This paper presents a conceptual and interdisciplinary examination of how ordered structures emerge in physical, chemical, and biological systems despite the constraints imposed by the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Drawing on examples from atomic interactions, molecular bonding, biological organization, and gravitational systems, the study explores how local decreases in entropy can arise in open systems through energy exchange and dynamic interactions. Rather than proposing a single unifying force, the paper analyzes how different types of interactions—such as electromagnetic forces, chemical bonding, natural selection, and gravity—contribute to the formation of stable and complex structures across scales. The concept of “attraction” is used descriptively to compare interaction-driven organization in different domains, while acknowledging the distinct mechanisms governing each system. In addition, the paper examines philosophical interpretations of order, emergence, and complexity, including perspectives that attribute purposive structure to the universe. These interpretations are presented separately from empirical scientific explanations and are discussed as part of broader metaphysical inquiry. Overall, the paper aims to provide a structured synthesis of how complexity and organization arise in nature, emphasizing the compatibility between entropy-driven processes and the emergence of ordered systems within non-equilibrium conditions.
Ahmad Saylam (Sat,) studied this question.