What is fascinating about this book is that the deep amount of theory contained, a sort of theory of everything attempting to integrate the second law, with the nebular hypothesis, and evolution, among other phenomenon such as "black body stars" (black holes) as he called them, the "big collision" (big bang) theory of the origin of the universe, etc., was conceived in 1915-1916 as a sort of passing hobby by a seventeen-year-old child prodigy during his summer off who had just finished a mathematics degree at Harvard and was on his way to Law School at Cambridge. To give a decent representative quote: "Our theory of the origin of life is that there is no origin, but only a constant development and change of form." He mixes this in with discussions of endothermic and exothermic movements of matter in relation to animate matter (humans) and inanimate matter (food), into and out of the body, in way that seems to foreshadow the concept of free energy coupling developed in the 1920s through the 1940s, all in relation to chemical experiments and findings, such as the Haber process.
William Sidis Bücher
William James Sidis war ein außergewöhnliches mathematisches und sprachliches Wunderkind, das für seine radikalen Theorien über Kosmos und menschliche Gesellschaft bekannt wurde. Sein Buch „Das Belebte und das Unbelebte“ aus dem Jahr 1920 nahm Konzepte der Dunklen Materie, der Entropie und des Ursprungs des Lebens im Rahmen der Thermodynamik vorweg. Sidis war bekannt für seine unkonventionelle Erziehung, die seine lebenslange Besessenheit vom Wissen förderte. Sein interdisziplinärer Ansatz in der Wissenschaft, von der Kosmologie bis zur Linguistik und Geschichte, zusammen mit seinem Pazifismus, machen ihn zu einer faszinierenden Persönlichkeit, deren Werk bis heute studiert wird.
