Developmental Ideology

raw data sequestered from the Cloud by a biological-mind/electromagnetic-portal symbiot. Representing the developing stages of a belief system. An ideology based upon information, found online.

It’s the Law!

Among the important laws of nature are Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation (gravity), Conservation of Momentum, Conservation of Energy (1st Law of Thermodynamics), Bernoulli’s Principle, the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics, the 3rd Law of Thermodynamics, and the Uncertainty Principle.

Mechanism plays an important role in operation of most of these laws, in effect establishing a timescale over which the laws apply in different situations. This sometimes clouds human understanding and interpretation of these laws. Years ago when I taught thermodynamics, I used something called the Nuclear Bomb in the Room Example to drive this point home. Imagine a room with a table, chairs, and a nuclear bomb. As long as the bomb isn’t detonated, the chairs, table, and other room contents are basically stable. However, if the bomb is detonated, the most stable state of the room is vapor and maybe a small amount of debris. We might say that the room is in a metastable state when the bomb is undetonated, and it is in a stable state after the bomb is detonated. But a better way to look at the situation is to recognize that stability depends on mechanism. As long as there is no mechanism by which the bomb can be detonated, it is perfectly reasonable to regard the room with chairs, table, etc. as a stable state. Only if we believe there is some likelihood the bomb will detonate should we consider the atomized room as the stable state.

So it goes with most of human endeavor. We can build all kinds of complex structures, systems, and devices as long as we ensure that mechanisms don’t exist to allow those structures, systems, and devices to devolve to some more stable (and usually much more disordered) state.

When things DO go wrong in our society, it usually occurs because we have either failed to know/acknowledge the applicable laws of nature or we have failed to consider all mechanisms by which the laws may manifest themselves. That house sitting on the edge of a bluff may be engineered to be stable under ordinary conditions. Let us never forget, however, that mechanisms DO exist (earthquakes, storms, structural deterioration, etc.) which may destabilize that house. And we don’t ever want to lose sight of the fact that Gravity is still The Law!

(Source: blogs.cybersym.com)

That would be about 20-25 minutes in a freezer. If you put it in a bucket of ice, that would halve that time. If you put water in that ice, it’d be cold (+- 5c) enough to drink in about 4-6 minutes, if you put salt in that water, you’d reduce the chill time to just over 2 minutes. Agitating the can in the water, rolling it around, reduces the chill time even more.
The fastest possible way is to grab a CO2 fire extinguisher and unload that sucker on the can.
Whatever you do, do NOT bury the can in sand, pour gasoline on the sand and set the sand on fire. That won’t do anything.
This is all empirically gained evidence, not third party.

Teaching the Second Law

Moderator: Robert J. SilbeyJoseph Smith Jr. ScD ‘59
Howard Butler
Andrew Foley
Kim Hamad-Schifferli
Bernhardt Trout ‘90, SM ‘90
Jeffrey Lewins SM ‘57, PhD ‘59
Enzo Zanchini
Michael von Spakovsky

Milton Friedman, the Nobel economic laureate, is famous for his expression: “There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch” (TANSTAAFL). Many of you will immediately recognize this as a typical conservation law. It is in fact substantially equivalent to the 1st Law of Thermodynamics (although money is not perfectly equivalent to total energy). What may be less obvious is that the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics also has important applications to economics, and it involves the concept of financial risk. In essence, risk is something akin to the opposite of efficiency.

(TANSTAAFL)

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You and Yours - BBC Radio 4 - 10/11/11

  • The man who launched Lara Croft tells us what needs to happen to help the British gaming industry boost creativity and sales.
  • The Trussell Trust is launching new foodbanks at a rate of one a week to meet growing need for free food, and say delays to benefits is growing as a reason for people seeking their food banks.
  • What we can learn from the Germans about reducing our domestic carbon emissions.
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]