Episode #407 from 12:21

Thermodynamics

So the second law of thermodynamics says that the entropy is always increasing in the universe that's tending towards an equilibrium. And you're saying there's these pockets that have complexity and are out of equilibrium. You said that thermodynamics favors the creation of complex life that increases its capability to use energy to offload entropy. To offload entropy. So you have pockets of non-entropy that tend the opposite direction. Why is that intuitive to you that it's natural for such pockets to emerge? Well, we're far more efficient at producing heat than let's say just a rock with a similar mass as ourselves. We acquire free energy, we acquire food, and we're using all this electricity for our operation. And so the universe wants to produce more entropy and by having life go on and grow, it's actually more optimal at producing entropy because it will seek out pockets of free energy and burn it for its sustenance and further growth. And that's sort of the basis of life. And I mean, there's Jeremy England at MIT who has this theory that I'm a proponent of, that life emerged because of this sort of property. And to me, this physics is what governs the meso scales. And so it's the missing piece between the quantum and the cosmos. It's the middle part. Thermodynamics rules the meso scales.

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So the second law of thermodynamics says that the entropy is always increasing in the universe that's tending towards an equilibrium. And you're saying there's these pockets that have complexity and are out of equilibrium. You said that thermodynamics favors the creation of complex life that increases its capability to use energy to offload entropy. To offload entropy. So you have pockets of non-entropy that tend the opposite direction. Why is that intuitive to you that it's natural for such pockets to emerge? Well, we're far more efficient at producing heat than let's say just a rock with a similar mass as ourselves. We acquire free energy, we acquire food, and we're using all this electricity for our operation. And so the universe wants to produce more entropy and by having life go on and grow, it's actually more optimal at producing entropy because it will seek out pockets of free energy and burn it for its sustenance and further growth. And that's sort of the basis of life. And I mean, there's Jeremy England at MIT who has this theory that I'm a proponent of, that life emerged because of this sort of property. And to me, this physics is what governs the meso scales. And so it's the missing piece between the quantum and the cosmos. It's the middle part. Thermodynamics rules the meso scales.

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Thermodynamics chapter timestamp | Guillaume Verdon: Beff Jezos, E/acc Movement, Physics, Computation & AGI | EpisodeIndex