Affiliation:
1. Department of Physics, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
Abstract
Thermodynamics is regarded as a universal but not foundational theory because its laws for macroscopic quantities have not been derived from microscopic entities. Thus, to root thermodynamics into the fundamental substance, atomism is revived, thinking that the light quantum is the indivisible and permanent element. Assuming the same basic building blocks constitute everything, the state of any system can be quantified by entropy, the logarithmic probability measure multiplied by Boltzmann’s constant. Then, the change in entropy expresses the system’s evolution toward thermodynamic balance with its surroundings. These natural processes consuming free energy in the least time accumulate sigmoidally, resulting in skewed distributions found throughout nature. In this way, thermodynamics makes sense of phenomena across disciplines and provides a holistic worldview to address questions such as what the world is, how we know about it, what is the meaning of life and how we should live.
This article is part of the theme issue ‘’Thermodynamics 2.0: Bridging the natural and social sciences (Part 1)’.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics
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