Ugh, it’s Monday again. I’m very much not ready to start another work week. I’ve felt a bit queasy and under the weather since yesterday afternoon‒probably due to some dietary indiscretion, I don’t know‒and just felt kind of icky. I’m not nauseated at the moment, though, just kind of wiped.
I’m sure that’s how you were hoping to begin your week of reading blog posts: with news of my upset stomach from yesterday. One can imagine Tom Brokaw, or perhaps even Walter Cronkite, breathlessly delivering such a bulletin, am I right? What would the banner headline in the New York Times or the Wall Street Journal say about such a story?
Probably nothing, of course. Imagine how slow and anti-interesting a news day would have to be for major news outlets to carry stories about my minor ailments.
Not to say that the ailments of certain people don’t get covered; they do, of course. Sometimes this is just frivolous curiosity or even prurient interest, as in the case of “celebrities”. Sometimes it really is important, as in the case of powerful individuals who carry great responsibilities. In those cases, people can legitimately be concerned, especially if the responsibilities carried by these individuals are things only they can do. That’s rare in the real world, but it can happen*.
Oy, sorry about the interruption there. I had a little sneezing fit. Oh, wait, you all didn’t experience that interruption; only I did. How embarrassing. I shouldn’t have said anything. Well, it’s too late now.
Though, of course, it isn’t too late, not for me as I write it‒I could change it if I wanted to change it. But by the time you read this, then, yes, it will be too late for me to change it. I mean, I could edit the post after the fact‒I have that power‒but it wouldn’t affect those who had already read it.
I could conceivably affect your memory of what it had originally said if I changed it and then persistently repeated the lie that it had never been the way I originally posted it. But even if I got everyone in the universe to believe the lie‒getting them all to care would be a big enough undertaking‒it would not change the fact of what had originally happened.
This underscores the true, fundamental powerlessness of lies. Words can change what people “believe” in the short term, but talk is cheap (mother fucker). No matter how much a person believes they can fly under their own power, if they step off the top of a tall building (on Earth, in normal gravity) they will plummet.
And they may believe, all the way down, that they are actually flying and that the falling is the illusion, but once they reach the bottom, everything with which they believe anything will, if the fall was far enough, be utterly broken, perhaps even scattered across the pavement. All that they believed or remembered will be obliterated, in a very true sense of the word.
That’s one of the good, albeit sometimes frustrating, things about reality. Whatever it is, it is, regardless of whether anyone believes it or even knows it, regardless of whether there even exists anyone who can know it.
How did I get there from having noted that I felt sick yesterday and don’t feel great today to be starting the week? I’m sure it’ll be clear in the editing process. But it is a fact that I got to this point, so it happened somehow.
I don’t really know what else to discuss. Nothing of consequence happens in my life anymore, not even from the narrow, parochial point of view of my own mind. At this stage, my life is of more or less of zero significance to anyone, including me, so I guess it doesn’t matter what I discuss.
I’m very tired, though, and it’s just the start of the day and the week. I hope I get to feeling better as the week goes along, though the second law of thermodynamics seems to imply that such a thing is by no means guaranteed to happen, and indeed, in the long run, will definitely not happen. At least, the tendency for entropy to increase is as definite as anything we know.
Clearly, though, huge regions of low entropy are possible; the universe as we know it “began” in such a state. Mind you, we wouldn’t want to be suddenly transported to such a low entropy region of spacetime, as they are not readily amenable to life, which is dependent upon local gradients in free energy and entropy. This is why life occurred in sort of the “middle state” of the universe, the mixing state, as when one sees the many swirling forms and patterns in one’s coffee cup as one is pouring in milk or cream, before the mixing finally becomes uniform.
Also, though quite uniform and low entropy, the Big Bang was also pretty darn hot, and I’m not speaking metaphorically.
If one could open a teeny, tiny wormhole back to some region of the early universe just after the Big Bang, one could conceivably obtain functionally limitless energy**. But that would affect the subsequent evolution of the early universe, I suspect, though perhaps it could not possibly affect the universe in such a way as to prevent itself from being instantiated. Or, well, maybe for that reason it cannot be instantiated.
I don’t know. I’m tired. You can probably tell. Anyway, I hope you have a good day and a good week.
*Though no examples spring to mind. If you can think of one, please share it in the comments below.
**Though, would that outweigh the energy required to create and maintain the wormhole? I have a strong intuition that it would not.



