As the day winds down,
sipping cognac, I take stock of the day shutting down. Did things settle down
today or did they just get bigger, one leading to another, never really
settling. Typically, you keep a to-do list handy to track and close the endless
items but haven’t you noticed that it never ever clears up. Eventually, you
lose interest and dump the laundry list. This disenchantment has led me to a
visceral suspicion of something more fundamental at play here. So why is there
always something to fix or clean up? Why cannot perpetual ‘order’ ever be
achieved setting us free?
Interestingly, in physics,
they got a funny definition and rule for this apparent ‘lack of order’ or shall
we say, gradual decline into disorder. Entropy! Technically, it is a
thermodynamic quantity representing the unavailability of a system’s thermal
energy for conversion into mechanical work (Phew!). Simply put, it represents
the degree of order or randomness in a system. They even conjured up a law for
it. The famed second law of thermodynamics that states in a closed and changing system disorder just continues to increases
with time.
Till yesterday, I did not have
an issue with this concept because it was supposed to be applicable to
‘closed-looped systems’ only. Little did I know, the implication of this law
was much more profound and universal. It affects every damn single being or
thing at every single instance of existence. And unaware of its universality,
we (dolts) rant and rave to no relief. Look around. Every day you scream at
your kids or spouse…where is my pen?!
Haven’t I told you to put it back once you are done!!..or only last week, I cleaned my desk and now!...all
too familiar scenes. Well sometimes, even as you scream, a guilt emerges (deep
inside you) amidst the echo of similar screams of your parents, ages ago. Look
around your house or office table to realize how difficult it is to keep things
in order. You wonder, why is such a simple principle violated so often. A
simple discipline that simply cannot be kept. Nobody is proposing to clear the math
Olympiads but just ‘restore the status-quo’ once you have done using it.
Let’s be honest. It is not
that we have not tried but truth is, it never worked. Why? Because it is so
pervasive. Take a simple example. You decide to be orderly one fine Sunday
morning. Read the newspaper, fold it back nicely and place it back to where you
took it. You then spend the whole weekend cleaning and re-arranging, swearing
to be orderly. You even make checklists and resolutions to just maintain
what you have achieved. Yet, in a week’s
time, the vagaries of nature have sneaked in and once again turned the shelves
and bathrooms upside down. What depresses you more is the banality of the task you
wanted to achieve. It is not even a fraction of the effort or focus needed to
achieve a 6-pack abs. The very ordinariness of the silly challenge you set for
yourself finally kills your self-belief and self-esteem. Is it because we are
undisciplined by nature or is it something more fundamental?
Well, it turns out that, any
dynamic systems (and that includes us) will disintegrate into disorder with
time. There are two levels to this nonsense.
In intelligent systems, or
eco-systems involving intelligence entities (say humans) , the reality is that,
unless you are super vigilant to every instance in every action and its
purpose, you miss it. Like watching your breath during meditation. You cannot
possibly live like a stack always unwinding to restore before you go about your
next action. Theoretically you can but practically never. The reason is that
after an action ‘happens’, the result changes the initial condition in two
possible ways. If you got the intended result, you are likely to quickly move
on to the next (to save time), this is an natural optimization technique
(acquired by evolution). If it was not the intended result, it gets worse.
Now you are more disturbed with the
failure that the chances to restore the
initial condition will be lesser. In short, there is no reward or logic to
rewind and we typically end up running low priority weekend threads or daemons
to clean up or restore. Even meditation is one such thread to unwind a tensed
mind. Because in the immediacy of ‘living’ and interacting with several other
dynamic systems, it is virtually impossible to restore orderliness or
constancy. Come to think of it, this dynamic interactions and ensuing reactions
resemble Brownian Motion!
The same entropy applies to
buying and possessing things. Every new asset only adds to entropy. Like the
wise Admiral who realized ‘half of world
problems would end if only we knew how little we need’ . You cook up
excuses to possess new devices but do not realize the liability they become
once novelty wears out (a storage problem, a maintenance problem, a disposal
problem). Suddenly you have become this ‘maintainer machine’ to fix and
maintain all your possessions. Look around, every weekend, there is tap to fix,
a bulb to change, utensils to replace…the list goes on. Your smart phones needs
constant care, the apps need constant upgrade, sync contacts and data across
all other gadgets…the entropy just increases with every new device. The below
equation proves that entropy increases with the number of objects or tasks at
our disposal. There is no point fighting entropy. The only way is to reduce the
number of objects or tasks associated with you.
With unintelligent systems it is equally bad. In fact,
the second law that stated entropy shall increase, posed a serious paradox to
physicists of late 19th century. Unlike chemical reactions, the
fundamental laws of physics are by nature completely reversible. So if entropy
can increase, it must be able to decrease as well but the reality is not. It
was Ludwig Boltzwmann who finally figured it out. He said, it is not a ‘law’ as
in Newton’s law of gravity but more of statistical law that merely suggests ‘by
probability, entropy will not decrease’. The genius lay in the insight that the
‘law’ - entropy will (probably) only increase – could be easily understood with
the aid of theory of probability. Consider this, will a tub with a drop of ink
only spread out or will it ever clear up and produce back the small drop of
ink? Truth is,(being a probability,) though
it is very unlikely, but certainly not impossible. In fact, Boltzmann
identified the inadequacy of his own theory further. Technically, by the
equation, entropy can be shown to increase into the past and future. But let’s
not go any further. Our objective is not to drown ourselves in esoteric
Physics.
So there you are. There is no
point in shouting at others. We are forced to accept that systems (intelligent
or otherwise) will continue to deteriorate and the only respite, perhaps, is a
sincere accommodation of Mr. Entropy. On a lighter note, being fundamentally a
probability, this also leads us to a seeming impossible possibility; that of
getting up one fine Sunday morning and seeing one’s desk spick
and span! As Mr. Holmes once quipped, ‘Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how
improbable, must be the truth’. It must be Entropy after all!
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