Ok, I had to look up what the term "isentropic" meant. The definitions I'm finding basically amount to "with unchanging entropy; at constant entropy".
And to this, I must go "Treat WTC 7 isentropically??
Buh"?
Maybe I'm ignorant here, but: Given that the 7 World trade went from a highly ordered to a disordered system, and that it went from having elements of itself having a gravitational PE built up (from the process of constructing the tower) to having those components have far less due to being on or very near the ground, how can
anyone posit that there is no entropy change? That simply makes no sense to me. It seems to me that, if you try to make an analysis describe 7 World Trade's collapse as having constant entropy, you're going to fail because clearly energy was dispersed in the collapse. Treating it "isentropically" seems to me to posit a sort of collapse that's reversible without an additional input of energy. And clearly, that has no chance in hell of happening. So why use the term? Or am I, the layman, misunderstanding the concept here?
Ps. Yes, I understand we're dealing with a word salad chef. What
I'm trying to do is teach myself a bit more about how to consider that aspect of his salad, and that's why I'm posting. Am I treating the concept correctly, and have I reached a correct understanding of what the implications of considering the collapse "isentropically" are?
That's why I'm posting. That man is self-refuting, but I gain nothing by not learning when I have an opportunity to.