by MonteQuest » Sat 15 Jan 2005, 00:36:56
I have received hundreds of private messages from members praising me for my insightful and reasoned posts, so I shall not detour from that proclivity here. There are some things that cannot be taught; they must be lived to understand. 2nd Law may just be one of them.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seb', 'F')ew months ago, I tried to explain why the impact of human activities is neglectible(sic) in term of the 2nd law on Earth.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Xelat', 'T')he Sun has been keeping entropy stable on earth by doing (electromagnetic) work on it as a system since, well, far outside the scope of our argument.
What both Seb and Xelat fail to grasp is, I am
not, and have
not been, talking about the thermodynamic equilibrium of the earth and man's effect on it, although I am working on a post right now that will address global warming and it's affect
on that equilibrium. That's another thread entirely. And neglectible? I think Seb meant negligible, but I always wonder about a "professional scientist" credibility who can't even spell, and who reverts to ad hominem attacks saying I am naive, rather than debating the issue on logical grounds. I am
anything but naive.
I have been talking about the systems on the earth that involve the use of energy, not earth's thermodynamic equilibrium with the universe. That entropy is what gives us our ability to live on this planet in a temperate climate suitable for plants and animals to exist! But does anyone think that the energy transfers that occur everyday
on earth in automoblies, power plants, and the human body are not subject to the laws of thermodynamics? Every
single physical activity that humankind engages in is subject to the iron clad imperative expressed in the first and second laws of thermodynamics. Few understand this.
Jeremy Rifkin, in his book, Entropy: Into the Greenhouse World, wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')There will be those who will stubbornly refuse to accept the fact that the Entropy Law reigns supreme over all physical reality in the world. They will insist that the entropy process only applies in selective instances and that any attempts to apply it more broadly to society is to engage in the use of metaphor. Quite simply, they are wrong. The laws of thermodynamics provide the overreaching scientific frame for the unfolding or all physical activity in this world."
In the words of Nobel prize-winning chemist Frederick Soddy, the laws of thermodynamics, "control, in the last resort, the rise and fall of political systems, the freedom of bondage of nations, the movements of commerce and industry, the origins of wealth and poverty, and the general physical welfare of the race."
Seb and Xelat seem to be trying to say that the laws of thermodynamics only apply in isolated systems like the universe and a gas beaker in a physics lab--someplace free of external influences. They imply that since the earth is a closed system, and is not free of external influences, then the 2nd Law does not apply here, and I am using it wrongly. Am I?
Let's look at the law as they use it:
Any system which is free of external influences becomes more disordered with time. This disorder can be expressed in terms of the quantity called entropy.
What does this mean? It means that when energy is transferred form one form to another within an isolated system (free from external influences), there is always a loss of energy in the form of heat. Entropy is a measure of this loss. But does it say that entropy only occurs in isolated systems? No, it merely states that without external influences, it will
always become more disordered with time. Entropy occurs with every single physical activity on earth. In closed and open systems, entropy still occurs, but it
can be reduced or reversed by external influences. But here is the catch:
The application of external influences to reduce or reverse entropy in a closed or open system requires that an even greater amount of entropy is created somewhere else as a result. In other words, you cannot reduce or reverse entropy without a loss of energy. The hard rule of 2nd Law. You cannot break even, no matter how hard you try.
And forget 2nd law for a moment, look around you. Do you see the pollution, environmental degradation, overpopulation, loss of species and habitat, world indebtedness, poverty, inequity, and ever growing consumption as something you wish to continue, or that
can continue, for that matter? How are we going to maintain this complex web of society without the energy to sustain it or the environment to support it?
Eating your food faster does not avoid starvation, and that is what our technological world tries to do. In the end, there is a watershed, and the piper must be paid.
In our post-peak world, we will not have the "external influences" required to reduce or reverse entropy and maintain our standard of living, much less our current population. Entropy Law tells us that a society's energy flow must be reduced to as low a point as possible in order to sustain the unfolding of all life as far into the future as possible. The entropy economy we are headed for is one of necessities, not luxuries.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."