ABSTRACT This paper demonstrates that the second law of thermodynamics is not an independent fundamental law but an inevitable consequence of the competition between U (the expansive attribute) and D (the condensative attribute) in UD theory. From the mutual containment principle, the condensation of D must rely on local constraints provided by U as a background field. In isolated systems, without external energy to maintain these constraints, they naturally relax, causing D structures to spontaneously degenerate toward U. Entropy is defined as S = U/(U+D), which directly yields dS/dt > 0. The inequality is strict because U and D can never be zero—the mutual containment principle forbids pure states. The system eternally approaches but never reaches equilibrium. Unlike statistical mechanics, where entropy increase is only probabilistic, UD theory establishes it as an ontological necessity. The other laws of thermodynamics follow even more directly: the first law is the conservation U+D=C; the third law is the unattainability of pure D (U=0); the zeroth law follows from the scalar nature of the U-D ratio. All four laws are unified within the UD framework without additional assumptions. KEY FINDINGS 1. Dissipation is a physical identification: D structures require U constraints; without maintenance, they spontaneously degenerate (dD/dt 0, a deterministic law, not a probabilistic tendency. 4. The inequality is strict: U and D can never be zero by the mutual containment principle. The system eternally approaches but never reaches equilibrium. 5. The arrow of time originates from the unidirectionality of the U-D competition, not from special initial conditions. 6. This is falsifiable: an observation of spontaneous macroscopic entropy decrease would falsify UD theory, whereas statistical mechanics would merely call it "unlikely but possible." 7. The other laws of thermodynamics follow immediately from UD axioms: first law = conservation U+D=C; third law = unattainability of U=0 or D=0; zeroth law = transitivity of U-D equilibrium. COMPARISON WITH STATISTICAL MECHANICS - Statistical mechanics: Entropy increase is probabilistic; Poincaré recurrence is possible; equilibrium is theoretically attainable; arrow of time requires Past Hypothesis.- UD theory: Entropy increase is ontologically necessary; recurrence is impossible; equilibrium is never reached; arrow of time is intrinsic to U-D competition. UNIFICATION OF ALL FOUR LAWS - First Law: U+D = C (total normalization axiom)- Second Law: dS/dt > 0 (derived from dD/dt 0, D>0 eternally (mutual containment)- Zeroth Law: transitivity of U/D equilibrium (scalar field) ELIMINATED ASSUMPTIONS - Second law as axiom → Derived from U-D competition- Statistical derivation → Physical identification dD/dt < 0- Probabilistic entropy → S = U/(U+D), deterministic- Arrow of time postulate → U-D unidirectionality- Attainable equilibrium → Eternal approach, never reached- Past Hypothesis → Critical state breakdown Keywords: UD theory, second law of thermodynamics, entropy increase, arrow of time, U-D competition, unification of thermodynamics
Dan Zhu (Wed,) studied this question.
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