Translation from the French text
In
his memorable series "Etudes sur le temps humain", Georges Poulet devoted
one volume to the "Mesure de l'instant".1 There he proposed a classification
of authors according to the importance they give to the past, present and future.
I believe that in such a typology my position would be an extreme one, as I live
mostly in the future. And thus it is not too easy a task to write this autobiographical
account, to which I would like to give a personal tone. But the present explains
the past.
In my Nobel Lecture, I speak much about fluctuations; maybe
this is not unrelated to the fact that during my life I felt the efficacy of striking
coincidences whose cumulative effects are to be seen in my scientific work.
I was born in Moscow, on the 25th of January, 1917 - a few months before
the revolution. My family had a difficult relationship with the new regime, and
so we left Russia as early as 1921. For some years (until 1929), we lived as migrants
in Germany, before we stayed for good in Belgium. It was at Brussels that I attended
secondary school and university. I acquired Belgian nationality in 1949.
My father, Roman Prigogine, who died in 1974, was a chemical engineer from
the Moscow Polytechnic. My brother Alexander, who was born four years before me,
followed, as I did myself, the curriculum of chemistry at the Université
Libre de Bruxelles. I remember how much I hesitated before choosing this direction;
as I left the classical (Greco-Latin) section of Ixelles Athenaeum, my interest
was more focused on history and archaeology, not to mention music, especially
piano. According to my mother, I was able to read musical scores before I read
printed words. And, today, my favourite pastime is still piano playing, although
my free time for practice is becoming more and more restricted.
Since
my adolescence, I have read many philosophical texts, and I still remember the
spell "L'évolution créatrice" cast on me. More specifically,
I felt that some essential message was embedded, still to be made explicit, in
Bergson's remark:
"The more deeply we study the nature of time, the
better we understand that duration means invention, creation of forms, continuous
elaboration of the absolutely new."
Fortunate coincidences made the
choice for my studies at the university. Indeed, they led me to an almost opposite
direction, towards chemistry and physics. And so, in 1941, I was conferred my
first doctoral degree. Very soon, two of my teachers were to exert an enduring
influence on the orientation of my future work.
I would first mention
Théophile De Donder (1873-1957).2 What an amiable character
he was! Born the son of an elementary school teacher, he began his career in the
same way, and was (in 1896) conferred the degree of Doctor of Physical Science,
without having ever followed any teaching at the university.
It was
only in 1918 - he was then 45 years old - that De Donder could devote his time
to superior teaching, after he was for some years appointed as a secondary school
teacher. He was then promoted to professor at the Department of Applied Science,
and began without delay the writing of a course on theoretical thermodynamics
for engineers.
Allow me to give you some more details, as it is with
this very circumstance that we have to associate the birth of the Brussels thermodynamics
school.
In order to understand fully the originality of De Donder's
approach, I have to recall that since the fundamental work by Clausius, the second
principle of thermodynamics has been formulated as an inequality: "uncompensated
heat" is positive - or, in more recent terms, entropy production is positive.
This inequality refers, of course, to phenomena that are irreversible,
as are any natural processes. In those times, these latter were poorly understood.
They appeared to engineers and physico-chemists as "parasitic" phenomena, which
could only hinder something: here the productivity of a process, there the regular
growth of a crystal, without presenting any intrinsic interest. So, the usual
approach was to limit the study of thermodynamics to the understanding of equilibrium
laws, for which entropy production is zero.
This could only make
thermodynamics a "thermostatics". In this context, the great merit of De Donder
was that he extracted the entropy production out of this "sfumato" when related
it in a precise way to the pace of a chemical reaction, through the use of a new
function that he was to call "affinity".3
It is difficult
today to give an account of the hostility that such an approach was to meet. For
example, I remember that towards the end of 1946, at the Brussels IUPAP meeting,4
after a presentation of the thermodynamics of irreversible processes, a specialist
of great repute said to me, in substance: "I am surprised that you give more attention
to irreversible phenomena, which are essentially transitory, than to the final
result of their evolution, equilibrium."
Fortunately, some eminent
scientists derogated this negative attitude. I received much support from people
such as Edmond Bauer, the successor to Jean Perrin at Paris, and Hendrik Kramers
in Leyden.
De Donder, of course, had precursors, especially in the
French thermodynamics school of Pierre Duhem. But in the study of chemical thermodynamics,
De Donder went further, and he gave a new formulation of the second principle,
based on such concepts as affinity and degree of evolution of a reaction, considered
as a chemical variable.
