vectors, violent rain, and deadly humid heat are driving an exponential rise in climate-related deaths. This lethal triad–infectious disease, extreme heat, and intense rainfall–demonstrates that climate change is not a distant concern but a present, accelerating force behind rising mortality worldwide. Together, these threats magnify each other’s impacts, underscoring the urgent need to address climate change as a health crisis already unfolding.

* Our climate model — which incorporates complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, signaling a dramatic acceleration of warming.

We analyze how human activities (such as deforestation, fossil fuel use, and land development) interact with ecological processes (including carbon cycling, water availability, and biodiversity loss) in ways that amplify one another. These interactions do not follow simple cause-and-effect patterns; instead, they create cascading, interconnected impacts that can rapidly accelerate system-wide change, sometimes abruptly. Understanding these dynamics is essential for assessing risks and designing effective climate adaptation and mitigation strategies.

Edge of Chaos: Chaos Theory Basics

From the album “Sunny Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThe Stars and Stripes Rag

The-Stars-and-Stripes-Rag.mp3
The-Stars-and-Stripes-Rag.mp4
The-Stars-and-Stripes-Rag-Unplugged-Underground-XXIII.mp3
The-Stars-and-Stripes-Rag-Unplugged-Underground-XXIII.mp4
The-Stars-and-Stripes-Rag-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Time for some ragtime!
The Stars and Stripes Rag
(Ain’t it a drag?)

[Verse 1]
Are you feeling ill
Did your guts spill
I guess it really matters
When your rags in tatters

[Chorus]
This rag is shot
(Can’t clean up the mess)
Just spreads the rot
(Helping less and less)

[Bridge]
The Stars and Stripes Rag
(Ain’t it a drag?)
Oh, woe, oh
(In a feedback loop)
Woe, I don’t know
(How to scoop this poop)

[Verse 2]
Are you feeling sick
Need help and quick
Your aid falling apart
Calls for a restart

[Chorus]
This rag is shot
(Can’t clean up the mess)
Just spreads the rot
(Helping less and less)

[Bridge]
The Stars and Stripes Rag
(Ain’t it a drag?)
Oh, no, no
(In a feedback cycle)
Whoa, I don’t know
(How to stop the tribal)

[Chorus]
This rag is shot
(Can’t clean up the mess)
Just spreads the rot
(Helping less and less)

[Outro]
Yes, that’s the scoop
(In a feedback loop)
The Stars and Stripes Rag
(Ain’t it a drag?)

A SCIENCE NOTE
My latest deep reflection has centered on how tipping points have triggered self-sustaining feedback loops in the climate system. We knew this was coming–and it is now here. Luckily, I was prepared for that part.

What I could not fully envision in my mind’s eye was how the interplay of different tipping points would ignite a domino effect so rapidly–so, so fast.

Now, I can see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological unordered systems in real time. This is pure math and science, visibly unfolding for all to see, transforming abstract models into undeniable, measurable reality.

To understand unordered systems, you must “zoom out.” Imagine standing in the eye of a hurricane, unable to grasp its structure from within, then pulling back to see the swirling system from a satellite view. Only then can you perceive its shape, patterns, and momentum. Climate science and economics share this paradox: from within, the chaos feels incomprehensible, but from a higher vantage, the pattern is clear.

I offer this perspective to help you grasp the critical reality of where we stand today:

We are witnessing at least nine major tipping points that are already in play, with dominoes falling and each accelerating the collapse of the next. Crossing these tipping points represents a threshold beyond which impacts on global ecosystems and human societies become irreversible within human timescales.

Tipping Cascades and The Domino Effect

These tipping points do not act in isolation. Each collapse amplifies stress on others, triggering tipping cascades:

  • Melting Greenland ice weakens the AMOC, which alters weather patterns, drying the Amazon, triggering dieback that releases COâ‚‚, further warming the Arctic, collapsing permafrost, and amplifying ocean heating.

  • Changes in Arctic sea ice affect jet stream patterns, causing persistent heat domes, droughts, and flooding cycles, which destabilize ecosystems and food systems.

  • The weakening of the AMOC is linked to increased East Coast flooding, European storm intensification, and droughts in the Sahel, while simultaneously accelerating Antarctic ice melt.

We are seeing chaotic systems align into self-perpetuating loops, moving climate change from linear, human-driven emissions to nonlinear, nature-driven escalation.

