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Design in Nature: How the Constructal Law Governs Evolution in Biology, Physics, Technology, and Social Organization Hardcover – January 24, 2012
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Everything—from biological life to inanimate systems—generates shape and structure and evolves in a sequence of ever-improving designs in order to facilitate flow. River basins, cardiovascular systems, and bolts of lightning are very efficient flow systems to move a current—of water, blood, or electricity. Likewise, the more complex architecture of animals evolve to cover greater distance per unit of useful energy, or increase their flow across the land. Such designs also appear in human organizations, like the hierarchical "flowcharts" or reporting structures in corporations and political bodies.
All are governed by the same principle, known as the Constructal Law, and configure and reconfigure themselves over time to flow more efficiently. Written in an easy style that achieves clarity without sacrificing complexity, Design in Nature is a paradigm-shifting book that will fundamentally transform our understanding of the world around us.
- Print length304 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDoubleday
- Publication dateJanuary 24, 2012
- Dimensions6.43 x 1.16 x 9.53 inches
- ISBN-100385534612
- ISBN-13978-0385534611
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Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
Review
"Interesting....brings a useful new perspective to ubiquitous natural phenomena"--New Scientist
"[I] found myself immediately sucked in....The Constructal Law is important because it not only describes the patterns of change in the world within and around us, but it allows us to predict how the configuration of those patterns will evolve over time."--Forbes
"Provocative, witty, well written....makes a strong case"--Charlotte Observer
"Brilliant. He effectively illustrates complex ideas for a general audience, provides real-world examples, and includes scholarly notes and references. A landmark publication."--Library Journal
"Lucidly written....a revolutionary, unifying vision of nature that could impact all branches of science"--Booklist
"Filled with fascinating observations and brainteasers....gracefully written"--Macleans
"Presents complex ideas in an understandable context....source of food for thought....interesting....excellent reflection on the history of science."--Winnipeg Free Press
“DESIGN IN NATURE is an elegant exposition of a unifying principle so simple that it demystifies our comprehension of the "flow" of the universe. An absorbing and thoughtful account of why nature is designed that way it is; Bejan engages the reader from the very first sentence to last word.”
--Donald Johanson, Founding Director of the Institute of Human Origins and noted discoverer of "Lucy"
“Why do riverbeds, blood vessels, and lightning bolts all look alike? It’s not a coincidence. This extraordinary book proposes a law of nature whose power is matched only by its simplicity. Everything you lay your eyes on will blow your mind with fresh interpretation.”
—David Eagleman, The New York Times bestselling author of INCOGNITO and SUM, and Director of the Laboratory for Perception and Action at the Baylor College of Medicine
“After reading this deeply inspiring and liberating book, you will never look at the world—the whole world—the same again. It not only helps us to better understand the natural environment, but it has profound implications for how we all need to act if we want to sustain success. This perspective is not just for scientists—it helps to reframe agendas for entrepreneurs, business executives, educators, and policy makers. Go with the flow!”
—John Hagel, co-author of The Power of Pull, and Co-Chairman of the Deloitte Center for the Edge
“Bejan masterfully unifies—under a deep common law—physics, chemistry, biology, and even part of the social sciences. His treatment of natural design, flow systems, and complex order as spontaneously arising from flow optimization is novel, powerful, and highly plausible.”
—Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, author of What Darwin Got Wrong, and Professor of Cognitive Science at the University of Arizona
“The most amazing thing about life is that it exists at all. The second most amazing thing about life is that living things seem to be so very good at it. In his bold new book Bejan asks why, and his answer cuts to the very core of what life is—organized flows of heat, electricity, matter, and energy. From this deceptively simple idea, Bejan takes us on an incredible expedition through life’s vast scope, from tiniest cell to organism to societies to ecosystems to the entire planet. It is a bracing journey.”
—J. Scott Turner, author of The Tinkerer’s Accomplice, and Professor of Biology at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse
“With wide-ranging examples and the iconic pictures to go with them, Bejan illustrates that nature is inherently an outstanding designer of flow configurations, which raises philosophic issues beyond the remit of thermodynamics. Is the distinction between animate and inanimate blurred by their common constructal design? These and many more issues are raised by Bejan’s distinguished and original work, fittingly presented in Design in Nature.”
—Jeffery Lewins, Deputy Praelector at Magdalene College at Cambridge University
“A most stimulating thought principle, framed in a nice and lively personal story. What I really find most exciting is the exceptionally broad perspective that Bejan adopts for developing his concepts. Design in Nature is a fascinating read.”
