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MANY of the important ideas of physics are of such recent birth that if they still seem hard to grasp, it may be contended that the world has not yet had the time to assimilate them. Of entropy this cannot be said; with its centenary almost upon us, entropy is ancient compared with most of the concepts which baffle the student today. Yet an aura of mystery seems to envelop it still, and two other things inseparably joined to it: the scale of temperature called absolute, and the Second Law of Thermodynamics. One is driven to wonder why the three of them resist the understanding so tenaciously, and certain reasons are not hard to find. Thus, to speak of the three as “joined together” is too weak, for it implies that they can at least be taken in a certain order for didactic purposes, the student ascending from the one to the next and finally to the last. Actually they are much too tightly interlocked for this, a sort of trinity one and indivisible, which must be apprehended as a whole if ever to be properly grasped at all. Again, the Second Law has been expressed in many different ways, and it is one of the oddest things in science to see how various authorities can claim that the law is obeyed absolutely without exception, while they themselves cannot agree how to state it. A further cause of trouble lies in the unlucky boundary between chemistry and physics, which nowhere harms these sciences more than in the study of entropy. Like the worst of the old-fashioned boundaries of Europe, it wanders capriciously across the natural lines of intercourse and trade, cutting off the traditional chemist from the origin and development of some of his most valuable ideas, cutting off the traditional physicist from some of the finest verifications of the thought of his fore-runners. It will be the principal object of this paper to dwell on these verifications, abolishing the barrier so far as may be feasible.
Karl K. Darrow (Mon,) studied this question.