I don’t think the
Communication and entropy thread made much progress on its orginal question:
Quote:
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Does anyone have a succinct explanation for the difference between thermodynamic entropy, and information entropy?
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Other than demonstrating the already well-known phenomena of bickering, ad hominem attacks, and gross misuse of common terms in a web forum, ;( this thread demonstrated to me that while many of us hypographers have an intuitive grasp of information and thermodynamic entropy, and a vague sense of how they’re connected, these concepts are far from well understood in detail.
I though it helpful to start by applying the
information (Shannon) entropy of some intuitively obvious systems (that is, discrete random variables), such as a
roulette wheel and some variations.
The entropy of a discrete random variable X with possible values

is
For a fair roulette wheel with the usual 38 pockets

So
Doubling the number of pockets increases the entropy by 1.
Halving it decreases it by 1.
Altering the number of pockets to an integer power of 2 gives an integer entropy, ie:
Making the wheel unfair lower’s its entropy …
Having 1 cup that is 2 times as likely to get the ball reduces the entropy by about 0.0138073
Having 1 cup that is .5 times as likely reduces it by 0.0057755
Having 1 cup 5 times as likely to get the ball reduces it by 0.1823552
Having 5 cups that are 2 times as likely to get the ball as any of the remaining 33 cups reduces it by 0.1339015
Having 1 cup that is 100 times as likely reduces it by 2.9994255
Having the ball always land in the same cup – effectively, having a wheel with only one cup – reduces the entropy to 0.
Adding multiple balls (and allowing a pocket to catch any number of them) the wheel greatly increases a roulette wheel’s entropy…
For 2 balls, entropy increases by 4.2742433 to 9.5221708.
For 5 balls, it’s 19.5930529
The above math is pretty simple, though for some of the variations, it requires either mild ingenuity or inhumanly brutal computational power. Before trying to extend this experience into a comparison with thermodynamic entropy, does anyone see any flaw, or have questions or comments, about this example of calculating informational entropy?

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