See main: Rossini debateIn 1971, American chemical thermodynamicist Frederick Rossini argued that governments are regulated by the laws of chemical thermodynamics. In particular, during one part of his Priestley Medal address, he used a modified version of the combined law of thermodynamics, as shown below, to understand the paradox between freedom and security in social life: [2]
“Worst of all, there is some danger that chemical thermodynamics will have ascribed to it a power that it simply does not have, namely, the power to explain the human condition.”
“The point of all of this is that our creator has fashioned laws that are deep seated and broadly applicable, that science is heavily intertwined in our everyday life, frequently without our realization, that we need to break down the compartmentalization of knowledge, that we need to work for a unification of learning, and that we need to understand better the meaning and purpose of life.”
“Rossini was a devout Catholic all his life, and this was probably an important factor in his move to the University of Notre Dame in 1960 as dean of the College of Science there. The head of the chemistry department G. F. D'Alelio had resigned the previous year and the department was rudderless. Realizing that chemistry was one of the better departments in the college but needed help, Rossini additionally assumed the position of acting head, which he filled for over three years. (I followed him as head in 1964.) The combination of these administrative responsibilities obligated Rossini to suspend his beloved thermochemical research for the 11 years he stayed at Notre Dame.”
A young Frederick Rossini, Gilbert Lewis' most noted student, in respect to the human chemical thermodynamics. [6] |
“In 1971, Rossini received the Priestley Medal, the highest distinction conferred by the American Chemical Society, during which, in his address ‘Chemical Thermodynamics in the Real World’, he made a clever comparison of the counterplay of enthalpy and entropy in thermodynamics with that of security vis-à-vis freedom in the world at large.”— Ernest Eliel (1999), “Frederick Rossini” in Biographical Memoirs [4]
“Rossini was one of the preeminent thermodynamicists of the twentieth century.”Quotes | By— Ernest Eliel (1999), Biographical Memoirs, National Academies of Press (see: generations) [4]
References“Gilbert Lewis: inspirer to many to travel the broad highway of thermodynamics.”— Frederick Rossini (1950), Chemical Thermodynamics (pg. v) [5]