Given my interest in the concept of time,
it was only natural that my attention was focused on the second principle, as
I felt from the start that it would introduce a new, unexpected element into the
description of physical world evolution. No doubt it was the same impression illustrious
physicists such as Boltzmann5 and Planck6 would have felt
before me. A huge part of my scientific career would then be devoted to the elucidation
of macroscopic as well as microscopic aspects of the second principle, in order
to extend its validity to new situations, and to the other fundamental approaches
of theoretical physics, such as classical and quantum dynamics.
Before
we consider these points in greater detail, I would like to stress the influence
on my scientific development that was exerted by the second of my teachers, Jean
Timmermans (1882-1971). He was more an experimentalist, specially interested in
the applications of classical thermodynamics to liquid solutions, and in general
to complex systems, in accordance with the approach of the great Dutch thermodynamics
school of van der Waals and Roozeboom.7
In this way, I
was confronted with the precise application of thermodynamical methods, and I
could understand their usefulness. In the following years, I devoted much time
to the theoretical approach of such problems, which called for the use of thermodynamical
methods; I mean the solutions theory, the theory of corresponding states and of
isotopic effects in the condensed phase. A collective research with V. Mathot,
A. Bellemans and N. Trappeniers has led to the prediction of new effects such
as the isotopic demixtion of helium He3+ He4, which matched
in a perfect way the results of later research. This part of my work is summed
up in a book written in collaboration with V. Mathot and A. Bellemans, The
Molecular Theory of Solutions. 8
My work in this field
of physical chemistry was always for me a specific pleasure, because the direct
link with experimentation allows one to test the intuition of the theoretician.
The successes we met provided the confidence which later was much needed in my
confrontation with more abstract, complex problems.
Finally, among
all those perspectives opened by thermodynamcis, the one which was to keep my
interest was the study of irreversible phenomena, which made so manifest the "arrow
of time". From the very start, I always attributed to these processes a constructive
role, in opposition to the standard approach, which only saw in these phenomena
degradation and loss of useful work. Was it the influence of Bergson's "L'évolution
créatrice" or the presence in Brussels of a performing school of theoretical
biology?9 The fact is that it appeared to me that living things provided
us with striking examples of systems which were highly organized and where irreversible
phenomena played an essential role.
Such intellectual connections,
although rather vague at the beginning, contributed to the elaboration, in 1945,
of the theorem of minimum entropy production, applicable to non-equilibrium stationary
states.10 This theorem gives a clear explanation of the analogy which
related the stability of equilibrium thermodynamical states and the stability
of biological systems, such as that expressed in the concept of "homeostasy" proposed
by Claude Bernard. This is why, in collaboration with J.M. Wiame,11
I applied this theorem to the discussion of some important problems in theoretical
biology, namely to the energetics of embryological evolution. As we better know
today, in this domain the theorem can at best give an explanation of some "late"
phenomena, but it is remarkable that it continues to interest numerous experimentalists.12
From the very beginning, I knew that the minimum entropy production was
valid only for the linear branch of irreversible phenomena, the one to which the
famous reciprocity relations of Onsager are applicable.13 And, thus,
the question was: What about the stationary states far from equilibrium, for which
Onsager relations are not valid, but which are still in the scope of macroscopic
description? Linear relations are very good approximations for the study of transport
phenomena (thermical conductivity, thermodiffusion, etc.), but are generally not
valid for the conditions of chemical kinetics. Indeed, chemical equilibrium is
ensured through the compensation of two antagonistic processes, while in chemical
kinetics - far from equilibrium, out of the linear branch - one is usually confronted
with the opposite situation, where one of the processes is negligible.
Notwithstanding this local character, the linear thermodynamics of irreversible
processes had already led to numerous applications, as shown by people such as
J. Meixner,14 S.R. de Groot and P. Mazur,15 and, in the
area of biology, A. Katchalsky.16 It was for me a supplementary incentive
when I had to meet more general situations. Those problems had confronted us for
more than twenty years, between 1947 and 1967, until we finally reached the notion
of "dissipative structure". 17
Not that the question was
intrinsically difficult to handle; just that we did not know how to orientate
ourselves. It is perhaps a characteristic of my scientific work that problems
mature in a slow way, and then present a sudden evolution, in such a way that
an exchange of ideas with my colleagues and collaborators becomes necessary. During
this phase of my work, the original and enthusiastic mind of my colleague Paul
Glansdorff played a major role.
