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by ajkjk
1551 days ago
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This paper feels very unconvincing. It seems to just assume that there is some intrinsic entropy inside a particle which, by virtue of their annihilation, must be released. I'm fairly sure that is not at all what the Landauer limit is talking about. This cited paper https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0064475 comes up a with a number and says it's intrinsic in each particle, but.. that just seems so sketchy. The Landauer limit says: since entropy can't be destroyed, if an irreversible computation takes place -- if a bit is 'erased' -- the entropy must be released a heat. Then, using dE = T dS, that change in entropy ought to correspond to a change in energy. Nowhere in this is it claimed that particles store intrinsic bits of information. It's just talking about data that is modeled in the _state_ of a system. Erasing a bit means collapsing two states of the system into one. Also, maybe I'm being unfair here, but I'd guess that no paper about entropy that starts with "digital information storage technologies have radically transformed our modern society" is going to end up being good. |
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Could you explain why you phrased it this way, as opposed to e.g. "I find this paper very unconvincing."?
This isn't a critique; I'm just trying to understand a recent drift in language, and if/how it corresponds to a difference in the underlying thinking.
In my upbringing, there's a strong delineation between "thinking" and "feeling". In that view, thinking is mostly about propositions, ideas, and logic; feeling is mostly about emotions.
My best guess is that "... feels ...", as used above, is meant to express a uncertainty about what follows.