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Evolution and
Thermodynamics
The Second Law of
Thermodynamics, which is accepted as one of the
basic laws of physics, holds that under normal
conditions all systems left on their own tend to
become disordered, dispersed, and corrupted in
direct relation to the amount of time that
passes. Everything, whether living or not, wears
out, deteriorates, decays, disintegrates, and is
destroyed. This is the absolute end that all
beings will face one way or another, and
according to the law, the process cannot be
avoided.
This is something that
all of us have observed. For example if you take
a car to a desert and leave it there, you would
hardly expect to find it in a better condition
when you came back years later. On the contrary,
you would see that its tires had gone flat, its
windows had been broken, its chassis had rusted,
and its engine had stopped working. The same
inevitable process holds true for living things.
The second law of
thermodynamics is the means by which this
natural process is defined, with physical
equations and calculations.
This famous law of
physics is also known as the "law of entropy."
In physics, entropy is the measure of the
disorder of a system. A system's entropy
increases as it moves from an ordered,
organized, and planned state towards a more
disordered, dispersed, and unplanned one. The
more disorder there is in a system, the higher
its entropy is. The law of entropy holds that
the entire universe is unavoidably proceeding
towards a more disordered, unplanned, and
disorganized state.
The truth of the second
law of thermodynamics, or the law of entropy,
has been experimentally and theoretically
established. All foremost scientists agree that
the law of entropy will remain the principle
paradigm for the foreseeable future. Albert
Einstein, the greatest scientist of our age,
described it as the "premier law of all of
science." Sir Arthur Eddington also referred to
it as the "supreme metaphysical law of the
entire universe."364
If you leave a car
out in natural conditions, it will rust
and decay. In the same way, without an
intelligent organization all the systems
in the universe would decay. This is an
incontrovertible law.
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Evolutionary theory
ignores this fundamental law of physics. The
mechanism offered by evolution totally
contradicts the second law. The theory of
evolution says that disordered, dispersed, and
lifeless atoms and molecules spontaneously came
together over time, in a particular order, to
form extremely complex molecules such as
proteins, DNA, and RNA, whereupon millions of
different living species with even more complex
structures gradually emerged. According to the
theory of evolution, this supposed process-which
yields a more planned, more ordered, more
complex and more organized structure at each
stage-was formed all by itself under natural
conditions. The law of entropy makes it clear
that this so-called natural process utterly
contradicts the laws of physics.
Evolutionist scientists
are also aware of this fact. J. H. Rush states:
In the complex course of
its evolution, life exhibits a remarkable
contrast to the tendency expressed in the Second
Law of Thermodynamics. Where the Second Law
expresses an irreversible progression toward
increased entropy and disorder, life evolves
continually higher levels of order.365
The evolutionist author
Roger Lewin expresses the thermodynamic impasse
of evolution in an article in Science:
One problem biologists
have faced is the apparent contradiction by
evolution of the second law of thermodynamics.
Systems should decay through time, giving less,
not more, order.366
Another defender of the
theory of evolution, George Stravropoulos,
states the thermodynamic impossibility of the
spontaneous formation of life and the
impossibility of explaining the existence of
complex living mechanisms by natural laws in the
well-known evolutionist journal American
Scientist:
Yet, under ordinary
conditions, no complex organic molecule can ever
form spontaneously, but will rather
disintegrate, in agreement with the second law.
Indeed, the more complex it is, the more
unstable it will be, and the more assured,
sooner or later, its disintegration.
Photosynthesis and all life processes, and even
life itself, cannot yet be understood in terms
of thermodynamics or any other exact science,
despite the use of confused or deliberately
confusing language.367
As we have seen, the
evolution claim is completely at odds with the
laws of physics. The second law of
thermodynamics constitutes an insurmountable
obstacle for the scenario of evolution, in terms
of both science and logic. Unable to offer any
scientific and consistent explanation to
overcome this obstacle, evolutionists can only
do so in their imagination. For instance, the
well-known evolutionist Jeremy Rifkin notes his
belief that evolution overwhelms this law of
physics with a "magical power":
The Entropy Law says
that evolution dissipates the overall available
energy for life on this planet. Our concept of
evolution is the exact opposite. We believe that
evolution somehow magically creates greater
overall value and order on earth.368
These words well
indicate that evolution is a dogmatic belief
rather than a scientific thesis.
