Michael, I'm really tired of your childishness. You have an off-handed way of defining words for whatever suits your intention, with total disregard for accepted dictionary definitions. This only demonstrates that you are not well educated on the subject.
There is no definition of "regard" in my dictionary, which mentions "to think", or "consider" as you claim regard means. There are definitions which refer to "see", "give heed to", "look upon", "have relation to", etc., but why do you insist on "think"? — Metaphysician Undercover
There are definitions which refer to "see", "give heed to", "look upon", "have relation to", etc., but why do you insist on "think"?
I agree that foresight may be an indication of intention, in the sense that foresight might be an essential aspect of intention, as unenlightened implied.
They definitely have a relation to the future, but my favourite would be "let one's course be affected by" the future. That's exactly what I've been describing. From the day it starts growing, the plant intends to produce seed. It has as a purpose for growing, and that is to produce seed.So you're saying that plants see, give heed to, or look upon the future? — Michael
I think entropy is the tendency of things to go from higher to lower energy states. High energy states are sometimes pretty disorderly (like plasma). But when things cool down, all sorts of amazing things can start happening (like the earth's electromagnetic dynamo.)
And that just tapped out my physics knowledge. :) — Mongrel
As I said.. efficient and final causes are the answers to two different kinds of question. If you know what a sinus node is, you must have studied enough A&P to be impressed by exactly how dense the lines of final causation are with even relatively simple organisms. It's all about the questions we're asking.
They definitely have a relation to the future, but my favourite would be "let one's course be affected by" the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
From the day it starts growing, the plant intends to produce seed. It has as a purpose for growing, and that is to produce seed.
All apparent order is really the result of entropy... — John
Entropy alone doesn't drive this process: the specific material asymmetries of the beaker/heat/gravity set-up themselves 'force' entropy to expend itself in the particular self-organizing manner that it does. — StreetlightX
It seems to me that entropy just is symmetry-breaking, which just is energy flow, which just is efficient causation. — John
And in fact this last, that the regularities due to efficient causation we witness everywhere and interpret as 'order', is really just entropy at work is just what I had thought you and apo have been arguing. — John
So "entropy" is a macroscopic quality - a formal description of final goal - in this sense. — apokrisis
But wouldn't the energy that gets wasted in any specific causally efficient process we might be focused on, always be the efficient cause of other processes? — John
But isn't it the case that the material asymmetries of the set up, like all asymmetries, are the result of entropy, or even better, isn't it the case that they just are entropy? The more I think about it, it seems to me that asymmetry and entropy are the same. Also, as I said, if entropy is asymmetrical (and hence directional and temporal) energy flow, then all efficient causation (being directional energy flow) would seem to be simply entropy at work. — John
What I am trying to get at is that it seems to me that without asymmetry there is no entropy and without entropy there is no asymmetry. Asymmetry seems to be the frozen image of entropy and entropy the moving image of asymmetry. — John
What I am trying to get at is that it seems to me that without asymmetry there is no entropy and without entropy there is no asymmetry. — John
What I am trying to get at is that it seems to me that without asymmetry there is no entropy and without entropy there is no asymmetry. Asymmetry seems to be the frozen image of entropy and entropy the moving image of asymmetry. — John
The most basic answer is that asymmetry means that things will clump together in ways that will accelerate more clumping - hence the formation of local negentropic eddies. — StreetlightX
They are the exceptions that prove the rule? — John
Again, SX and I aren't just talking about entropy but the larger thermodynamical story of dissipative structure. — apokrisis
This seems intuitively right to me; earlier in a response to Mongrel I wrote this:When anything energetic happens, it must take the most direct route possible. — apokrisis
See, I would say that entropy is precisely "the line of least resistance". — John
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