Original cover to Erwin Schrodinger's famous 1994 Dublin lecture What is Life?, the book that inspired James Watson to discover DNA (1953) and that initiated the famous life feeds on negative entropy supposition. [3] |
“What then is that precious something that contained in our food which keeps us from death? That is easily answered. Every process, event, happening – call it what you will; in a word, everything that is going on in Nature means an increase of the entropy of the part of the world where it is going on. Thus a living organism continually increases its entropy – or, as you may say, produces positive entropy – and thus tends to approach the dangerous state of maximum entropy, which is death. It can only keep aloof from it, i.e. alive, by continually drawing from its environment negative entropy – which is something very positive as we shall immediately see. What an organism feeds upon is negative entropy. Or, to put it less paradoxically, the essential thing in metabolism is that the organism succeeds in freeing itself from all the entropy it cannot help produce while alive.”
“[I should have] let the discussion turn on free energy instead [but that] this high technical term seemed linguistically too near to energy for making the average reader alive to the contrast between the two things … the concept [free energy] is a rather intricate one, whose relation to Boltzmann’s order-disorder principle is less easy to trace than for entropy and ‘entropy taken with a negative sign’, which by the way is not my invention.”