The Misconception
About Open Systems
Some proponents of
evolution have recourse to an argument that the
second law of thermodynamics holds true only for
"closed systems," and that "open systems" are
beyond the scope of this law. This claim goes no
further than being an attempt by some
evolutionists to distort scientific facts that
invalidate their theory. In fact, a large number
of scientists openly state that this claim is
invalid, and violates thermodynamics. One of
these is the Harvard scientist John Ross, who
also holds evolutionist views. He explains that
these unrealistic claims contain an important
scientific error in the following remarks in
Chemical and Engineering News:
...there are no known
violations of the second law of thermodynamics.
Ordinarily the second law is stated for isolated
systems, but the second law applies equally well
to open systems. ...there is somehow associated
with the field of far-from-equilibrium phenomena
the notion that the second law of thermodynamics
fails for such systems. It is important to make
sure that this error does not perpetuate itself.369
An "open system" is a
thermodynamic system in which energy and matter
flow in and out. Evolutionists hold that the
world is an open system: that it is constantly
exposed to an energy flow from the sun, that the
law of entropy does not apply to the world as a
whole, and that ordered, complex living beings
can be generated from disordered, simple, and
inanimate structures.
However, there is an
obvious distortion here. The fact that a system
has an energy inflow is not enough to make that
system ordered. Specific mechanisms are needed
to make the energy functional. For instance, a
car needs an engine, a transmission system, and
related control mechanisms to convert the energy
in petrol to work. Without such an energy
conversion system, the car will not be able to
use the energy stored in petrol.
The same thing applies
in the case of life as well. It is true that
life derives its energy from the sun. However,
solar energy can only be converted into chemical
energy by the incredibly complex energy
conversion systems in living things (such as
photosynthesis in plants and the digestive
systems of humans and animals). No living thing
can live without such energy conversion systems.
Without an energy conversion system, the sun is
nothing but a source of destructive energy that
burns, parches, or melts.
As can be seen, a
thermodynamic system without an energy
conversion mechanism of some sort is not
advantageous for evolution, be it open or
closed. No one asserts that such complex and
conscious mechanisms could have existed in
nature under the conditions of the primeval
earth. Indeed, the real problem confronting
evolutionists is the question of how complex
energy-converting mechanisms such as
photosynthesis in plants, which cannot be
duplicated even with modern technology, could
have come into being on their own.
The influx of solar
energy into the world would be unable to bring
about order on its own. Moreover, no matter how
high the temperature may become, amino acids
resist forming bonds in ordered sequences.
Energy by itself is incapable of making amino
acids form the much more complex molecules of
proteins, or of making proteins form the much
more complex and organized structures of cell
organelles.
Ilya Prigogine and
the Myth of the "Self-Organization of Matter"
Quite aware that the
second law of thermodynamics renders evolution
impossible, some evolutionist scientists have
made speculative attempts to square the circle
between the two, in order to be able to claim
that evolution is possible.

Ilya Prigogine
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One person distinguished
by his efforts to marry thermodynamics and
evolution is the Belgian scientist Ilya
Prigogine.
Starting out from chaos
theory, Prigogine proposed a number of
hypotheses in which order develops from chaos
(disorder). However, despite all his best
efforts, he was unable to reconcile
thermodynamics and evolution.
In his studies, he tried
to link irreversible physical processes to the
evolutionist scenario on the origin of life, but
he was unsuccessful. His books, which are
completely theoretical and include a large
number of mathematical propositions which cannot
be implemented in real life and which there is
no possibility of observing, have been
criticized by scientists, recognized as experts
in the fields of physics, chemistry and
thermodynamics, as having no practical and
concrete value.
For instance, P.