Our collaboration was to give birth
to a general evolution criterion which is of use far from equilibrium in the non-linear
branch, out of the validity domain of the minimum entropy production theorem.
Stability criteria that resulted were to lead to the discovery of critical states,
with branch shifting and possible appearance of new structures. This quite unexpected
manifestation of "disorder-order" processes, far from equilibrium, but conforming
to the second law of thermodynamics, was to change in depth its traditional interpretation.
In addition to classical equilibrium structures, we now face dissipative coherent
structures, for sufficient far-from-equilibrium conditions. A complete presentation
of this subject can be found in my 1971 book co-authored with Glansdorff.18
In a first, tentative step, we thought mostly of hydrodynamical applications,
using our results as tools for numerical computation. Here the help of R. Schechter
from the University of Texas at Austin was highly valuable.19 Those
questions remain wide open, but our centre of interest has shifted towards chemical
dissipative systems, which are more easy to study than convective processes.
All the same, once we formulated the concept of dissipative structure,
a new path was open to research and, from this time, our work showed striking
acceleration. This was due to the presence of a happy meeting of circumstances;
mostly to the presence in our team of a new generation of clever young scientists.
I cannot mention here all those people, but I wish to stress the important role
played by two of them, R. Lefever and G. Nicolis. It was with them that we were
in a position to build up a new kinetical model, which would prove at the same
time to be quite simple and very instructive - the "Brusselator", as J. Tyson
would call it later - and which would manifest the amazing variety of structures
generated through diffusion-reaction processes.20
This
is the place to pay tribute to the pioneering work of the late A. Turing,21
who, since 1952, had made interesting comments about structure formation as related
to chemical instabilities in the field of biological morphogenesis. I had met
Turing in Manchester about three years before, at a time when M.G. Evans, who
was to die too soon, had built a group of young scientists, some of whom would
achieve fame. It was only quite a while later that I recalled the comments by
Turing on those questions of stability, as, perhaps too concerned about linear
thermodynamics, I was then not receptive enough.
Let us go back to
the circumstances that favoured the rapid development of the study of dissipative
structures. The attention of scientists was attracted to coherent non-equilibrium
structures after the discovery of experimental oscillating chemical reactions
such as the Belusov-Zhabotinsky reaction;22 the explanation of its
mechanism by Noyes and his co-workers;23 the study of oscillating reactions
in biochemistry (for example the glycolytic cycle, studied by B. Chance24
and B. Hess25) and eventually the important research led by M. Eigen.26
Therefore, since 1967, we have been confronted with a huge number of papers on
this topic, in sharp contrast with the total absence of interest which prevailed
during previous times.
But the introduction of the concept of dissipative
structure was also to have other unexpected consequences. It was evident from
start that the structures were evolving out of fluctuations. They appeared in
fact as giant fluctuations, stabilized through matter and energy exchanges with
the outer world. Since the formulation of the minimum entropy production theorem,
the study of non-equilibrium fluctuation had attracted all my attention.27
It was thus only natural that I resumed this work in order to propose an extension
of the case of far-from-equilibrium chemical reactions.
This subject
I proposed to G. Nicolis and A. Babloyantz. We expected to find for stationary
states a Poisson distribution similar to the one predicted for equilibrium fluctuations
by the celebrated Einstein relations. Nicolis and Babloyantz developed a detailed
analysis of linear chemical reactions and were able to confirm this prediction.28
They added some qualitative remarks which suggested the validity of such results
for any chemical reaction.
