Or we live in a system so large that it only appears to be an open system, as far as we can understand based upon our cognitive limits.J T wrote:
Then maybe existence is an open system?
If I use Newtonian physics I can accurately predict what will happen when I kick a ball. I can know the trajectory, velocity, the landing point, when it will roll to a stop, etc. However, when I kick a human, things become much more unpredictable. Will they cry? Will they laugh? Will they turn around and kick my ass? It becomes much more probabilistic than deterministic. Maybe there is a degree of determinism, but its boundaries are more fuzzy.
If we lived in a closed system, then everything would dissolve into the entropy of the 2nd law of thermodynamics, but then why, as one professor used to ask me, are there no Toyota mines? These incredibly complex machines didn't exist in the past, and don't seem to be getting simpler, in fact increasing complexity seems to be readily observable in human society. How are we not just fading away in entropy? Maybe the entropy of closed systems doesn't apply to us because we actually live in an open system.
If you kick someone, he may laugh, cry, fight you, complain, etc. Yes, the results may seem almost random, but the truth is that the reaction you get will be based on several factors: upbringing, current events in the individual's life, physical stature and prior physical training, tolerance toward pain, current level of fatigue, emotional level, perhaps even factors such as weather, time of year, time of day, etc. While it may be more data points than you can potentially consider, it isn't necessarily an infinite number of data points.
Now is it possible that there are elements which break this? Yes. Random number generators could break such a chain, if they are truly random. Random behavior in quantum particles, if they are truly random as well. Anything that can randomize those data points and make even a single factor unpredictable will disrupt a closed system and potentially lead to radically different results.