—Ewald Weibel, Professor Emeritus of Anatomy at the University of Berne
“Thought provoking! Thermodynamics may determine where you’re going; here’s a rule that tells how you get there. And so simple—the more efficient the pathway, the more likely is its persistence, whatever the mechanism behind that persistence. This is science at its biggest and boldest.”
—Steven Vogel, author of Cats’ Paws and Catapults, and James B. Duke Professor of Biology at Duke University
About the Author
J. PEDER ZANE is an award-winning columnist who has worked for the New York Times and the Raleigh News.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Discovering a unifying law of design in nature was not on my to-do list when I traveled to Nancy, France, in late September 1995. I was a forty-seven-year-old professor of mechanical engi- neering at Duke University who had come to deliver a lecture at an international conference on thermodynamics. Giving you a sense of how steeped my career was in mechanical engineering, I remember that I had brought flyers announcing the publication of my seventh book, Entropy Generation Minimization.
My work took a fateful turn during the prebanquet speech delivered by the Belgian Nobel laureate Ilya Prigogine. Echo- ing the scientific community’s conventional wisdom, this famous man asserted that the tree-shaped structures that abound in nature—including river basins and deltas, the air passages in our lungs, and lightning bolts—were aléatoires (the result of throw- ing the dice). That is, there is nothing underlying their similar design. It’s just a cosmic coincidence.
When he made that statement, something clicked, the penny dropped. I knew that Prigogine, and everyone else, was wrong. They weren’t blind; the similarities among these treelike struc- tures are clear to the naked eye. What they couldn’t see was the scientific principle that governs the design of these diverse phe- nomena. In a flash, I realized that the world was not formed by random accidents, chance, and fate but that behind the dizzying diversity is a seamless stream of predictable patterns.
As these thoughts began to flow, I started down a long, uncharted, and wondrously exciting path that would allow me to see the world in a new, and better, light. In the sixteen years since, I have shown how a single law of physics shapes the design of all around us. This insight would lead me to challenge many articles of faith held by my scientific colleagues, including the bedrock beliefs that biological creatures like you and me are governed by different principles from the inanimate world of winds and rivers and the engineered world of airplanes, ships,
and automobiles. Over time, I would develop a new understand- ing of evolutionary phenomena and the oneness of nature that would reveal how design emerges without an intelligent designer. I would also offer a new theory for the history of Earth and what it means to be alive.
In addition, I and a growing number of scientists around the world would begin finding new ways to make life easier: better ways to design roads and transport systems; to predict the evolution of civilization and science, of cities, universities, sports, and the global use of energy. We would unravel the mysteries of Egypt’s Pyramids and the genius of the Eiffel Tower while demonstrating how governments are designed like river basins and how busi- nesses are as interdependent as the trees on the forest floor.
All that lay in the future when I boarded the plane for the trip home. High over the Atlantic, I opened my notebook (the old- fashioned kind, with paper) and wrote down the constructal law:
For a finite-size flow system to persist in time (to live), its configuration must evolve in such a way that provides easier access to the currents that flow through it.
I was writing in the language of science, but the fundamental idea is this: Everything that moves, whether animate or inani- mate, is a flow system. All flow systems generate shape and struc- ture in time in order to facilitate this movement across a landscape filled with resistance (for example, friction). The designs we see in nature are not the result of chance. They arise naturally, spon- taneously, because they enhance access to flow in time.
Flow systems have two basic features (properties). There is the current that is flowing (for example, fluid, heat, mass, or infor- mation) and the design through which it flows.
A lightning bolt, for example, is a flow system for discharging electricity from a cloud. In a flash it creates a brilliant branched structure because this is a very efficient way to move a current (electricity) from a volume (the cloud) to a point (the church steeple or another cloud). A river basin’s evolution produces a similar architecture because it, too, is moving a current (water) from an area (the plain) to a point (the river mouth). We also find a treelike struc- ture in the air passages of lungs (a flow system for oxygen), in the capillaries (a flow system for blood), and the dendrites of neurons in our brains (a flow system for electrical signals and images). This treelike pattern emerges throughout nature because it is an effective design for facilitating point-to-area and area-to-point flows. Indeed, wherever you find such flows, you find a treelike structure.