Considering again the computations for
the example of a non-linear biomolecular reaction, I noticed that this extension
was not valid. A further analysis, where G. Nicolis played a key role, showed
that an unexpected phenomenon appeared while one considered the fluctuation problem
in nonlinear systems far from equilibrium: the distribution law of fluctuations
depends on their scale, and only "small fluctuations" follow the law proposed
by Einstein.29 After a prudent reception, this result is now widely
accepted, and the theory of non-equilibrium fluctuations is fully developing now,
so as to allow us to expect important results in the following years. What is
already clear today is that a domain such as chemical kinetics, which was considered
conceptually closed, must be thoroughly rethought, and that a brand-new discipline,
dealing with non-equilibrium phase transitions, is now appearing.30, 31,
32
Progress in irreversible phenomena theory leads us also
to reconsideration of their insertion into classical and quantum dynamics. Let
us take a new look at the statistical mechanics of some years ago. From the very
beginning of my research, I had had occasion to use conventional methods of statistical
mechanics for equilibrium situations. Such methods are very useful for the study
of thermodynamical properties of polymer solutions or isotopes. Here we deal mostly
with simple computational problems, as the conceptual tools of equilibrium statistical
mechanics have been well established since the work of Gibbs and Einstein. My
interest in non-equilibrium would by necessity lead me to the problem of the foundations
of statistical mechanics, and especially to the microscopic interpretation of
irreversibility.33
Since the time of my first graduation
in science, I was an enthusiastic reader of Boltzmann, whose dynamical vision
of physical becoming was for me a model of intuition and penetration. Nonetheless,
I could not but notice some unsatisfying aspects. It was clear that Boltzmann
introduced hypotheses foreign to dynamics; under such assumptions, to talk about
a dynamical justification of thermodynamics seemed to me an excessive conclusion,
to say the least. In my opinion, the identification of entropy with molecular
disorder could contain only one part of the truth if, as I persisted in thinking,
irreversible processes were endowed with this constructive role I never cease
to attribute to them. For another part, the applications of Boltzmann's methods
were restricted to diluted gases, while I was most interested in condensed systems.
At the end of the forties, great interest was aroused in the generalization
of kinetic theory to dense media. After the pioneering work by Yvon34,
publications of Kirkwodd35, Born and Green36, and of Bogoliubov37
attracted a lot of attention to this problem, which was to lead to the birth of
non-equilibrium statistical mechanics. As I could not remain alien to this movement,
I proposed to G. Klein, a disciple of Fürth who came to work with me, to
try the application of Born and Green's method to a concrete, simple example,
in which the equilibrium approach did not lead to an exact solution. This was
our first tentative step in non-equilibrium statistical mechanics.38
It was eventually a failure, with the conclusion that Born and Green's formalism
did not lead to a satisfying extension of Boltzmann's method to dense systems.
But this failure was not a total one, as it led me, during a later work,
to a first question: Was it possible to develop an "exact" dynamical theory of
irreversible phenomena? Everybody knows that according to the classical point
of view, irreversibility results from supplementary approximations to fundamental
laws of elementary phenomena, which are strictly reversible. These supplementary
approximations allowed Boltzmann to shift from a dynamical, reversible description
to a probabilistic one, in order to establish his celebrated H theorem.
We still encountered this negative attitude of "passivity" imputed to irreversible
phenomena, an attitude that I could not share. If - as I was prepared to think
- irreversible phenomena actually play ann active, constructive role, their study
could not be reduced to a description in terms of supplementary approximations.
Moreover, my opinion was that in a good theory a viscosity coefficient would present
as much physical meaning as a specific heat, and the mean life duration of a particle
as much as its mass.
I felt confirmed in this attitude by the remarkable
publications of Chandrasekhar and von Neumann, which were also issued during the
forties.39 That was why, still with the help of G. Klein, I decided
to take a fresh look at an example already studied by Schrödinger, 40
related to the description of a system of harmonic oscillators. We were surprised
to see that, for all such a simple model allowed us to conclude, this class of
systems tend to equilibrium. But how to generalize this result to non-linear dynamical
systems?
Here the truly historic performance of Léon van Hove
opened for us the way (1955).41 I remember, with a pleasure that is
always new, the time - which was too short - during which van Hove worked with
our group. Some of his works had a lasting effect on the whole development of
statistical physics; I mean not only his study of the deduction of a "master equation
" for anharmonic systems, but also his fundamental contribution on phase transitions,
which was to lead to the branch of statistical mechanics that deals with so-called
"exact" results.42
This first study by van Hove was restricted
to weakly coupled anharmonic systems. But, anyway, the path was open, and with
some of my colleagues and collaborators, mainly R. Balescu, R. Brout, F. Hénin
and P. Résibois, we achieved a formulation of non-equilibrium statistical
mechanics from a purely dynamical point of view, without any probabilistic assumption.
The method we used is summed up in my 1962 book.43 It leads to a "dynamics
of correlations", as the relation between interaction and correlation constitutes
the essential component of the description. Since then, these methods have led
to numerous applications. Without giving more detail, here, I will restrict myself
to mentioning two recent books, one by R. Balescu,44 the other by P.