Why This Matters Now

It is now clear: climate change has entered a phase where natural systems themselves are the drivers. Even if humans ceased all emissions today, these processes will continue for centuries or millennia, while continuing emissions add fuel to the fire.

Understanding and communicating the urgency of these tipping cascades is essential not only for scientists but for policymakers, businesses, and every individual. We must accelerate adaptation strategies while urgently reducing emissions to slow additional triggers.

The sooner we act, the more we can reduce the damage of the tipping cascades that are now unstoppable but can still be limited in scope and speed.

* Our climate model — incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates, which predicted a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, and signals a dramatic acceleration of warming.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

From the album “Shot!

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderA Little Too Close

A-Little-Too-Close-Best-Of.mp3
A-Little-Too-Close-Best-Of.mp4
A-Little-Too-Close.mp3
A-Little-Too-Close.mp4
A-Little-Too-Close-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Horseshoes and hand grenades

[Verse 1]
How can I whisper
Within a whisker
My life…
And a knife

[Bridge]
What I’m talking about
Makes me want to (shout!)
Shout it out

[Chorus]
Close only counts
(In horseshoes and hand grenades)
We’re talkin’ exact amounts
(Solid lines… not shades)

[Verse 2]
Alright, to be upfront
That was too close for comfort
Do you understand
… the damned demand

[Bridge]
What I’m talking about
Makes me want to (shout!)
Shout it out

[Chorus]
Close only counts
(In horseshoes and hand grenades)
We’re talkin’ exact amounts
(Solid lines… not shades)

[Bridge]
As humanity fades
(Fade away, don’t fade away)
Day after day
(Fading away)
Day after day

[Outro]
Close only counts
(In horseshoes and hand grenades)
We’re talkin’ exact amounts
(Solid lines… know shades)

From the album “Clues

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderWhistling Past the Graveyard

Whistling-Past-the-Graveyard-UU-XXIII.mp3
Whistling-Past-the-Graveyard-UU-XXIII.mp4
Whistling-Past-the-Graveyard-intro.mp3
Whistling-Past-the-Graveyard.mp3
Whistling-Past-the-Graveyrd.mp4

[Intro]
Everything’s fine
(Ignore the sign)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Verse 1]
This can’t go on
It’s a red octagon
A command for demand
… to stop!

[Chorus]
Everything’s fine
(Ignore the sign)
The price you pay
(Comes due today)

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Synth Solo, Organ, Bass]
Ignore the alarm
(Bring on the harm)
[Instrumental, Whistle Solo]
Whistling past the graveyard
Going to get hit hard
(Caught off-guard)

[Verse 2]
The wrong way
On a one-way street
Comes the day
For self-defeat

[Chorus]
Everything’s fine
(Ignore the sign)
The price you pay
(Comes due today)

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Synth Solo, Organ, Bass]
Ignore the alarm
(Bring on the harm)
[Instrumental, Whistle Solo]
Whistling past the graveyard
Going to get hit hard
(Caught off-guard)

[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
Everything’s fine
(Ignore the sign)
The price you pay
(Comes due today)

[Outro]
[Instrumental, Sound Effects]
Ignore the alarm
(Bring on the harm)
[Instrumental, Whistle Solo]
Whistling past the graveyard
Going to get hit hard
(Caught off-guard)

From the album “Clues

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderHmmm

Hmm-Best-Of.mp3
Hmm-Best-Of.mp4
Hmm.mp3
Hmm.mp4
Hmm-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Hmmm… I dunno
(That doesn’t sound quite right)

[Verse 1]
The Earth is flat
The Earth is cooling
Both are not fact
You need schooling

[Bridge]
Hmmmm… I dunno
(That doesn’t sound quite right)

[Chorus]
Here we go
(Step into the light)
Watch us grow
(Gaining “knew” insight)

[Verse 2]
Vaccines cause autism
We need more CO2
Both show you have no clue
Abandon white nationalism

[Bridge]
Hmmmm… I dunno
(That doesn’t sound quite right)

[Chorus]
Here we go
(Step into the light)
Watch us grow
(Gaining “knew” insight)

[Bridge]
’cause… I do know
(That doesn’t sound quite right)

[Chorus]
Here we go
(Step into the light)
Watch us grow
(Gaining “knew” insight)

[Outro]
’cause… I do know
(That doesn’t sound quite right)

From the album “Clues

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment