The example a person standing in one place for five minutes? This is more than a few air molecules- I believe it's trillions. Also, it's introducing new future DNA into the local bacteria/viral mix as large quantities of future-bacteria fall off you (some of the future bacteria will live and become millions/billions/etc. of bacteria, some'll be eaten but it's eaters will absorb the DNA. Either way, it's staying around).Simon_Jester wrote: The question is, "By standing here, have I perturbed the fertilization of any ova?" Is my presence in the room sufficient to cause the effect in question? How much change does it take to result in a different sperm reaching the egg or a different egg leaving the ovary? There is no way to test this in reality. We cannot assume "a couple of air molecules hit people at a different angle" or some such is sufficient cause to make this happen.
A person standing in one place is *ridiculously* macro scale on the size of physics. This is literally multiple cubic feet of atomics displaced at the time of arrival, and continuing to make an ever-growing disturbance the longer it lasts (including, of course, every breath exchanging oxygen for carbondioxide, picking up some other molecules, leaving a different mix). Five minutes? If there's no airflow, that means nigh-every air molecule in the room will be affected significantly (it'll be hotter, it'll be in different configuration and courses) and likewise the molecules in the walls, door, and floor, and when the door's open, all that changed air comes out. In my hypothetical *outside* event, and air travels in it at, say, 6 inches a second, then by the time you leave the disturbance has left a 150 foot trail (or an airvent or crack in the door could do similar). Carrying, among other things, future bacteria.
And all the change needs to hit is the placement of an individual cell for it to be obvious to humans.
The question is not if it causes a macro-visible change, but when. And that's a hypothetical not-seen-by-anyone event. Actual "go behind someone, say 'Hey,' then immediately vanish," automatically makes it macro.
Ah, 'swamped'. Here's the thing- even if a small change is, to outside appearances, overwhelmed by an existing mix, it does not actually go away unless an exact counter-force happens to appear, that didn't appear before, and matches it (and note, running into something head-on, that doesn't stop the change from persisting, that means the change is now "this thing that used to have the momentum sufficient to do X now doesn't because it used it canceling out this momentum caused by the change, and thus it won't bump into and slow down this *other* thing later on that it would've instead).A sufficiently large cause will result in a large enough effect that amplification and the process we call "the butterfly effect" come into play. But a sufficiently small cause is just as likely to be swamped by all the other (unchanged) events taking place. As I mentioned, you cannot assume that changing the course of one butterfly will change the course of a hurricane, just because the hurricane is somehow linked to the butterfly in a way that creates more than literally zero connection between them.
If it was a truly small change, a literal few atoms or such, it'd possibly take a ridiculously long time before it has any macro effect, but it won't actually vanish, it'll just move around. And this isn't that small a change physics-wise.
Or, to put it another way, we're running smack into entropy here. Energy cannot be destroyed.
Something being swamped sounds simple, but swamping a small event among pre-existing one is hiding it, not canceling it.