Morphsnorkle said:
If the infinite monkey theorem provides proofs for the probability of order's emergence from chaos, is there a way to measure the probability of order in our universe i.e. matter/anti-matter, snowflakes, DNA?
I just wonder because if there was, you could compare the two values and see if we observe a higher rate of order in reality than in a theoretical chaos based situation.
There's no way to arrive at the universe we observe by simple reference to a random, stochastic process.
The way that this is properly codified is through entropy: entropy is a sort of measure of "order" in a system. A more specific way in which to state it is that entropy is a count of the number of ways that you can rearrange the components of the system and still have it come out looking the same. To take a simple example, consider a glass. If we have a whole glass, sitting on a table, there are some number of ways to rearrange the atoms in that glass and still have it coming out looking like the same glass.
But if we drop the glass off that table and let it shatter on the floor, then the number of ways we can rearrange the atoms increases exponentially: now not only can we rearrange the atoms within the shape, but the pieces of the glass themselves that are now spread across the floor can be rearranged in a multitude of ways without changing the fact that it looks like a bunch of shards of glass.
With this view, things tend towards higher entropy simply because there are more ways for the system to exist in a higher-entropy state. Sometimes it will drop to a lower-entropy (more ordered) configuration, but only occasionally. Still, if we wait long enough, there will be a drop in entropy as large as we like.
You might think, at first blush, that this could explain our universe: every once in a while, there's a big drop in entropy, occasionally big enough to produce a universe like the one we observe. The problem with this idea comes from the fact that small drops in entropy are
vastly more common than big ones. So instead of getting a whole big universe like the one we see, we're much more likely to get just a single galaxy. We're even more likely to get a single solar system. This makes a prediction that is flatly contradicted by reality: the universe we observe should be
minimal.
The general idea, that our universe might be some random fluctuation, might still be correct, but the true answer has to be quite a bit more complicated than simply saying there's a random fluctuation.