meccanoman
Thinker
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2017
- Messages
- 232
Science education, because it's there.
Sure, one may simply decide to climb a mountain 'because it's there'. But there are rather more compelling reasons for teaching 'real' science which in my own experience (not necessarily typical) is not happening. I refer to the ability of physical, chemical and biological systems to self-organize, which to many might seem counter-intuitive, indeed at odds with the 'laws of nature'.
To take one simple example: how many science courses take the example of snowflakes to convey the principle of self-organization. Not only are the flakes all six-sided, though complex and non-identical, but they are formed from water vapour by cooling, i.e. removing, not adding energy. If a simple physical/chemical system involving one of the simplest molecules in nature, H2O, can self-organize to generate complexity and do so without needing an energy input, then is it any wonder that life forms could have arisen purely on the same basis of self-organization?
The explanation for self-organization is generally complex for each given system, but simple to grasp in principle, namely that the multi-proton atoms derived form nucleosynthesis in long dead stars come equipped with an equal number of negative electrons to balance the charge of the positive protons in the nucleus. But those electrons are required to occupy ordered orbitals (aka quantized 'energy levels') around the nucleus which makes atoms ready to interact with other atoms so as to adopt via 'chemical reaction' a preferred re-configuration that is energetically-more favourable for the given circumstances (temperature, pressure, concentration etc). Thus we have the phenomenon of self-organization', maybe better described as self-reorganization which can express itself as GREATER rather than less complexity, arrived at SPONTANEOUSLY (with so many folk imagining through faulty or deficient science education that to be somehow prohibited by the laws of nature, which is most definitely not the case, provided the total entropy change for system AND SURROUNDINGS is positive).
Was anyone here ever taught in their science lessons at school that spontaneous self-organization of atoms and molecules - with INCREASE in complexity - occurs freely in nature with no thermodynamic barriers bar the total entropy rule, and is indeed happening all the time (like each time snowflakes fall from the sky)?