<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE article
  PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD JATS (Z39.96) Journal Publishing DTD v1.2 20120330//EN" "http://jats.nlm.nih.gov/publishing/1.2/JATS-journalpublishing1.dtd">
<article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"
         xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
         article-type="research-article"
         dtd-version="1.2"
         xml:lang="en">
   <front>
      <journal-meta>
         <journal-id>ZYGO</journal-id>
         <journal-title-group>
            <journal-title>Zygon®</journal-title>
            <abbrev-journal-title/>
         </journal-title-group>
         <issn pub-type="print">0591-2385</issn>
         <issn pub-type="electronic">1467-9744</issn>
      </journal-meta>
      <article-meta>
         <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.1111/j.1467-9744.1991.tb00824.x</article-id>
         <title-group>
            <article-title>TIME, THERMODYNAMICS, AND THEOLOGY</article-title>
         </title-group>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="author">
               <name name-style="western">
                  <surname>Murphy</surname>
                  <given-names>George L.</given-names>
               </name>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <aff id="a1"/>
         <pub-date publication-format="electronic" iso-8601-date="1991-09-02">
            <day>02</day>
            <month>09</month>
            <year>1991</year>
         </pub-date>
         <volume>26</volume>
         <issue>3</issue>
         <issue-id pub-id-type="doi">10.1111/zygo.1991.26.issue-3</issue-id>
         <fpage>359</fpage>
         <lpage>372</lpage>
         <permissions/>
         <abstract>
            <p>Keywords:  A theological approach to understanding time and change in a modern way must consider the relationships between thermal physics and time as elucidated during the past century and a half. The fact of temporal change, including death and decay, has been a religious problem since antiquity, so that some traditions have simply attempted to transcend the world of change. However, a major current of the Christian tradition has seen change as a fundamental aspect of God's creation, and one with which God becomes identified in the Incarnation. This implies approval of history, as having an ultimate value, rather than transcendence of it.</p>
            <p>We examine thermodynamics, and especially its Second Law, in order to understand more precisely the issues of temporal change. The Second Law states a universal tendency toward increasing disorder, and several implications of this law are discussed. Of particular significance, however, is the work of Prigogine and others on nonequilibrium thermodynamics, drawing attention to such phenomena as the enhancement of chemical reaction rates and the formation of “dissipative structures” in nonequilibrium situations. Such possibilities may be of considerable importance for understanding chemical and biological evolution.</p>
            <p>These ideas can be included in an evolutionary picture in which, following Teilhard de Chardin, the Body of Christ is seen as the future of evolution‐an “ultimate dissipative structure” in which the world of time and change is united with God. Suffering, death, and decay receive their meaning from the future. Within this framework it is therefore possible to believe that the material world of history may be part of the eschatological future and that science provides hints, though not predictions, of how that may happen.</p>
         </abstract>
         <kwd-group>
            <kwd>creation</kwd>
            <kwd>eschatology</kwd>
            <kwd>Incarnation</kwd>
            <kwd>thermodynamics</kwd>
            <kwd>time</kwd>
         </kwd-group>
         <counts/>
      </article-meta>
   </front>
   <body/>
   <back>
      <ref-list>
         <ref id="b1">
            <mixed-citation id="cit1" publication-type="book">Augustine. 1968. The City of God, book 11, chap. 6, in vol. 3 of Loeb Classical Library ed. 
            Cambridge
          : Harvard Univ. Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b2">
            <mixed-citation id="cit2" publication-type="book">Barrow, John D., and 
Frank J.Tipler. 1986. The Anthropic Cosmological Principle. 
            Oxford
          : Oxford Univ. Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b3">
            <mixed-citation id="cit3" publication-type="book">Bridgman, P.W.1936. The Nature of Physical Theory, chap. 8. 
            Princeton
            , 
            N.J.
          : Princeton Univ. Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b4">
            <mixed-citation id="cit4" publication-type="book">Childs, Brevard S.1960. Myth and Reality in the Old Testament. 
            Naperville
            , 
            Ill.
          : Allenson.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b5">
            <mixed-citation id="cit5" publication-type="book">Cox, Richard T.1955. Statistical Mechanics of Irreversible Change. 
            Baltimore
          : Johns Hopkins Univ. Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b6">
            <mixed-citation id="cit6" publication-type="book">Crick, Francis. 1981. Life Itself. 
            New York
          : Simon and Schuster.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b7">
            <mixed-citation id="cit7" publication-type="book">Cruz, Joan Carroll. 1977. The Incorruptibles. 
            Rockford
            , 
            III.
          : TAN.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b8">
            <mixed-citation id="cit8" publication-type="book">Cullman, Oscar. 1950. Christ and Time. 
            Philadelphia
          : Westminster.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b9">
            <mixed-citation id="cit9" publication-type="book">De Groot, S. R., and 
P.Mazur. 1961. Non‐Equilibrium Thermodynamics. 
            Amsterdam
          : North Holland.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b10">
            <mixed-citation id="cit10" publication-type="book">Dostoyevski, Feodor. n.d.The Brothers Karamazou, 252–53. 
            New York
          : Grosset and Dunlap.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b11">
            <mixed-citation id="cit11" publication-type="book">Eddington, A.S.1929. The Nature of Physical World. 
            New York
          : Macmillan.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b12">
            <mixed-citation id="cit12" publication-type="book">Eliade, Mircea. 1959. Cosmos and History: The Myth of the Eternal Return. 
            New York
          : Harper.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b13">
            <mixed-citation id="cit13" publication-type="book">Gamow, George.1947. One Two Three… Infinity. 
