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Thanks for 'musing' about "entropic forces". Please consider these subtle points. The concepts of 'entropy' and the '2nd law of thermodynamics' relate to the principles of 'dissolution/destruction operator' (math) and Higgs field (mass in physics); and more fundamentally, in ancient Vedic literature, to the principle or 'force of nature' of 'inherent resistance to change' (called 'tamas', one of three fundamental principles associated with the mechanics and dynamics of phenomenal nature). Your assertion of the "inappropriateness of 'force" is due to contextual limitations such as in your example explanation, and also is not "simply a consequence of statistics." It is a 'real' phenomenon in the dynamics of nature. Also, 'negentropy' relates in the Vedic account to the term 'sattva' and the principle/force associated with the 'inherent order' (more fundamentally, 'intelligence'). The third principle/force is 'rajas', or inherent 'energy'. Entanglement does not "give rise to entropy". It is a current term used to describe the natural phenomenon of subtler interdependence that underlies and permeates classical phenomena of object independence, and the unifying concept of 'gravity' (associated with 'sattva'). If you become interested in how Veda addresses these concepts, one starting point is the paper on ResearchGate.net " Evidence of Vedic Renaissance" (2021), a concise intro relating modern physics to Veda. Bob (RW Boyer)

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