There's no difference between organic and nonorganic flowers in terms of appearance or how long they remain fresh. They're only worth the cost if you care deeply about environmental concerns.
The word is variously spelled as one word "nonorganic" or hyphenated "non-organic" which is a specialized informal term because the true opposite of organic is inorganic. Neither is in most spell-checkers.
Yes, organic fruits can go bad before non-organic fruits since they lack genetic modifications and preservatives.
Vitamin E is an organic chemical (meaning a complex compound containing the element carbon), but if you are referring to the "food" sense of those words it may be either organic or nonorganic depending on its source and how it was processed. Note: in chemistry the terminology is organic and inorganic while in "foods" the terminology is organic and nonorganic. The terminologies are completely unrelated.
Higher echelons, joint forces, and national agencies
There isn't a difference becaue there both the same.
A Organic fruits have 50 percent more antioxidants than nonorganic fruits.
Basically, organic compounds have carbon. Inorganic do not.
Basically, organic compounds have carbon. Inorganic do not.
maybe
nothing
There is no difference except the words you use to describe them.