English, asked by ahangerkaiser56, 1 month ago

Is it right to say that the nature is everlasting?​

Answers

Answered by Nitesh8735
0

Answer:

Yes

Explanation:

Nature is everlasting nature will always find a way to sustain itself hope this helps mark me brainliest

Answered by bdhyanam18
0

Nature, whether you take that mean the universe as a whole or just the Earth, is constantly changing. Despite what we as humans do to the environment around us the law of conservation of energy states that matter can neither be created or destroyed. That means that the elements that make up all natural things will still exist after their destruction, just in a different form. Even the word destruction implies that an object is deconstructed from it's current form, and not truly departed. The universe is said to be heading towards max Entropy, that is towards total disorder.

If you mean to ask whether "Mother Nature" is eternal, then the abstract concept certainly is but the physical evidence of a "Force of Nature" as it exists currently is not. Nature as a deity would be exempt from the laws of conservation, and Nature as an idea would also share that luxury. The forces exhibited by Mother Earth, (as MN is sometimes called) however, are tied to the earth's specific meteorological, celestial, and environmental tendencies. These forces are still material and therefore are subject to the laws of thermodynamics.

If you believe that the current understanding of the law of conservation of energy is not absolute however, than all of the prior discussion would be considered null. Philosophically it could be argued that the law conservation of energy, though thoroughly observed, is still an artificial construct devised by man and is therefore fallible on some scale. It is the best explanation that we have for the universe thus far, but is it irrefutable enough for us as mere humans to use in measurement of entities of this magnitude? This my friend is up to you to decide.

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