Order From Disorder
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Creationists have been claiming for decades that evolution must be impossible because it supposedly requires a decrease in entropy, in violation of the second law of thermodynamics. As with so many creationist arguments, this one depends upon misrepresenting the science, confusing several different meanings of “information” and “order”, and quietly omitting the conditions under which the law applies.
The second law does not say that entropy can never decrease anywhere. It says that the total entropy of an isolated system cannot decrease. Entropy may decrease in one part of a system provided that an equal or greater increase occurs elsewhere. A refrigerator, for example, reduces the entropy of its contents by transferring heat into the room, where its motor and cooling coils generate still more heat. The contents become colder and more ordered, but the total entropy of the refrigerator and its surroundings increases.
Strictly speaking, a “closed” system is one that can exchange energy, but not matter, with its surroundings. An “isolated” system exchanges neither. Earth is not isolated: it is continually receiving concentrated, high-temperature energy from the Sun and radiating more diffuse, low-temperature infrared energy into space. That energy flow powers weather systems, ocean currents, photosynthesis and almost every ecosystem on the planet. Organisms, meanwhile, are open systems that take in energy and matter and release heat and waste.
Consequently, the maintenance and growth of biological complexity do not require the entropy of the universe—or even that of Earth as a whole—to decrease. Organisms maintain their internal organisation by consuming free energy and exporting entropy into their surroundings. Every growing tree, developing embryo and reproducing bacterium does this without so much as inconveniencing the second law.
Nor is biological “information” simply the opposite of thermodynamic entropy. Genetic information refers to sequences and their biological effects, whereas thermodynamic entropy concerns the number and distribution of microscopic physical states available to a system. Treating the two as interchangeable because both employ the word “information” is not physics; it is wordplay.
Gravity makes the creationist caricature still less defensible. A diffuse cloud of gas can collapse under gravity to form a highly structured star and planetary system. To the unaided eye, this looks like disorder turning into order. Yet the collapse releases enormous quantities of heat and radiation, increasing the entropy of the wider system. Visible organisation and thermodynamic entropy are not simple opposites, especially when gravity is involved.
Now, a paper published in Physical Review D by Professor Ginestra Bianconi of Queen Mary University of London takes this relationship between gravity, information and thermodynamics much further. As Queen Mary University explains in its accompanying news release, Bianconi’s proposed “Gravity from Entropy” theory treats gravity as arising from information encoded in the interaction between matter and the geometry of spacetime.








