Hohenberg, a physicist regarded as an expert in
the fields of statistical mechanics and pattern
formation, and one of the authors of the book
Review of Modern Physics, sets out his comments
on Prigogine's studies in the May 1995 edition
of Scientific American:
I don't know of a single
phenomenon his theory has explained.370
And Cosma Shalizi, a
theoretical physicist from Wisconsin University,
has this to say about the fact that Prigogine's
studies have reached no firm conclusion or
explanation:
…in the just under five
hundred pages of his Self-Organization in
Nonequilibrium Systems, there are just four
graphs of real-world data, and no comparison of
any of his models with experimental results. Nor
are his ideas about irreversibility at all
connected to self-organization, except for their
both being topics in statistical physics.371
The studies in the
physical field by the determinedly materialist
Prigogine also had the intention of providing
support for the theory of evolution, because, as
we have seen in the preceding pages, the theory
of evolution is in clear conflict with the
entropy principle, i.e., the second law of
thermodynamics. The law of entropy, as we know,
definitively states that when any organized, and
complex structure is left to natural conditions,
then loss of organization, complexity and
information will result. In opposition to this,
the theory of evolution claims that unordered,
scattered, and unconscious atoms and molecules
came together and gave rise to living things
with their organized systems.
Prigogine determined to
try to invent formulae that would make processes
of this kind feasible.
However, all these
efforts resulted in nothing but a series of
theoretical experiments.
The two most important
theories that emerged as a result of that aim
were the theory of "self-organization" and the
theory of "dissipative structures." The first of
these maintains that simple molecules can
organize together to form complex living
systems; the second claims that ordered, complex
systems can emerge in unordered, high-entropy
systems. But these have no other practical and
scientific value than creating new, imaginary
worlds for evolutionists.
The fact that these
theories explain nothing, and have produced no
results, is admitted by many scientists. The
well-known physicist Joel Keizer writes: "His
supposed criteria for predicting the stability
of far-from-equilibrium dissipative structures
fails-except for states very near equilibrium."372
The theoretical
physicist Cosma Shalizi has this to say on the
subject: "Second, he tried to push forward a
rigorous and well-grounded study of pattern
formation and self-organization almost before
anyone else. He failed, but the attempt was
inspiring."373
F. Eugene Yates, editor
of Self-Organizing Systems: The Emergence of
Order, sums up the criticisms directed at
Prigogine by Daniel L. Stein and the Nobel
Prize-winning scientist Phillip W. Anderson, in
an essay in that same journal:
The authors [Anderson
and Stein] compare symmetry-breaking in
thermodynamic equilibrium systems (leading to
phase change) and in systems far from
equilibrium (leading to dissipative structures).
Thus, the authors do not believe that
speculation about dissipative structures and
their broken symmetries can, at present, be
relevant to questions of the origin and
persistence of life.374
In short, Prigogine's
theoretical studies are of no value in
explaining the origin of life. The same authors
make this comment about his theories:
Contrary to statements
in a number of books and articles in this field,
we believe that there is no such theory, and it
even may be that there are no such structures as
they are implied to exist by Prigogine, Haken,
and their collaborators.375
In essence, experts in
the subject state that none of the theses
Prigogine put forward possess any truth or
validity, and that structures of the kind he
discusses (dissipative structures) may not even
really exist.
Prigogine's claims are
considered in great detail in Jean Bricmont's
article "Science of Chaos or Chaos in Science?"
which makes their invalidity clear.
Despite the fact that
Prigogine did not manage to find a way to
support evolution, the mere fact that he took
initiatives of this sort was enough for the
evolutionists to accord him the very greatest
respect. A large number of evolutionists have
welcomed Prigogine's concept of
"self-organization" with great hope and a
superficial bias. Prigogine's imaginary theories
and concepts have nevertheless convinced many
people who do not know much about the subject
that evolution has resolved the dilemma of
thermodynamics, whereas even Prigogine himself
has accepted that the theories he has produced
for the molecular level do not apply to living
systems-for instance, a living cell:
The problem of
biological order involves the transition from
the molecular activity to the supermolecular
order of the cell. This problem is far from
being solved.376
These are the
speculations that evolutionists have indulged
in, encouraged by Prigogine's theories, which
were meant to resolve the conflict between
evolution and other physical laws.
