that actually helps to explain your point but-
universalis is not a closed system, so there's this thing called advection that is caused by insolation - which causes parcels of air to move and circulate. the circulation of your non-diffusing water-saturated parcel is dictated by the entire planet's circulation flow which is not beneficial to having it sit above blaland indefinitely
As vh points out again this will be flawed as long as you continue to use determinism based on macroscopic terms which are, at the fundamental level, not determined from the concepts you use. Pressure, temperature, ... can never hold the information necessary to describe the motion of 10
23 molecules.
so. . . If Blaland can have water over it just because it /must/ exist in some Universe out of the infinite possibilities. . . am I allowed to pick an initial state that ends up with the Aeridani becoming pure desert?
Is this the icecap thing again? Not that I really care. But remember this came out of the discussion where you called water over Blaland magic and said human life wasn't. Now I showed how it wasn't magic but just very improbable just like the human life. So there's no need to create a new argument.
I like how I even offered to reconsider Blaland's location in the reply but now this was fully ignored.
yes in some universes if we are dealing with numbers larger than graham's number
humans are vastly, vastly more likely than blaland's climate anomalously being cold and forested for thousands of years, because humans have not only already arisen once - but the factors to create them (a creature with the body structure of an ape, a savanna with harsh competition which favors continual growth of intelligence, language development, hairlessness) are all trivially easy compared to the enormous towers of exponents required to make a wind wall requires for blaland's wet existence
Humans are more than just those simple body structures as concepts, they consist of more than 10
23 molecules and are the product of interactions with all the other life forms, their body is marked by vestiges from when they were oceanic and every period of their history, the continental plate and climate history of Earth. To recreate all that on our planet I think that too would require somthing like Graham's number - and certainly if we include all the other Earthly life forms.
Anyway... Should we just get on with considering the possibility of moving Blaist Blaland, now that I offered it...