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| Tattoo (or inking) of the Clausius inequality; photo by Marco Fantoni (March, 2008); an example of art thermodynamics. In the photo, showing a hand holding both a new and burnt match, “the hand represents the capacity of the human mind to analyze and understand natural phenomena [such as] the power and imperative of irreversibility.” [3] |
“I have just recently found out about the EoHT—a truly marvelous project! I did not think that it could be possible for someone to be able to conduct such a demanding project, but the result itself proves it is possible. Thank you for the EoHT.”
— PhD physicist, comment to site creator Sadi-Carnot, Apr 13, 2009
| Some of the core books in Libb Thims' thermodynamics book collection: the three most germane to human thermodynamics being: (1) Clausius' 1865 Mechanical Theory of Heat, (2) Gibbs' 1876 Equilibrium on the Heterogeneous Substances, and (3) Lewis' 1923 Thermodynamics and the Free Energy of Chemical Substances. | EoHT wiki = weekly online manuscript construction. | Draft cover of possible future hardcover multi-volume: Encyclopedia of Human Thermodynamics. |
See main: IQ: 200+ and IQ: 225+The most visited page at the EoHT wiki is the IQ = 200+ page, with about 1,300 visits per month (Feb 2010), which is a tabulated listing of individuals with an intelligent quotient of 200 or above, ranked in corroboration with American psychologist Catherine Cox’s 1926 Early Mental Traits of 300 Geniuses and English accelerated-learning expert Tony Buzan’s 1994 Book of Genius.
| EoHT 2010 Ranking of IQ 225+ Geniuses |
1. Start articles or stubbies on related topics (e.g. see: list of articles to write) or add related references and material to existing articles.
2. Add related video clips or lectures, e.g. from YouTube (or make your own).
3. Help organize (or add to) the 500+ photos in the Photo Gallery
4. Make a vizu poll, e.g. see the Greatest Thermodynamicist of All Time? poll.
5. Join in with comment, discussion, cleaning, and or editing of these articles.
6. Donate used thermodynamics books (see: donation section).
| Thermodynamics News (more) |
| Thermodynamics Videos: Peter Atkins on the Four Laws and MC Hawking Entropy | |
See main: Founders of thermodynamicsAdd biographies or tidbits on those who helped to lay out the groundwork for the science of heat, such as Herman Boerhaave, William Cullen, Joseph Black, James Watt, Antoine Lavoisier, Benjamin Thomson, Joseph Fourier, Robert Mayer, James Joule, etc. Add to the biographies of those whose discussions, theories and publications worked to initiate the science of thermodynamics, notably Sadi Carnot, Émile Clapeyron, William Thomson, Hermann Helmholtz, William Rankine, Rudolf Clausius, James Maxwell, August Horstmann, Ludwig Boltzmann, Willard Gibbs, Walther Nernst, Theophile de Donder, Fritz Haber, Max Planck, Gilbert Lewis, Edward Guggenheim, etc.
See main: Human thermodynamics pioneersAdd to the biographies and theories of those thermodynamicists, physicists, scientists, philosophers and writers who, in some way or another, have published or professed their views on aspects of the thermodynamic operation of human life, including: Gustave Hirn (1869), Henry Adams (1910), Frederick Soddy (1921), Carl Jung (1928), Leslie White (1943), C.G. Darwin (1952), Thomas Pynchon (1960), Ilya Prigogine (1977), Georgi Gladyshev (1978), Kenneth Bailey (1990), Libb Thims (1995), David Hwang (2001), Jing Chen (2002), Ingo Müller (2002), John Avery (2003), Octavian Ksenzhek (2007), Richard Hughes (2008), among others.
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| European schools of thermodynamics |
See also: Wetpaint Central HelpTo start a new page, first play around with the practice page, then use the search box to see if the article exists, and (if it does not exist) then start the article by following the instructions in the following link: "how to start new page?" To see how to add equations, see the help page: equations and symbols.
| Person | Contribution | Person | Contribution |
Georg Helm (1851-1923) | His 1887 book The Doctrine of Energy, argued that energy and entropy was all that was need to uniform physics and contained an appended final chapter on the extension of the energy principle to social theory and economics. | Léon Winiarski (1865-1915) | Taught a course called “social mechanics”, at the University of Geneva (1894-1900), where he applied the dynamics of Italian mathematician Joseph Lagrange and the thermodynamics of German physicist Rudolf Clausius in sociology and economics; theorizing on concepts such as "aesthetic energy" among others. |
Yevgeny Zamyatin (1884-1937) | Explained the Russian revolutions of 1905 and 1917 in the language of thermodynamics. Wrote the 1921 novel We from the human particle point of view focused on the connection between entropic mechanism, evolutionary vitalism, and revolution; also, due to synesthesia, described the “color of entropy”. | Pierre Levy (1956-) | Explains philosophical aspects of the internet using a "molar" point of view of systems of people, intertwined with discussions on "human thermodynamics" and speculations on the future human engineering of "social bonds". |
See main: Evolution timeline; See also: Evolution, Evolutionary thermodynamics, Thermodynamic evolution, etc.The EoHT timeline, the Internet's longest horizontally-scrolling human evolution timeline, shows the main steps in the mechanism from assembly of subatomic particles 13.7-billion-years ago to the synthesis of the modern human. New links or intermediates in the connective timeline mechanism, from big bang to the formation of humans, are added periodically (the timelime evolves to). Help us add missing links in the mechanism. Also, on the evolution timeline page a musical scrolling timeline video can be watched. A June 2009 crop of the timeline is shown below:
See main: Working papersThe EoHT wiki is place to read newly developing articles that others have written as well as to post working human thermodynamics related papers (or short books) of your own work (or favorite authors) for others to read, discuss, and critique. Embedded readable articles can be added to any EoHT page, article, or biography. The following, for instance, is the 2008 book The Human Molecule (120-pages) by American chemical engineer Libb Thims, readable via DocStoc.com, shown as an example:
References 1. (a) Stats: EoHT.info gets roughly 12,000 visits (21,000 page views) per month; source: Google Analytics (Mar 14). (b) Alexa rank: 2,100,000 - Global / 900,000 - US (Mar 14). 2. Post a note in the threads (below or on the discussion page) if you have a suggestion for a new spotlight article. 3. (a) Irreversibility (photo) - Flickr. (b) Irreversibility – Flickr (Italian → English). Notes Quote: by a Croatian physicist; a published, decade-long, researcher on the entropy, free energy, and thermodynamics of social systems. | |
| A partial listing of rare human thermodynamics quotes. |
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Sadi-Carnot |
Latest page update: made by Sadi-Carnot
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