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It's a fact. See for instance https://arxiv.org/pdf/0907.0659.pdf


It's more like an opinion. Of one particular guy who has a Ph.D. in Physics. But there are many, and there is no consensus overall.

Here's the relevant quote from wikipedia [1]

  Recent work has cast some doubt on the heat death hypothesis and the applicability of any simple thermodynamic model to the universe in general. Although entropy does increase in the model of an expanding universe, the maximum possible entropy rises much more rapidly, moving the universe further from the heat death with time, not closer. This results in an "entropy gap" pushing the system further away from the posited heat death equilibrium. Other complicating factors, such as the energy density of the vacuum and macroscopic quantum effects, are difficult to reconcile with thermodynamical models, making any predictions of large-scale thermodynamics extremely difficult.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy#Cosmology


That's discussing the effects of metric expansion, which are not relevant for gravitationally bound systems. It also doesn't claim the second law of thermodynamics fails. On the contrary,

> entropy does increase in the model of an expanding universe


This is quite different from what you were saying about gravity reducing entropy, though. And I know quite well that having a PhD in Physics does not make someone right, but then quoting Wikipedia in such an argument is really not great.




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