ChatterBank6 mins ago
guys thanx for ur replies.. anyway i ill drop the question for a while..
recently i read in a book that life forms couldnot have got more and more complex(order) with time because of entropic reasons .. ur thoughts??
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No best answer has yet been selected by dudenexdoor1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The solar system is one example of increased order and complexity in the universe. Star formation is another. The universe existed millions of years without the elements necessary for life. These were cooked up in stars and from these, more complex elements, life forms such as us became possible. We are all children of the stars.
If you require more recent evidence of increased complexity and order, tear open your computer and take a look!
Seems I referenced a raging disagreement focusing on a 'closed system' and the Entropic Principal...
well dudenextdoor1 the book where you gleaned that piece of work from was a book on "creation science". Creationists, IDer's or whatever are fond of misrepresenting science to discredit other science that makes them uncomfortable. A quick glance at the entropy law will show it refers to closed systems and the earth - which relies on energy from the sun to support and devlep life - is certainly not a closed system. Think about how you grew from a single micrscopic cell into the billions of cells you are today and think about how that happened. You are also an open system in that you need to take on energy to enable your development.
It is certain that, eventually, the sun will run out of fuel and evolution will fail but not for another 15 billion years. Until then it can carry on regardless.
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sorry Mibn far too philosophical for my tastes. not sure what your point is in relation to my comments. In most species death is a far more likely outcome than maturity, occuring as a result of predation and resource competion. But as long as sufficient numbers of a population survive long enough to breed then adaptations through random mutations will occur. It is inacurate to say life gets more and more complex. rather, it adapts through random mutations as a result of selection.
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Sorry Clanad. I didn't explain my point very well.
It is common to assume that evolution is a process by which living things get more and more complex. i.e. that man is somehow the pinacle of an evolutionary process and is the most complex of all organisms, or collection of organisms, which ever you prefer. However, we all know that to assume makes an ass out of you and me. Evolution is, put simply, change over time and this change actually takes place at the genetic level through the frequency of particular alleles within the gene pool. Evolution is not the search for complexity as this would suggest some purpose to evolution which simply doesn't exist. Instead, evolution is an accumulation of random mutations that by chance provide enough benefit to the host to become typical in the genetic traits of that population. Since populations - or, indeed, individuals within populations are not closed systems and since increased complexity is an inaccurate way of describing evolution then the 2nd law does not apply.
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