Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the First Edition
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Chapter I The Approach to the External World
- Chapter II The Methods of Science
- Chapter III The Framework of the External World—Space and Time
- Chapter IV Mechanism
- Chapter V The Texture of the External World—Matter and Radiation
- Chapter VI Wave-Mechanics
- Chapter VII Indeterminacy
- Chapter VIII Events
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the First Edition
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Chapter I The Approach to the External World
- Chapter II The Methods of Science
- Chapter III The Framework of the External World—Space and Time
- Chapter IV Mechanism
- Chapter V The Texture of the External World—Matter and Radiation
- Chapter VI Wave-Mechanics
- Chapter VII Indeterminacy
- Chapter VIII Events
- Index
Summary
Thermodynamics
The province of atomic physics is to discuss the nature of particular events, and it has been very successful in shewing us how it is that certain kinds of events occur, while others do not. Yet this can give us but little information as to what is happening to the universe as a whole. Another branch of physics, known as thermodynamics, takes this problem in hand; it does not concern itself with individual events separately, but studies events in crowds, statistically. Its province is to discuss the general trend of events, with a view to predicting how the universe as a whole will change with the passage of time.
The science of thermodynamics had its origin in severely practical problems relating to the efficiency of engines, but it was soon extended to cover the operations of nature as a whole. All this happened in the days when nature was assumed, without question, to be mechanical and deterministic. In what follows, we shall not treat nature as mechanical, but for the moment we shall treat it as though it were strictly deterministic.
On a deterministic view of nature, the universe never has any choice; its final state is inherent in its present state, just as this present state was inherent in its state at its creation. It must inevitably move along a single road to a predestined end, like a train rolling along a single-track line, on which there are no junctions of any kind.
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- The New Background of Science , pp. 266 - 307Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1931