Résibois and M. De Leener.45
This concluded the
first step of my research in non-equilibrium statistical mechanics. The second
is characterized by a very strong analogy with the approach of irreversible phenomena
which led us from linear thermodynamics to non-linear thermodynamics. In this
tentative step also, I was prompted by a feeling of dissatisfaction, as the relation
with thermodynamics was not established by our work in statistical mechanics,
nor by any other method. The theorem of Boltzmann was still as isolated as ever,
and the question of the nature of dynamics systems to which thermodynamics applies
was still without answer.
The problem was by far more wide and more
complex than the rather technical considerations that we had reached. It touched
the very nature of dynamical systems, and the limits of Hamiltonian description.
I would never have dared approach such a subject if I had not been stimulated
by discussions with some highly competent friends such as the late Léon
Rosenfeld from Copenhagen, or G. Wentzel from Chicago. Rosenfeld did more than
give me advice; he was directly involved in the progressive elaboration of the
concepts we had to explore if we were to build a new interpretation of irreversibility.
More than any other stage of my scientific career, this one was the result of
a collective effort. I could not possibly have succeeded had it not been for the
help of my colleagues M. de Haan, Cl. George, A. Grecos, F. Henin, F. Mayné,
W. Schieve and M. Theodosopulu. If irreversibility does not result from supplementary
approximations, it can only be formulated in a theory of transformations which
expresses in "explicit" terms what the usual formulation of dynamics does "hide".
In this perspective, the kinetic equation of Boltzmann corresponds to a formulation
of dynamics in a new representation.46, 47, 48, 49
In
conclusion: dynamics and thermodynamics become two complementary descriptions
of nature, bound by a new theory of non-unitary transformation. I came so to my
present concerns; and, thus, it is time to end this intellectual autobiography.
As we started from specific problems, such as the thermodynamic signification
of non-equilibrium stationary states, or of transport phenomena in dense systems,
we have been faced, almost against our will, with problems of great generality
and complexity, which call for reconsideration of the relation of physico-chemical
structures to biological ones, while they express the limits of Hamiltonian description
in physics.
Indeed, all these problems have a common element: time.
Maybe the orientation of my work came from the conflict which arose from my humanist
vocation as an adolescent and from the scientific orientation I chose for my university
training. Almost by instinct, I turned myself later towards problems of increasing
complexity, perhaps in the belief that I could find there a junction in physical
science on one hand, and in biology and human science on the other.
In addition, the research conducted with my friend R. Herman on the theory of
car traffic50 gave me confirmation of the supposition that even human
behaviour, with all its complexity, would eventually be susceptible of a mathematical
formulation. In this way the dichotomy of the "two cultures" could and should
be removed. There would correspond to the breakthrough of biologists and anthropologists
towards the molecular description or the "elementary structures", if we are to
use the formulation by Lévi-Strauss, a complementary move by the physico-chemist
towards complexity. Time and complexity are concepts that present intrinsic mutual
relations.
During his inaugural lecture, De Donder spoke in these
terms:51 "Mathematical physics represents the purest image that the
view of nature may generate in the human mind; this image presents all the character
of the product of art; it begets some unity, it is true and has the quality of
sublimity; this image is to physical nature what music is to the thousand noises
of which the air is full..."
Filtrate music out of noise; the unity
of the spiritual history of humanity, as was stressed by M. Eliade, is a recent
discovery that has still to be assimilated.52 The search for what is
meaningful and true by opposition to noise is a tentative step that appears to
be intrinsically related to the coming into consciousness of man facing a nature
of which he is a part and which it leaves.
I have many times advocated
the necessary dialogue in scientific activity, and thus the vital importance of
my colleagues and collaborators in the journey that I have tried to describe.
I would also stress the continuing support that I received from institutions which
have made this work a feasible one, especially the Université Libre de
Bruxelles and the University of Texas at Austin. For all of the development of
these ideas, the International Institute of Physics and Chemistry founded by E.
Solvay (Brussels, Belgium) and the Welch Foundation (Houston, Texas) have provided
me with continued support.
The work of a theoretician is related
in a direct way to his whole life. It takes, I believe, some amount of internal
peace to find a path among all successive bifurcations. This peace I owe to my
wife, Marina. I know the frailty of the present, but today, considering the future,
I feel myself to be a happy man.
