The Organic Evolution of the Universe
As a closed system, the entropy of the Universe has been constantly increasing from the beginning of its formation until now. Logical reasoning tells us that if this is indeed the case and universal Entropy has been constantly increasing from the birth of the Universe to today, then the Universe must have begun its development with extremely low entropy, so low as to allow all those physical processes of myriads upon myriads of Galaxies, stars, planets for billions of years without ever reaching the maximum entropic limit. Indeed, a maximum entropy limit that the Universe can support exists. Scientific consensus tells us that a general estimate of the maximum entropy of the Universe can be obtained by considering all the observable mass of the Universe concentrated in a hypothetical black hole. Such entropy is proportional to the square of the black hole's mass and more precisely $S_{BN} = \frac{2Gc\hbar M^2}{k}$ (4) where $G$ is Newton's gravitational constant, $c$ the speed of light, $\hbar$ Planck's constant and $k$ is Boltzmann's constant. Such calculation would lead to an estimate of the maximum Entropy of the Universe of about $S_{Max} \approx 10^{121}k$ (5). At the same time, current cosmological investigations indicate a general absence of supermassive black holes in the early formation of the Universe, so the Entropy at the initial stage of the Universe can be estimated simply by considering universal energy in its various forms and therefore of the order $S \approx 10^{89}k$ (6), that is, 32 orders of magnitude lower. The low initial entropy state of the Universe is not meaningless data, but testimony to the fact that the Universe, in its initial stage, is the result of a gestation process. Indeed, when we observe low-entropy systems in Nature, we automatically know that these are the result of organic evolution and a series of syntropic processes that have lowered their entropy. If, for example, we were to see a chicken egg, or rather a system of atoms in an extremely particular and low-entropy configuration, we would naturally consider it as the result of a syntropic gestation process. Similarly, if we were to come across a refined crystal glass, we would immediately deduce that such an artifact is the result of careful craftsmanship, evidently operated by an expert artisan. But we wouldn't stop there: since the most important law governing organic evolution is that of finality, at the sight of configurations with such low entropy as an egg or a crystal glass, we would wonder about the purpose of these systems. The logical conclusion of this reasoning is that if the Universe at the dawn of its existence was in the very special condition of having entropy such as to allow for billions of years the evolution of myriads of Galaxies, it is because such Universe is not only the result of a previous organic evolution unknown to us, but that such organic evolution must have had a precise purpose. Free energy and the ray of creation. Evolution is possible only when a source of free energy is present to operate this evolution. In the absence of free energy, when the entropy of a system is maximum, no work can be performed. When the system is in thermal equilibrium, energy is uniformly distributed, no defined dynamism can manifest and no evolution is possible. For this reason we must think that the beginning of the Universe, in whatever way it happened, coincided with a great energetic disequilibrium, a formidable entropic lowering and an immense input of free energy that allowed the evolution of the Universe for billions and billions of years up to our days. An impulse of Energy-Life-Consciousness that from an initial state of the Universe has spread through space-time giving form to all the hierarchical structures that we know. The ray of Life, or ray of Creation, has, before arriving to nourish our consciousness, traversed all the space-temporal depths of the Universe organizing hierarchically galactic Superclusters, Galaxies, myriads of Stars, Suns and planetary Systems full of life, and will continue to spread into cosmic void. Since the beginnings of civilization it has been evident that life on Earth, the evolution of all organisms present in it, is based on free energy produced by the Sun and the consequent thermal and chemical disequilibrium present on the planet. In the absence of this free energy, any organic evolution, independently of ecological conditions, would be unthinkable. Similarly, the Sun's free energy derives from the disequilibrium of a failed gravitational collapse at the Center of the Galaxy. Finally, all Universal evolution from an entropic point of view is made possible by the very low ent...