M
Monte_RCMS
Guest
One of my friends said that “theoretically” it is possible [the monkey thing] … and I said no, it’s not.Of course, but all the monkey scenario does is explain how extraordinarily unlikely this sort of spontaneous ordering is. In the observable universe the probability is effectively zero, I said as much in my post. This is why the second law is so well regarded and presented without qualifications. However, we are not talking about the observable universe. For example, if the monkeys in your example type for 10^183,800 times longer than they already have (i.e. after the heat death), their odds look a lot better. The timescale does not have to be infinite, just long enough.
In our universe there is a non-zero probability that entropy will spontaneously decrease; it has been experimentally observed in microscopic scales.
adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2002PhRvL…89e0601W
For anything other than micro-states, the probability of a violation is similar to the monkeys typing. Certainly people have a hard time imagining probabilities so tremendously small, but they have an equally hard time conceiving of time scales long enough to realize those small probabilities; this is understandable, because both are completely foreign to our daily experiences.
The problem is that once you admit that some “farfetched” thing is theoretically possible, then you open the doors to all kinds of logical abuses.
And, believe it or not, these “beliefs” carry over and pretty soon folks are trying to legislate all kinds of ridiculous things. Like declaring that carbon dioxide is a pollutant. And we have zero tolerance for pollutants. So, we end up killing all the plants, which as you all know won’t grow without carbon dioxide and which thrive at ten times or more of our present levels of CO2.
OR, we ourselves die trying to abolish carbon dioxide.
What you end up with is “mutant logic”. Some genetic logical mutation. Neither fact nor fiction.