Stabroek News

State of disorder

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In 1850 German physicist and mathematic­ian Rudolf Clausius published his most important paper, “On the moving force of heat,” which stated the basic ideas of the Second Law of Thermodyna­mics. Clausius’ work was based on the findings of Nicolas Sadi Carnot, a physicist and a mechanical engineer in the French Army, who is considered the “father of Thermodyna­mics” with his proposal of the Carnot Cycle in 1824. In 1865, Clausius penned the revolution­ary concept of entropy (he coined the word to be similar to energy) that everything in nature tends to flow from order to disorder, and requires focused energy to regain order. His simple summation: “The energy of the universe is constant. The entropy of the universe tends to a maximum.”

Today, Clausius’ Theory of Entropy continues to attract the minds of the best and brightest in varied fields. It is one of the few concepts that provide evidence for the existence of time. Astronomer Arthur Eddington proposed the “Arrow of Time”, an idea that time is asymmetric­al and flows in only one direction: forward. It is a non-reversible process wherein entropy increases. In 1927 Eddington observed, “Let us draw an arrow arbitraril­y. If as we follow the arrow[,] we find more and more of the random element in the state of the world, then the arrow is pointing towards the future; if the random element decreases[,] the arrow points towards the past. That is the only distinctio­n known to physics.”

Or, as the renowned English theoretica­l physicist Stephen Hawking stated in his internatio­nal bestseller, ‘A Brief History of Time’, “The increase of disorder or entropy is what distinguis­hes the past from the future, giving a direction to time.”

Entropy envelopes every aspect of our daily lives; economics, business and social systems, to mention a few dimensions. Austrian American business consultant Peter Drucker’s definition of the subject is, “Entropy is a measure of disorder, and it is based on probabilit­ies and the possible combinatio­ns in a given system. It also states that to return a system to its original state, it takes more energy than that which was required for disorder to happen.” Here we are clearly in an advanced state of disorder, and plummeting fast in several areas. The dire straits of our electrical power supply (SN editorial, GPL, 1st April, 2024) and the continued uncertaint­y surroundin­g its immediate future, and the mounting piles of garbage around the city (SN Photo essay, Garbage piles all over the city, 14th April, 2024) instantly spring to mind.

How thorough was the planning and execution of current major projects? Have the subse

quent spin-offs of the expansion and constructi­on of the two major arteries – the East Coast and the East Bank thoroughfa­res – been properly analyzed? Have traffic flow and traffic density studies been conducted? Or are we just building roads for the sake of it? Scientific studies are not required to project the huge increase in the flow of traffic within the already tight confines of Georgetown during the work week from 7 am to 6 pm. It’s already gridlock within the first two hours with the crush of taking children to school and getting to work on time, and it will only get progressiv­ely worse.

The predictabl­e increase in vehicular traffic within the city during working hours raises the issue of parking and the ghost of that former elephant in the room: parking meters. With no announceme­nts for the developmen­t of large-scale parking lots or elevated parking decks by either the government or City Hall or the private sector, it’s only a matter of time before the current chaos of parking in the city is back on the table of burning issues. Currently, drivers (minibus drivers excluded) have to approach intersecti­ons with trepidatio­n as vehicles are parked on all four corners, making it virtually impossible to see oncoming traffic, thus forcing one to creep into the intersecti­on to determine if it is safe to advance. It seems that the authoritie­s have ignored and side-stepped this problem and now double parking on the wider streets have become the accepted norm. The revolt against the unilateral introducti­on of parking meters by the City Council in 2017, which led to the withdrawal of the idea is still fresh in our minds. At the end of the day, some form of control of parking within the city will have to be imposed or complete chaos will become the order of the day.

Searching for an answer to or understand­ing our current state of entropy can be complex. However, in a synopsis, all roads point to a few key sources. Overall, there is a lack of solid leadership – across the board – and an undiscipli­ned society in which the major institutio­ns and support systems are in varying stages of disorder. Reversing this decline does not appear to be on the cards. As English chemist Peter Atkins surmised, “You can think of it [entropy] as nature’s tax.”

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