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  • The universe as a whole evolves towards increasing entropy, or disorder -- a tendency physicists

  • call the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

  • This movement toward disorganization might lead you to think that organized structures

  • like, say, living beingswould never spontaneously come into existence.

  • Of course entropy can go down in part of the universe -- you can trade a decrease in entropy

  • in one place (like cooling water so it crystallizes into ice) for an equal or larger increase

  • in entropy somewhere else (like heating the back of your fridge).

  • Order increases here, but only at the cost of decreasing order there.

  • But we can still ask: why do intricate, complex structures come into being in the universe,

  • if the overall tendency is toward increasing disorder?

  • The secret is that order and complexity are very different ideas.

  • Entropy measures how many different ways you can make an arrangement of small-scale particles

  • that have the same large-scale properties: like, 37 degrees celsius, brown hair, good

  • at soccer, and so on.

  • [There are lots of different ways!].

  • Complexity, on the other hand, is a measure of how hard it is to describe a set of large-scale

  • properties.

  • Simple systems are easy to describe; complex systems require a lot more information.

  • For example, take a cup filled with half coffee and half milk.

  • It starts off in a state with relatively low entropyyou could swap coffee molecules

  • with each other, or milk molecules with each other, without changing things substantially.

  • But if you swapped coffee molecules with milk molecules that would be a noticeable change.

  • It’s also a simple setup -- milk on top, coffee on the bottom.

  • Now, as the milk and coffee begin to mix, entropy goes upwhere they are mixed together,

  • swapping some coffee molecules for milk molecules no longer makes much of a difference.

  • But the system also becomes more complex - to describe what you see, you would have to specify

  • exactly how all of those tendrils of milk and coffee intricately swirl into each other.

  • Continuing on, entropy keeps going up, until the milk and coffee are completely mixed together

  • and swapping any molecules of coffee and milk with any others doesn’t really make any

  • difference at all.

  • That’s equilibrium, where there are a huge number of arrangements of the molecules that

  • look essentially the same.

  • But this highly-mixed equilibrium is once again simple: it’s just a homogenous mixture

  • of coffee and milk; no more complicated fractal swirly stuff.

  • This general principle is borne out time and time again: while entropy increases, complexity

  • initially grows, then decays.

  • Complexity can be a natural step along the path to increasing entropy.

  • The best example is the universe itself.

  • The early universe was very smooth and very dense: that’s low-entropy, and also extremely simple.

  • The far future will be smooth again, but very dilute: that’s high-entropy, and again extremely simple.

  • It’s now, in the medium-entropy middle, that things look complex.

  • Stars and galaxies and veins of minerals in rock and swirling clouds and amino acids and

  • proteins and human beings and catswere at the exciting, beautiful stage of the coffee

  • mixing!

  • But just as with the coffee and milk, in the far distant future complexity will decrease

  • again, and complicated stuff like us will at last be simplified out of existence.

  • Hey, Henry here, thanks for watching.

  • This is the third video in a series about time and entropy made in collaboration with

  • physicist Sean Carroll.

  • The series is supported with funding from Google’s Making and Science initiative,

  • which seeks to encourage more young people (and people of all ages) to learn about and

  • fall in love with science and the world around them, and the videos are based off of Sean’s

  • bookThe Big Picture: On the Origins of Life, Meaning, and the Universe Itself,”

  • which you can find online or in bookstores around the world.

The universe as a whole evolves towards increasing entropy, or disorder -- a tendency physicists

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