- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Frontispiece
- Epigraph
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- How This Book Came About
- Powerful Ideas Dealt with in the Book
-
I The Physical World -
1 Quantum Physics Takes Free Will into Account -
2 Unifying Particle Physics with the Cosmology of the Primordial Universe -
3 For Exoplanets, Anything Is Possible -
4 From Casimir Forces to Black-Body Radiation: Quantum and Thermal Fluctuations -
5 The Challenge of Climate Change -
6 Graphene and Its “Family”: The Finest Materials Ever to Exist -
7 The Laws of Thermodynamics Tell You What Is and What Is Not Possible -
8 Wisdom Hewn in Ancient Stones -
9 Galileo Programme: Planning Uncertainty and Imagining the Possible and the Impossible -
10 Looking Forward in Architecture by Looking Back -
11 The Seamless Coupling of Bits and Atoms -
II Information -
12 Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide -
13 The Logic of Physics versus the Logic of Computer Science -
14 The Pillars of MIT: Innovation, Radical Meritocracy, and Open Knowledge -
15 We Need Algorithms That Can Make Explicit What Is Implicit -
16 The Emergence of a Nonbiological Intelligence -
17 Remembering Our Future: The Frontier of Search Technologies -
18 The Challenge of the Open Dissemination of Knowledge, Distributed Intelligence, and Information Technology -
19 Technology Is Something to Make the World a Better Place -
20 Encryption as a Human Right -
21 Order in Cyberspace Can Only Be Maintained with a Combination of Ethics and Technology -
22 The Free Software Paradigm and the Hacker Ethic -
III Intelligence -
23 “Affective Computing” Is Not an Oxymoron -
24 Mind, Brain, and Behavior -
25 MIT Collaborative Innovation: It Takes >2 to Tango -
26 Mind over Matter: Brain-Machine Interfaces -
27 We Want Robots to See and Understand the World -
28 Between Caves: From Plato to the Brain through the Internet -
29 There Will Be No End of Work -
30 A Smart Mob Is Not Necessarily a Wise Mob -
31 Measuring the Intelligence of Everything -
32 Touching the Soul of Michelangelo -
IV Epilogue -
33 Geometry of a Multidimensional Universe: Weightless Art and the Painting of the Void - Name Index
- Subject Index
The Laws of Thermodynamics Tell You What Is and What Is Not Possible
The Laws of Thermodynamics Tell You What Is and What Is Not Possible
- Chapter:
- (p.77) 7 The Laws of Thermodynamics Tell You What Is and What Is Not Possible
- Source:
- Is the Universe a Hologram?
- Author(s):
Avelino Corma
Adolfo Plasencia
- Publisher:
- The MIT Press
Avelino Corma, the distinguished research chemist explains why scientific discovery is difficult. He then explains how ‘molecular recognition’ is achieved in nanochemistry, how molecular design and creating nanoreactors with zeolites is carried out in the laboratory to trap nanoparticles and make them react selectively, and what is meant by the ‘sociology of nanoparticles’. The relationship of chemistry with brain function or genome evolution is also considered. He then reflects on the role of chemistry from ancient times, when the discovery and synthesis of ammonia enabled the development of agriculture and societies, to the world as we know it today. The reason why chemistry is a fundamental discipline for balancing our ‘energy basket’ is also discussed, particularly with regard to achieving sustainable development of our planet.
Keywords: Cutting-edge chemistry, Catalysis, Molecular recognition, Nanoreactors, Weak interactions, Molecular interactions, Nanomaterials, Insulator atoms, Sociology of nanoparticles, Zeolites
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Frontispiece
- Epigraph
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- How This Book Came About
- Powerful Ideas Dealt with in the Book
-
I The Physical World -
1 Quantum Physics Takes Free Will into Account -
2 Unifying Particle Physics with the Cosmology of the Primordial Universe -
3 For Exoplanets, Anything Is Possible -
4 From Casimir Forces to Black-Body Radiation: Quantum and Thermal Fluctuations -
5 The Challenge of Climate Change -
6 Graphene and Its “Family”: The Finest Materials Ever to Exist -
7 The Laws of Thermodynamics Tell You What Is and What Is Not Possible -
8 Wisdom Hewn in Ancient Stones -
9 Galileo Programme: Planning Uncertainty and Imagining the Possible and the Impossible -
10 Looking Forward in Architecture by Looking Back -
11 The Seamless Coupling of Bits and Atoms -
II Information -
12 Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide -
13 The Logic of Physics versus the Logic of Computer Science -
14 The Pillars of MIT: Innovation, Radical Meritocracy, and Open Knowledge -
15 We Need Algorithms That Can Make Explicit What Is Implicit -
16 The Emergence of a Nonbiological Intelligence -
17 Remembering Our Future: The Frontier of Search Technologies -
18 The Challenge of the Open Dissemination of Knowledge, Distributed Intelligence, and Information Technology -
19 Technology Is Something to Make the World a Better Place -
20 Encryption as a Human Right -
21 Order in Cyberspace Can Only Be Maintained with a Combination of Ethics and Technology -
22 The Free Software Paradigm and the Hacker Ethic -
III Intelligence -
23 “Affective Computing” Is Not an Oxymoron -
24 Mind, Brain, and Behavior -
25 MIT Collaborative Innovation: It Takes >2 to Tango -
26 Mind over Matter: Brain-Machine Interfaces -
27 We Want Robots to See and Understand the World -
28 Between Caves: From Plato to the Brain through the Internet -
29 There Will Be No End of Work -
30 A Smart Mob Is Not Necessarily a Wise Mob -
31 Measuring the Intelligence of Everything -
32 Touching the Soul of Michelangelo -
IV Epilogue -
33 Geometry of a Multidimensional Universe: Weightless Art and the Painting of the Void - Name Index
- Subject Index