James Clerk Maxwell — "I have been trying to invent a demon who could violate the second law of thermod…"
I have been trying to invent a demon who could violate the second law of thermodynamics, but he keeps getting drunk on entropy.
I have been trying to invent a demon who could violate the second law of thermodynamics, but he keeps getting drunk on entropy.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"The human mind is in a state of perpetual oscillation between the actual and the possible."
"The chief philosophical difficulty in the present state of electrical science is to form a distinct conception of the mode in which electrical action is propagated through space."
"Mathematicians my flatter themselves that they possess new ideas which mere human language is as yet unable to express."
"The opinion seems to have got abroad, that in a few years all the great physical constants will have been approximately estimated, and that the only occupation which will then be left to men of scienc…"
"It is a perfect pleasure to think of anything that is not connected with the examination."
Found in 1 providers: deepseek
1 source checked
The speaker jokes about trying to create a being that could break the rule that disorder always increases in closed systems. The punchline is that even an imaginary creature designed to defeat this law ends up succumbing to the very chaos it was meant to overcome, humorously suggesting that disorder is so pervasive it corrupts anything that tries to fight it.
Maxwell actually proposed a famous thought experiment in 1867 known as Maxwell's Demon, a hypothetical creature that could sort fast and slow molecules to seemingly violate the second law of thermodynamics. This quip reflects his playful wit and his deep engagement with statistical mechanics, alongside his groundbreaking work unifying electricity, magnetism, and light into electromagnetic theory.
Maxwell worked in the Victorian era when thermodynamics was being formalized by Clausius, Kelvin, and Boltzmann. The second law had just been articulated, and debates raged about whether its statistical nature allowed loopholes. Industrial steam engines made efficiency and entropy urgent practical concerns, while physicists grappled with reconciling Newtonian determinism with the probabilistic behavior of molecules in gases.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty