In human thermodynamics, an entropologist is an anthropologist whose studies and theories rest on the prediction of the ultimate thermodynamic leveling of all culture. [1] The term is a derivative of French anthropologist and philosopher Claude Lévi-Strauss' 1960s concept of entropology. In some scenarios, an entropologist is considered as any literary writer who uses the verbal ideas of entropy and disintegration. [2]
References
1. Diamond, Stanley. (1974). In Search of the Primitive: A Critique of Civilization, (pg. 95). Transaction Publishers.
2. Tanner, Tony. (1970). “The American Novelist as Entropologist”, London Magazine, n.s., 10, Oct. (tanner discusses the recent literary uses of entropy).