References
1. G. Poulet, Etudes sur le temps humain, Tone 4, Edition 10/18, Paris, 1949.
2. See the note on De Donder in the Florilège (pedant le XIXe siècle et le début du XXe), Acad. Roy. Belg., Bull. Cl. Sc., page 169, 1968.
3.
Th. De Donder (Rédaction nouvelle par P. Van Rysselberghe), Paris, Gauthier-
Villars, 1936.
See also:
I. Prigogine and R. Defay: Thermodynamique
Chimique conformément aux méthodes de Gibbs et De Donder (2 Tomes),
Liège, Desoer, 1944-1946.
Or the translation in English:
Chemical
Thermodynamics, translated by D.H. Everett, Langmans 1954, 1962.
4. See Colloque de Thermodynamique, Union Intern. de Physique pure et appliquée (I.U.P.A.P.), 1948.
5. Bolzmann, L., Wien, Ber. 66, 2275, 1872.
6. Planck, M., Vorlesaungen engines search Autobiography Ilya Prigogine free - beastiality Prigogine Ilya ads - Autobiography underwear Prigogine pics Autobiography Ilya incest illegal - Ilya - Autobiography Prigogine Íàñîñ Hyundai - Autobiography Ïîäèóìû Accent Logan Prigogine Ilya Renault GetZ óíèâåðñàëüíûå über - free sex Ilya Prigogine scandal Autobiography Thermodynamik, Walter Ilya Autobiography beastiality free - search engines Prigogine de Gruyter, Berlin, Leipzig, 1930.
7. Timmermans,
J., Les Solutions Concentrées, Masson et Cie, Paris, 1936.
Let us
also quote his thesis on experimental research on demixtion in liquid mixtures.
8.
Prigogine, I., The Molecular Theory of Solutions, avec A. Bellemans et V. Mathot;
North-Holland Publ. Company, Amsterdam, 1957.
See also: Prigogine and Defay,
Ref. 3.
9. Let us quote some remarkable works of this
School:
Barchet, A., La Vie créatrice des formes, Alcan, Paris, 1927.
Dalcq, A., L'Oeuf et son dynamisme organisateur, Alban Michel. Paris, 1941.
Barchet, J., Embryologie Chimique, Desoer, Liège et Masson, Paris, 1946.
I was also much interested in the beautiful book by Marcel Florkin: L'Evolution
biochimique, Desoer, Liège, 1944.
10. Prigogine,
I., Acad. Roy. Belg. Bull. Cl. Sc. 31, 600, 1945.
- Etude thermodynamique
des phénomènes irréversibles. Thèse d'agrégation
présentée en 1945 à l'Université Libre de Bruxelles.
Desoer, Liège, 1947.
- Introduction à la Thermodynamique des
processus irréversibles, traduit de l'anglais par J. Chanu, Dunod, Paris,
1968.
11. Prigogine, I., and Wiame, J.M., Experientia, 2, 451, 1946.
12. Nicolis, G. and Prigogine, I., Self Organization in Non-Equilibrium Systems (Chaps. III and IV), J. Wiley and Sons, New York, 1977.
13. Onsager, L. , Phys. Rev., 37, 405, 1931.
14. Meixner, J., Ann. Physik, (5), 35,
701, 1939; 36, 103, 1939; 39, 333, 1941; 40, 165, 1941;
Zeitsch Phys. Chim. B 53, 235, 1943.
15. de Groot, S.R. and Mazur, P., Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics, North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1962.
16. Katchalsky, A. and Curran, P.F., Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics in Biophisics, Harvard Univ. Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1946.
17.
Prigogine, I., Structure, Dissipation and Life.
Theoretical Physics and
Biology, Versailles, 1967.
North-Holland Publ. Company, Amsterdam, 1969.
It is in this communication that the term "structure dissipative" is used for
the first time.
18. Glansdorff, P. and Prigogine, I.,
Structure, Stabilité et Fluctuations, Masson, Paris, 1971.
- Thermodynamic
Theory of Structure Stability and Fluctuations, Wiley and Sons, London, 1971.
- Traduction en langue russe: Mir, Moscouu, 1973.
- Traduction en langue
japonaise; Misuzu Shobo, 1977.
This book presents in detail the original
work by the two authors, which led to the concept of dissipative structure. For
a brief historical account, see also:
Acad. Roy. Belg., Bull. des Cl. Sc.,
LIX, 80, 1973.
