Exporter:
I am corious why an Engineering book treats Evolution…
Exporter,
No, my text doesn’t talk about evolution at all, but why should it? I’m not talking about evolution either – I’m talking about thermodynamics.
Dan-Man:
why are you trying to use the physical to prove the spiritual?..
Dan-Man,
I’m not, what I’m doing is demonstrating that thermodynamic laws do not disprove evolution. As I said at the end of post #19, it’s not a good tactic to use science to prove spiritual truths any more than it is to use spiritual truths to prove science. Ya gotta use the right tools.
FelixBlue:
- What does the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics/Entropy imply regarding the “closed” system of the universe?..
- I don’t understand how you can say, “The spacial arrangement of the objects in the system, in and of itself, has no bearing on entropy.” Isn’t entropy (and any other physical/energy property) fundamentally related to all other physical properties? And isn’t “order” or relative space merely
- … how does the second law/entropy change in light of the general (and perhaps specific) law of relativity…
FelixBlue,
I have little background in cosmology, but I don’t think that this is much of a problem. The universe started out with a certain amount of total entropy, and eventually will end up with some much larger amount of total entropy. In the meantime, here we are.
No, entropy is not fundamentally related to all other physical properties, at least not in the way you may be thinking. I expect that it’s related because of the way fundamental constants like Planck’s seem to underly everything, but things like density, electrical resistance, coefficient of friction, thermal conductivity, and even enthalpy are not dependent on entropy.
Note that you mention “order”. I understand why this is, you’ve always understood that “entropy is a measure of the disorder of a system”; the problem is, that definition is
only correct for a partcular
kind of disorder, that related to the heat content of the objects. It really and truly has absolutely nothing to do with the macroscopic spacial arrangements of the bodies in the system. When you lay down a pattern of tiles on the floor, energy is expended and total entropy is increased due to the inefficiencies of the chemical processes, the friction in your joints, etc., but there is no entropy change due to the fact that the tiles are laid out in a pattern rather than randomly.
There is
no entropy transfer associated with energy transfer as work. If you put a brick up on a shelf, there is no change in the entropy of the brick, nor of the system. I know it sounds like it makes no sense, but that’s because you’ve always thought that entropy is something that it’s not.
I’ll have to defer to others for a discussion of relativistic effects on the 2nd Law, but again I don’t see any reason to think that it would fundamentally change what I’m saying.