Lets take alcohol as an example.
The same concentration we're talking about, 0,038% or 380 ppm of alcohol in your blood means you are on the verge of being too drunk to drive. The legal limit varies from country to country, but here in Finland it's 0,05% or 500 ppm.
Alcohol is a potent drug, you only need to have "traces" of it in your blood to be intoxicated. Some other drugs are even more potent - much smaller concentrations can intoxicate, or even kill you.
In other words, a seemingly minuscule concentration of a substance can have a profound influence.
This goes back to the thought experiment of putting heated BBs in an insulated tank of water. The profile of the response of an immersed thermometer will depend on the temperature of the water, the mass of water, the temperature of the BBs and the mass of BBs. Heating CO2 can only have so much effect without feedbacks. Pretty much.
Your thought experiment has no relation to the issue at hand.
We don't use "parameter" the same way. Solar flux and CO2 concentration are variables in models. But that's a small issue over terminology.
"Variable" is fine with me too. But i am NOT talking about
models, i am talking about the real world physics and chemistry behind those models.
In the light of these clarifications, i would appreciate it if you could first confirm that you accept the french-lined baby steps, then answer the next two questions?
- You agree that the atmosphere traps heat.
- You also agree that there is a greenhouse effect as described by mainstream science and that changes in the strength of the greenhouse effect can change the temperature on earth.
- You seem to agree that there's an energy balance that will always seek a new equilibrium, when parameters change (this follows from the other points).
- You agree that a change in the composition of gasses (like increasing CO2) in the atmosphere changes the strength of the greenhouse effect.
Here are the next baby steps: Do you, in the light of the above, agree that a rising concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere will cause global warming? Do you agree that human activity is the main cause for the increase in atmospheric CO2?