The Difference
Between Organized and Ordered Systems
If we look carefully at
Prigogine and other evolutionists' claims, we
can see that they have fallen into a very
important trap. In order to make evolution fit
in with thermodynamics, evolutionists are
constantly trying to prove that a given order
can emerge from open systems.
And here it is important
to bring out two key concepts to reveal the
deceptive methods the evolutionists use. The
deception lies in the deliberate confusing of
two distinct concepts: "ordered" and
"organized."
We can make this clear
with an example. Imagine a completely flat beach
on the seashore. When a strong wave hits the
beach, mounds of sand, large and small, form
bumps on the surface of the sand.
This is a process of
"ordering." The seashore is an open system, and
the energy flow (the wave) that enters it can
form simple patterns in the sand, which look
completely regular. From the thermodynamic point
of view, it can set up order here where before
there was none. But we must make it clear that
those same waves cannot build a castle on the
beach. If we see a castle there, we are in no
doubt that someone has constructed it, because
the castle is an "organized" system. In other
words, it possesses a clear design and
information. Every part of it has been made by
an intelligent entity in a planned manner.
The difference between
the sand and the castle is that the former is an
organized complexity, whereas the latter
possesses only order, brought about by simple
repetitions. The order formed from repetitions
is as if an object (in other words the flow of
energy entering the system) had fallen on the
letter "a" on a typewriter keyboard, writing "aaaaaaaa"
hundreds of times. But the string of "a"s in an
order repeated in this manner contains no
information, and no complexity. In order to
write a complex chain of letters actually
containing information (in other words a
meaningful sentence, paragraph or book), the
presence of intelligence is essential.
The same thing applies
when a gust of wind blows into a dusty room.
When the wind blows in, the dust which had been
lying in an even layer may gather in one corner
of the room. This is also a more ordered
situation than that which existed before, in the
thermodynamic sense, but the individual specks
of dust cannot form a portrait of someone on the
floor in an organized manner.
This means that complex,
organized systems can never come about as the
result of natural processes. Although simple
examples of order can happen from time to time,
these cannot go beyond certain limits.
But evolutionists point
to this self-ordering which emerges through
natural processes as a most important proof of
evolution, portray such cases as examples of
"self-organization." As a result of this
confusion of concepts, they propose that living
systems could develop of their own accord from
occurrences in nature and chemical reactions.
The methods and studies employed by Prigogine
and his followers, which we considered above,
are based on this deceptive logic.
However, as we made
clear at the outset, organized systems are
completely different structures from ordered
ones. While ordered systems contain structures
formed of simple repetitions, organized systems
contain highly complex structures and processes,
one often embedded inside the other. In order
for such structures to come into existence,
there is a need for intelligence, knowledge, and
planning. Jeffrey Wicken, an evolutionist
scientist, describes the important difference
between these two concepts in this way:
'Organized' systems are
to be carefully distinguished from 'ordered'
systems. Neither kind of system is 'random,' but
whereas ordered systems are generated according
to simple algorithms and therefore lack
complexity, organized systems must be assembled
element by element according to an external
'wiring diagram' with a high information content
... Organization, then, is functional complexity
and carries information.377
Ilya Prigogine-maybe as
a result of evolutionist wishful thinking-
resorted to a confusion of these two concepts,
and advertised examples of molecules which
ordered themselves under the influence of energy
inflows as "self-organization."
The American scientists
Charles B. Thaxton, Walter L. Bradley and Roger
L. Olsen, in their book titled The Mystery of
Life's Origin, explain this fact as follows:
... In each case random
movements of molecules in a fluid are
spontaneously replaced by a highly ordered
behaviour. Prigogine, Eigen, and others have
suggested that a similar sort of
self-organization may be intrinsic in organic
chemistry and can potentially account for the
highly complex macromolecules essential for
living systems. But such analogies have scant
relevance to the origin-of-life question. A
major reason is that they fail to distinguish
between order and complexity...378
And this is how the same
scientists explain the logical shallowness and
distortion of claiming that water turning into
ice is an example of how biological order can
spontaneously emerge:
It has often been argued
by analogy to water crystallizing to ice that
simple monomers may polymerize into complex
molecules such as protein and DNA. The analogy
is clearly inappropriate, however… The atomic
bonding forces draw water molecules into an
orderly crystalline array when the thermal
agitation (or entropy driving force) is made
sufficiently small by lowering the temperature.
