Chalnoth said:
While it is true that you can decrease the entropy of a system by pumping energy into it, non-decreasing entropy is still taken to be more fundamental than energy conservation.
Why? They're both parts of the same process, I don't understand why one is taken to be more fundamental than the other.
It's like saying that in the sales process of a product is more fundamental the buying than the selling, it is just dependent on whose POV is used , the buyer's or the seller's.
Instead of entropy we could equally choose to use Free-energy=internal energy-unusable (T\Delta S) energy, which is a form of using an energy dynamic measure (free energy decreases the same way entropy increases) for instance when using Gibbs or Helmholtz free energy.
According to WP : "Free energy is that portion of any first-law energy that is available to perform thermodynamic work; i.e., work mediated by thermal energy. Free energy is subject to irreversible loss in the course of such work. Since first-law energy is always conserved, it is evident that free energy is an expendable, second-law kind of energy that can perform work within finite amounts of time."
It is evident from this that the second and first law are inextricably interconnected, it makes little sense considering one more fundamental than the other except for special applications.
And makes no sense at all to claim one law holds and the other doesn't, since they are each based on the other holding true.
Chalnoth said:
Quantum effects, like the ones you mentioned, do not impact this argument because they tend to average out, producing no net change in energy.
Sure, in an equilibrium situation there is no net change of internal energy, this follows from the first law too.