Excuse me, what?!
Nitrogen has a greater mass than ozone, oxygen, C02 and the rest. This is why close to the surface, nitrogen predominates and the air we breathe is hence mostly nitrogen; it sinks to the bottom of the atmosphere, which is where we are.
GC has always been a bit of an enigma to me. He seems reasonable articulate, can grasp some esoteric philosophical concepts, and has a broad knowledge base, yet manages to get everything consistently wrong.
I suspect GC may be innumerate. He can discuss things on purely qualitative terms but is unable to determine the relative significance of different factors because he cannot make quantitative assessments of each. So, negligible factors (gravitational separation due to density, in this case) are given equal or greater weighting to significant ones (entropy). I'm surprised that he failed to instantly recognise that CO2 should be denser than O2 (by virtue of having an additional carbon worth of weight), but if you view the world in strictly qualitative terms I suppose Aristotle's classical elements may be a more intuitive way of viewing material properties.
Please don't take offence GC. Your way of thinking is very much reminiscent of that of classical philosophers and dominated human intuition for thousands of years. Unfortunately, there are very serious limitations to that approach of reasoning, and it has very much been superseded by other approaches that are rigorously grounded in mathematics rather than rhetoric.
I am seldom wrong, that is why I am an enigma to you because you are quite the opposite as are those you admire and follow. You start from degenerate intellectual foundations, disparaging the true foundations of human knowledge as having 'very serious limitations'; but did Issac Newton not say we
"stand on the shoulders of giants"? I don't know what to do with a person who thinks that rationality is some form of technology; how are we to evaluate the relative merits of older and newer rationality without some kind of neutral rationality to do so? I spy a certain Appeal to Novelty fallacy here.
I started on the assumption that C02 was heavier than Oxygen, I thought Bumber informed me that actually C02 was the same mass as oxygen and I believed Bumber (did Bumber actually say density?). I conceded the point so easily because it's *completely irrelevant* to what I was saying, since C02 is not competing directly with oxygen because the air is
NOT MADE OF OXYGEN. Thinking that the air is made of oxygen is like thinking the sea is made of salt, partly true but not very useful.
The air consists of nitrogen with oxygen dissolved into it, just like the sea behaves like water and not like a heap of salt, the oxygen in the air behaves like the nitrogen it is dissolved into. That means that we don't suffocate, because the oxygen which would normally float above the level of nitrogen is dissolved into the nitrogen we breathe and our lungs extract the oxygen from the nitrogen because of the diffusion of dissolved substances.
Even though oxygen is dissolved into the nitrogen, the oxygen in the nitrogen still diffuses itself, but only does so between and within substances in which it is soluble. Oxygen is soluble in both water and nitrogen, that means that if there is a deficit of oxygen in the water of the blood, the oxygen will flow from the air into the blood. Conversely if there is a surplus of C02 in the blood, it will flow into the nitrogen of the air in the lungs.