            New York
          : Viking.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b14">
            <mixed-citation id="cit14" publication-type="book">Gold, T.1959. Proceedings of the International Solvay Congress, 1958. 
            Brussels
          : Stoops.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b15">
            <mixed-citation id="cit15" publication-type="book">Hawking, S.W., and 
G.F.R.Ellis. 1973. The Large Scale Structure of Space–Time. 
            Cambridge
          : Cambridge Univ. Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b16">
            <mixed-citation id="cit16" publication-type="book">King, Allen L.1962. Thermophysics, chap. 20. 
            New York
          : Free Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b17">
            <mixed-citation id="cit17" publication-type="book">Klotz, John W.1955. Genes, Genesis, and Evolution. 
            St. Louis
            , 
            Mo.
          : Concordia.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b18">
            <mixed-citation id="cit18" publication-type="book">Lyte, Henry F. 1978. Lutheran Book of Worship, hymn 272. 
            Minneapolis
            , 
            Minn.
          : Augsburg.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b19">
            <mixed-citation id="cit19" publication-type="book">Mason, Stephen F.1962. A History of the Sciences, chap. 39. 
            New York
          : Macmillan.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b20">
            <mixed-citation id="cit20" publication-type="journal">Murphy, George L.. 1984.“ On the 'Nonclassical Many‐Valuedness' of the Universe.<source>Foundations of Physics 
        </source>4:351.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b21">
            <mixed-citation id="cit21" publication-type="journal">Murphy, George L.. 1986.“ A Theological Argument for Evolution.<source>Journal of the American Scientific Affiliation 
        </source>38:19.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b22">
            <mixed-citation id="cit22" publication-type="journal">Murphy, George L.. 1987.“ The Paradox of Mediated Creation Ex Nihilo.<source>Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith 
        </source>39:221.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b23">
            <mixed-citation id="cit23" publication-type="journal">Murphy, George L.. 1988.“ Science and Theology in Lutheran Perspective.<source>The Cresset 
        </source>51:9.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b24">
            <mixed-citation id="cit24" publication-type="journal">Neugebauer, G., and 
W.Meier. 1976.“ Friedman‐Kosmen mit Irreversiblem Expansions verhalent.<source>Annalen der Physik 
        </source>33:161.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b25">
            <mixed-citation id="cit25" publication-type="book">Pagels, Heinz R.1986. Perfect Symmetry, 234–43. 
            New York
          : Bantam.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b26">
            <mixed-citation id="cit26" publication-type="book">Pannenberg, Wolfhart. 1977. Jesus–God and Man. 2d ed., 67. 
            Philadelphia
          : Westminster.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b27">
            <mixed-citation id="cit27" publication-type="book">Pascal, Blaise. 1961, The Penséex (no. 734), 252–53. 
            Baltimore
          : Penguin.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b28">
            <mixed-citation id="cit28" publication-type="book">Plato. 1963. “<source>Phaedo 
        </source>.” In The Collected Works of Plato. 
            Princeton
            , 
            N.J.
          : Princeton Univ. Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b29">
            <mixed-citation id="cit29" publication-type="book">Prigogine, I.1967. Thermodynamics of Irreversible Processes. 3d ed. 
            New York
          : Interscience.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b30">
            <mixed-citation id="cit30" publication-type="book">Prigogine, I.1980. From Being to Becoming. 
            San Francisco
          : Freeman.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b31">
            <mixed-citation id="cit31" publication-type="book">Robertson, Archibald. 1980. Prolegomena to works of Athanasius in vol. 4 of The Nicene and Post–Nicene Fathers (2d ser.), Ixix‐lxxiii and n. 3. Grand Rapids, 
            Mich.
          : Eerdmans.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b32">
            <mixed-citation id="cit32" publication-type="journal">Ross, Sharon Zanter. 1986.“Creation of Time and Christ's Presence in the Eucharist.<source>Lutheran Forum 
        </source>20: 10.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b33">
            <mixed-citation id="cit33" publication-type="book">Sears, Francis Weston. 1953. An Introduction to Thermodynamics, the Kinetic Theory of Gases, and Statistical Mechanics. 2d ed. 
            Reading
            , 
            Mass.
          : Addison‐Wesley.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b34">
            <mixed-citation id="cit34" publication-type="book">Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre. 1959. The Phenomenon of Man, book 3, chap. 1. Orlando, 
            Fla.
          : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b35">
            <mixed-citation id="cit35" publication-type="book">Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre1970. Activation of Energy, 321–37, esp. n. 16. Orlando, 
            Fla.
          : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b36">
            <mixed-citation id="cit36" publication-type="book">Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre1971. Christianity and Evolution. Orlando, 
            Fla.
          : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b37">
            <mixed-citation id="cit37" publication-type="book">Thaxton, Charles B., 
Walter L.Bradley, and 
Roger L.Olsen. 1984. The Mystery of Life's Origin. 
            New York
          : Philosophical Library.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b38">
            <mixed-citation id="cit38" publication-type="book">Theological Dictionary of the New Testament.1965. S.V. Grand Rapids, 
            Mich.
          : Eerdmans.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b39">
            <mixed-citation id="cit39" publication-type="journal">Thomson, W.. 1852.“On the Universal Tendency in Nature to the Dissipation of Mechanical Energy.<source>Philosophical Magazine 
        </source>4:304.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
         <ref id="b40">
            <mixed-citation id="cit40" publication-type="book">Tolman,Richard C.1934. Relativity, Thermodynamics, and Cosmology, chaps. 9 and 10. Oxford, 
            England
          : Oxford Univ. Press.
</mixed-citation>
         </ref>
      </ref-list>
   </back>
</article>
