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I will take seriously any argument that debunks evolution, if and only if it is proposed by someone who looks exactly like both of his/her parents. Anyone else is an embodiment of evolution.
The random assumption of changes on the DNA; mutations, violates the second law.
That many random events would never maintain a constant.
, it only disproves the random assumptions of biology,
It would being like saying we have 6.022 X1023 dice and will throw all these dice at the same time, a thousand cycle. What we finds is each time we do this, they will add to the same total amount of constant entropy. This defies all known properties of statistics, but this is observed. The deniers need to wake up.
Why do you keep posting your ignorance of entropy?
Quote from: puppypower on 21/02/2022 12:14:16It would being like saying we have 6.022 X1023 dice and will throw all these dice at the same time, a thousand cycle. What we finds is each time we do this, they will add to the same total amount of constant entropy. This defies all known properties of statistics, but this is observed. The deniers need to wake up.If I throw a mole of dice the total score is going to be very close to NA times the average score for a single die which, I think, is 21/6 or 3.5.How far from that value would you expect the score to be?The property of stats that answers that is thishttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_large_numbersand the answer is that it's so nearly a constant that we can't hope to measure the difference.When someone says Quote from: Bored chemist on 20/02/2022 19:56:23Why do you keep posting your ignorance of entropy?it isn't a rhetorical question.Why do you keep posting stuff that shows that you do not know what you are talking about?
The problem with your analysis of dice, is you are assuming an average over time but not the observed constant value of entropy over any smaller interval of time.
As far as my understanding of entropy, I hear some members say I do not understand entropy,
If one did an energy balance, the energy did not add up properly.
If we could extract the entropic energy within a mole of water molecules, the order would break down and it would look more random to the naked eye.
Entropy still exists at absolute zero
Quote from: puppypower on 23/02/2022 16:03:41Entropy still exists at absolute zeroHow then to define the entropy when it is at zero? The entropy of a system at absolute zero is typically zero.
The entropy of a pure crystalline substance at absolute zero temperature is zero and there is no disorder at all. But it is true that there is the ground state of the atom: At absolute zero the system must be in a state with the minimum possible energy. Entropy is related to the number of accessible microstates, and there is typically one unique state (called the ground state) with minimum energy.But we can learn that: The third law of thermodynamics states that the entropy of a system approaches a constant value as the temperature approaches zero. The entropy of a system at absolute zero is typically zero, and in all cases is determined only by the number of different ground states it has. Specifically, the entropy of a pure crystalline substance at absolute zero temperature is zero. https://courses.lumenlearning.com/introchem/chapter/the-third-law-of-thermodynamics-and-absolute-energy/