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The Probability of Nothing and the Potential Inevitability of Life

Writer: Isaiah S.Isaiah S.

Updated: Mar 8, 2022

Found in the second law of thermodynamics, Entropy can either increase or stay

constant.


Throughout the existence of the universe, entropy increases, and in turn, the amount

of energy unable to do work also increases, leading to a mass thermal equilibrium and the end

of work. Theoretically, the universe will return to nonexistence, but what if I were to tell you that

existence is more likely than nonexistence. In the statistical interpretation of entropy, the

disorder is more likely than order. Nothingness is order, complete uniformity, and the lives we

live in are disorderly.


The very existence of the universe is disorderly. Does that mean that the universe’s

existence is more likely than it’s nonexistence? And once it ends, will its nonexistence be able to

maintain itself forever? If that’s true, then the likeness of something will put the universe in a

loop of something and nothing.


Perhaps life is born in each cycle. If that’s true then does that make your life an

inevitability. I guess that is reincarnation in a sense. If we all didn’t exist before birth, we all have

something in common. Nothing, turning into something in each life that’s created, it doesn’t

matter who. Imagine a pool of nothing, dripping into the beginning of all life and being converted

into something. If we are all nothing, then we are the same before birth, meaning that you have

been reincarnated in every creature that has ever lived, and ever will, until the universe dies,

and is created again.

 
 
 

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