But that's quite clearly not the case. The entire earth counters entropy by virtue of the energy flow from the sun.
How so?
If you doubt this, have a look at some of the discussions on thermodynamics in the creationist threads, here or on talk.origins. The supposedly unique thermodynamic nature of life is robustly debunked.
No, it isn't. And yes, I looked. The "debunking" of which you speak only entails pointing out that what life does is not inconsistent with the second law of thermodynamics.
Nobody has addressed the issue of how life managed to
consistently -- for over 3 billion years -- keep entropy at bay when there is no single natural law that could be responsible.
You can't just say "well gravity pulls stars together, that is an instance of decreasing local entropy" because living cells are not held together by gravity. You can't just say "chemical reactions decrease local entropy" because life is more than a single chemical reaction.
If you don't want to agree that life is unique in a qualitative way, then fine. But you can't ignore the fact that life is by far the
most thermodynamically improbable system in the known universe.
A living cell lasts for more than 3 billion years.
A dead cell lasts for far less than a single year.
In the case of a computer, it's fairly clear that by the time the power station has burned the fossil fuels to generate the electricity to power the machine, entropy is behaving just as it should. Nothing unique in either case.
I don't claim that computers counter entropy like life does. My claim is that life is able to counter entropy because of computation, and that is what life has in common with computers.
Any system that receives energy from an external source has the potential to reverse entropy locally, whether it's a tree or a pile of bricks.
There isn't a single system in the universe that does it to the extent that life on Earth does.
I mean this is basically the definition of life. I can't even believe this is a discussion. Biology 101, anyone?
Why don't you explain to us, westprog, how a living cell manages to stay in the same functional form for 3 billion years when, were it to die, it would break down into simpler components within a short time.
No, really. What mechanism is responsible for that feat?