Since there has to be about three different threads going about ColRegs, currently, this might be a good time to move into another branch of philosophy, Ethics.
Ethics is about behavior, action, motion, in a sense. The Old Man talks a lot about the idea of there being a direct analogy between Physics and Morality (Morality being the principles upon which ethical behaviors are based). He once met a retired Physicist at a marina who had basically become a recluse on his sailboat and never left the marina. The Old Man invited him to a drink at the marina bar and presented him with this idea. The laws of motion, conservation of energy, they all have their moral analogue. The physicist (I'll call him Ted, after a teacher I had in high school who like to indulge in the evenings after class. We called him ToastTed. That's who I picture when the Old Man tells this story.) didn't see the connection. So, the Old Man started with his points one at a time, 1st law of motion: An object in motion tends to remain in motion until acted upon by an outside force. In a psychological and social context, humans tend to move single-mindedly both individually and in groups (not necessarily in the same directions, the individual and the group, that is). Social movements historically continue on and on and on until they collide with an opposing social movement. Then, their mass and their velocity determine their relative inertial dispositions with respect to the other and a change in movement or the death of the movement is experienced. Newton's second law of motion: F=ma. In Physics, a collision is either elastic or inelastic, meaning the boats either bounce off each other like that cabin cruiser that bounced off the ferry, or they stick together, like that charter boat that ended up on top of the J-boat. An example of an elastic moral collision might be the Nazi Party and the established social movement of the rest of Europe. Both moral systems were hard and clashed directly, so they hit and bounced off each other with the established social system having more momentum and breaking up Fascism. The third law of motion states that the force exerted upon one body by another is equally exerted upon the other body, as well. This speaks directly to the idea of the conservation of energy. Since no energy is lost or created, Much of the energy of the lesser system was transferred to the greater system, but small pieces of the broken up system still swirls around today. The analogy of an inelastic cultural or moral collision makes me think of the growth of Christianity. When the ideas of Christianity moved into a new area, they often absorbed the cultural and ethical (practices) of the other cultures, thus the growth of Christianity across Europe and the World looks more like a collecting of cultural energy rather than the creation of new energy. However, in such collisions, the motion will eventually slow so that the sum total of all vectors establish the final motion of the larger, growing object. Just look at where the Catholic Church is today.
In the marina bar, that evening, the Physicist agreed that all these points had merit, "but," he said, "what about entropy?" The Old Man looked Ted up and down, his dishevelled hair, his stained shirt, his holed topsiders, and he said, "Ted, have you looked in the mirror lately?"
Ted's eyes grew wide and he responded, "By God, you're right."
-Will (Dragonfly)