Organic monomers such as amino acids resist
combining at all at any temperature however,
much less some orderly arrangement.379
Prigogine devoted his
whole career to reconciling evolution and
thermodynamics, but even he admitted that there
was no resemblance between the crystallization
of water and the emergence of complex biological
structures:
The point is that in a
non-isolated system there exists a possibility
for formation of ordered, low-entropy structures
at sufficiently low temperatures. This ordering
principle is responsible for the appearance of
ordered structures such as crystals as well as
for the phenomena of phase transitions.
Unfortunately this principle cannot explain the
formation of biological structures.
380
In short, no chemical or
physical effect can explain the origin of life,
and the concept of "the self-organization of
matter" will remain a fantasy.
Self-Organization:
A Materialist Dogma
The claim that
evolutionists maintain with the concept of
"self-organization" is the belief that inanimate
matter can organize itself and generate a
complex living thing. This is an utterly
unscientific conviction: Observation and
experiment have incontrovertibly proven that
matter has no such property. The famous English
astronomer and mathematician Sir Fred Hoyle
notes that matter cannot generate life by
itself, without deliberate interference:
If there were a basic
principle of matter which somehow drove organic
systems toward life, its existence should easily
be demonstrable in the laboratory. One could,
for instance, take a swimming bath to represent
the primordial soup. Fill it with any chemicals
of a non-biological nature you please. Pump any
gases over it, or through it, you please, and
shine any kind of radiation on it that takes
your fancy. Let the experiment proceed for a
year and see how many of those 2,000 enzymes
[proteins produced by living cells] have
appeared in the bath. I will give the answer,
and so save the time and trouble and expense of
actually doing the experiment. You will find
nothing at all, except possibly for a tarry
sludge composed of amino acids and other simple
organic chemicals.381
Evolutionary
biologist Andrew Scott admits the same fact:
Take some matter, heat
while stirring and wait. That is the modern
version of Genesis. The 'fundamental' forces of
gravity, electromagnetism and the strong and
weak nuclear forces are presumed to have done
the rest... But how much of this neat tale is
firmly established, and how much remains hopeful
speculation? In truth, the mechanism of almost
every major step, from chemical precursors up to
the first recognizable cells, is the subject of
either controversy or complete bewilderment.382
So why do evolutionists
continue to believe in scenarios such as the
"self-organization of matter," which have no
scientific foundation? Why are they so
determined to reject the intelligence and
planning that can so clearly be seen in living
systems?
The answer to these
questions lies hidden in the materialist
philosophy that the theory of evolution is
fundamentally constructed on. Materialist
philosophy believes that only matter exists, for
which reason living things need to be accounted
for in a manner based on matter. It was this
difficulty which gave birth to the theory of
evolution, and no matter how much it conflicts
with the scientific evidence, it is defended for
just that reason. A professor of chemistry from
New York University and DNA expert, Robert
Shapiro, explains this belief of evolutionists
about the "self-organization of matter" and the
materialist dogma lying at its heart as follows:
Another evolutionary
principle is therefore needed to take us across
the gap from mixtures of simple natural
chemicals to the first effective replicator.
This principle has not yet been described in
detail or demonstrated, but it is anticipated,
and given names such as chemical evolution and
self-organization of matter. The existence of
the principle is taken for granted in the
philosophy of dialectical materialism, as
applied to the origin of life by Alexander
Oparin.383
The truths that we have
been examining in this section clearly
demonstrate the impossibility of evolution in
the face of the second law of thermodynamics.
The concept of "self-organization" is another
dogma that evolutionist scientists are trying to
keep alive despite all the scientific evidence.
Continue:
Information
Theory and The End of Materialism
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