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Well my chemistry lecturers have always explained to me (in introductory chemistry) that most chemical reactions occur due to the components desiring to acquire a more stable state.
My high school physics teacher explained to me that when you put metal in fire it heats up and later releases the heat as energy has a tendency to dissipate.
I don't know if the above to statements are completely correct however I have been taught them and know no better. I base my questions entirely on statements such as the above:
Why does energy manifest the observed nature of dissipation from a system.
Can the phenomena that is "a decay of a system based on the relative influx and efflux of energy through it" (I am presuming this is entropy) be reversed. Considering that I was taught matter is indeed a condensation or accumulated form of energy why would than an added exposure to energy cause its degredation (matter in this instance is with reference to it being the system, i.e. the tungsten filament in a light bulb burning out).
I would further define energy as being the potential of existence or the potential of cause rather than the commonly accepted potential to work phrase. So an influx of energy would mean and increased potential of existence of the system, however energy still dissipates and causes the observed "chaos".
Ok now my final question, since matter is just a condensed form of energy what would than cause it to have relative states (i.e. valence or stability) as I would have presumed an accumulation of the same substance (i.e. energy) would have no difference amongst one another. What is this concept of stability and how does it arise?
My high school physics teacher explained to me that when you put metal in fire it heats up and later releases the heat as energy has a tendency to dissipate.
I don't know if the above to statements are completely correct however I have been taught them and know no better. I base my questions entirely on statements such as the above:
Why does energy manifest the observed nature of dissipation from a system.
Can the phenomena that is "a decay of a system based on the relative influx and efflux of energy through it" (I am presuming this is entropy) be reversed. Considering that I was taught matter is indeed a condensation or accumulated form of energy why would than an added exposure to energy cause its degredation (matter in this instance is with reference to it being the system, i.e. the tungsten filament in a light bulb burning out).
I would further define energy as being the potential of existence or the potential of cause rather than the commonly accepted potential to work phrase. So an influx of energy would mean and increased potential of existence of the system, however energy still dissipates and causes the observed "chaos".
Ok now my final question, since matter is just a condensed form of energy what would than cause it to have relative states (i.e. valence or stability) as I would have presumed an accumulation of the same substance (i.e. energy) would have no difference amongst one another. What is this concept of stability and how does it arise?