19. Schechter, R.S., The Variational Method in Engineering, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1967.
20. Tyson, J., Journ. of Chem. Physics, 58, 3919, 1973.
21. Turing, A., Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London, Ser B, 237, 37, 1952.
22.
Belusov, B.P., Sb. Ref. Radiat. Med. Moscow, 1958.
Zhabotinsky, A.P., Biofizika,
9, 306, 1964.
Acad. Sc. U.R.S.S. Moscow (Nauka), 1967.
23. Noyes, R.M. et al., Ann. Rev. Phys. Chem. 25, 95, 1974.
24. Chance, B., Schonener, B. and Elsaesser, S., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 52, 337-341, 1964.
25. Hess, B., Ann. Rev. Biochem. 40, 237, 1971.
26. Eigen, M., Naturwissenschaften, 58, 465, 1971.
27. Prigogine, I. and Mayer, G., Acad. Roy. Belg. Bull. Cl. Sc., 41, 22, 1955.
28. Nicolis, G. and Babloyantz, A., Journ. Chem. Phys., 51, 6, 2632, 1969.
29. Nicolis, G. and Prigogine, I., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 68, 2102, 1971.
30. Prigogine, I., Proc. 3rd Symp. Temperature,
Washington D.C., 1954.
Prigogine, I. and Nicolis, G., Proc. 3rd. Intern.
Conference: From Theoretical Physics to Biology, Versailles, France, 1971.
31. Nicolis, G. and Turner, J.W., Proc. of the Conference on Bifurcation Theory, New York, 1977. To Appear.
32. Prigogine, I. and Nicolis, G., Non-Equilibrium Phase Transitions and Chemical Reactions, Scientific American. To Appear.
33. Prigogine, I., Non-Equilibrium Stastistical Mechanics, Interscience Publ., New York, London, 1962-1966. (For a brief history and original references.)
34. Yvon, J., Les Corrélations et l'Entropie en Mécanique Statistique Classique. Dunod, Paris, 1965.
35. Kirkwood. J.G., Journ, Chem. Physics, 14, 180, 1946.
36. Born, M. and Green, H.S., Proc, Roy, Soc. London, A 188, 10, 1946 and A 190, 45, 1947.
37. Bogoliubov, N. N., Jour. Phys. U.S.S.R. 10, 257, 265, 1949.
38. Klein, G. and Prigogine, I., Physica XIX 74-88; 88-100; 1053-1071, 1953.
39. Chandrasekhar, S., Stocastic Problems in Physics and Astronomy; Rev. of Mod. Physics, 15, no 1, 1943.
40. Shrödinger, E., Ann. der Physik, 44, 916, 1914.
41. Van Hove, L., Physica, 21, 512 (1955).
42. Van Hove, L., Physica, 16, 137 (1950).
43. Prigogine, I., cf. Ref. 33.
44. Balascu, R., Equilibrium and Non-Equilibrium Statistical Mechanics, Wiley, Interscience, 1957.
45. Résibois, P. and De Leener, M., Classical Kinetic Theory of Fluids, Wiley, Interscience, New York, 1977.
46. Prigogine, I., George, C., Henin, F. and Rosenfeld, L., Chemica Scripta, 4, 5-32, 1973.
47. Prigogine, I., George, C., Henin, F., Physica, 45, 418-434, 1969
48. Prigogine, I. and Grecos, A.P., The Dynamical Theory of Irreversible Processes, Proc. Intern. Conf. on Frontiers of Theor. Phys., New Delhi, 1976.
Kinetic Theory and Ergodic Properties in Quantum Mechanics, Abhandlungen der Akad. der Wiss., der D.D.R. Nr 7 n Berlin, Jahrgang 1977.49. Grecos, A.P. and Prigogine, I., Thirteenth IUPAP Conference on Statisyical Physics, Haifa, August 1977.
50. Prigogine, I. and Herman, R., Kinetic Theory of Vehicular trafic, Elsevier, 1971.
51. For the reference, see note 2.
52. Mircéa Eliade, Historie des croyances et fies idées religieuseu Vol. I., p. 10, Payot, Paris, 1976.
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1971-1980, Editor-in-Charge Tore Frängsmyr, Editor Sture Forsén, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1993
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
 
Ilya Prigogine died on May 28, 2003.