No biological entity violates any of the laws of thermodynamics.
Biological organisms do not violate the laws of thermodynamics. Instead, they operate within and are subject to these laws. Living systems utilize energy from their environment, taking in nutrients and converting them into useful forms of energy. While biological processes are able to maintain and increase order locally, the overall entropy of the universe continues to increase in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics.
this increase in organization over time in no way violates the second law. The entropy of a particular system, such as an organism, may actually decrease, so long as the total entropy of the universe-the system plus its surroundings-increases. Thus, organisms are islands of low entropy in an increasingly random universe. The evolution of biological order is perfectly consistent with the laws of thermodynamics.
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Why should it violate it? Atoms are simply rearranged. No new atoms are created, no atoms are destroyed. The rust will have more mass than the original iron (or whatever metal is rusting), but that's because oxygen atoms from the atmosphere are added. Add: This does not violate the law of conservation of mass, because the mass of the rust is the combined mass of the iron and the oxygen in the atmosphere that reacted to form the rust.
No. That would violate the Newtonian principle of Conservation of Mass.
Biological organisms do not violate the laws of thermodynamics. Instead, they operate within and are subject to these laws. Living systems utilize energy from their environment, taking in nutrients and converting them into useful forms of energy. While biological processes are able to maintain and increase order locally, the overall entropy of the universe continues to increase in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics.
Texas law does not address this, but generally the biological mothers always oppose it, or violate the orders with immunity, just as they do in heterosexual relationships.
I will not violate your privacy.
No. Its the LAW! Not a suggestion! The waste energy just goes somewhere else, like heat radiation of thermal conduction.
ViolateA sentence for the word violate is: It's smart not to violate the law.
The noun forms of "violate" are violation and violator.
The past tense of violate is violated.
Violate This was created on 2001-08-21.
The noun forms for the verb to violate are violator, violation, and the gerund, violating.
To Violate the Oblivious was created in 2004-07.
Biological weapons have a great capacity for backlash. As it is used against the enemy, it can spread and kill the very people that released the 'killer germ' in the first place. These types of weapons have worldwide laws as to their use, but it takes just one government to violate those rules and release a deadly agent that could devistate the globe.
No, "violate" is typically used as a verb to indicate breaking or disregarding rules or laws.