Since human beings are part of nature and governed by its laws, the point-to-area and area-to-point flows we construct also tend to have treelike structures. These include the transportation routes we follow to work (a flow system for moving people and goods), which include many smaller driveways and neighborhood paths flowing into a few larger roads and highways. So, too, do the flowing networks of information, material, employees, and customers that keep those businesses afloat. The engineered world we have built so that we can move more easily does not copy any part of the natural design; it is a manifestation of it. That said, once we know the principle, we can use it to improve our designs.
Although treelike structures are a very common design in nature, they are only one manifestation of the constructal law. In a simple example, logs floating on a lake or icebergs at sea ori- ent themselves perpendicular to the wind in order to facilitate the transfer of motion from the moving air body to the water body. A more complex example is the design of animals that have evolved to move mass better and better (to cover more distance per unit of useful energy) across the landscape. This includes the seemingly “characteristic” sizes of organs, the shape of bones, the rhythm of breathing lungs and beating hearts, of undulating tails, running legs, and flapping wings. All these designs have arisen—and work together—to allow animals, like raindrops in a river basin, to move more easily across a landscape.
The constructal law dictates that flow systems should evolve over time, acquiring better and better configurations to provide more access for the currents that flow through them. Design gen- eration and evolution are macroscopic physics phenomena that arise naturally to provide better and better flow access to the currents that run through them. The majesty of this principle is that it occurs at every scale. Each component of an evolving flow system—each rivulet, each tree, each road—acquires evolving designs to facilitate flow access. As these elements coalesce into larger and larger structures (into evolving river basins, forests, and transport networks), the various-sized components work
together so that everything flows more easily. We see this, for example, in the shape and structure of the neural networks in the brain, of the alveoli in the lung, and the human settlements on a map. In the big picture, all the mating and morphing flows on the largest system that surrounds us, the Earth itself, evolve to enhance global flow. E pluribus unum (one out of many).
The constructal law is revolutionary because it is a law of physics—and not just of biology, hydrology, geology, geophys- ics, or engineering. It governs any system, any time, anywhere, encompassing inanimate (rivers and lightning bolts), animate (trees, animals), and engineered (technology) phenomena, as well as the evolving flows of social constructs such as knowledge, language, and culture. All designs arise and evolve according to the same law.
This law tears down the walls that have separated the disci- plines of science by providing a new understanding of what it means to be alive. Life is movement and the constant morphing of the design of this movement. To be alive is to keep on flow- ing and morphing. When a system stops flowing and morphing, it is dead. Thus, river basins configure and reconfigure them- selves to persist in time. When they stop flowing and morphing they become dry riverbeds, that is, the fossilized remains of earlier “live” flow systems. The solid, treelike veins of ore found under- ground today, for example, are fossils of the fluid streams, eddies, and meanders that flowed before solidification a long time ago. Biological creatures are alive until all their flows (blood, oxygen, locomotion, and so on) stop, after which they, too, become fos- silized remains.
This unifying definition marks an advance because it removes the concept of life from the specialized domain of biology. It aligns it (or, better, it juxtaposes it) with the physics concept of the dead state, which means “equilibrium with the environ- ment” in thermodynamics: a system that is at the same pres- sure, the same temperature, and so forth as its surroundings, and hence, in which nothing moves. The constructal law defines
life in physics terms, and it covers all live-system phenomena. It also reframes the view that life on Earth began with the rise of primitive species some 3.5 billion years ago. As we will see, “life” began much earlier, when the first inanimate systems, such as currents of solar heat and wind, acquired evolving designs. In the big history of life on Earth, the emergence and evolution of inanimate, animate, and technological designs tell a single story. Where Darwin showed the links between biological creatures, the constructal law connects everything on the planet.
On one level, the constructal law can be expressed through the language of mathematics, physics, and engineering. My col- leagues and I have published hundreds of articles in leading peer- reviewed journals. My own books for specialists—including Advanced Engineering Thermodynamics; Shape and Structure, from Engineering to Nature; and Design with Constructal Theory—use the constructal law to predict the phenomenon of design configura- tion. Leading universities, from Paris and Lausanne to Shanghai and Pretoria, have hosted international conferences and courses on the constructal law.
You don’t need advanced mathematics to grasp it. The con- structal law is also a way of seeing. Since discovering the law, I have witnessed thousands of people—from renowned scholars and professional scientists to my students at Duke and those at high schools I’ve visited—experience a moment of discovery like the one I had in Nancy. They, too, hear the penny drop. They see it. They get it. Through this book I hope to help you recog- nize how the constructal law is shaping everything around—and within—you.
Seeing constructally can be thought of as a three-step process. Step one starts with Leonardo da Vinci’s insight that “motion is the cause of every life.” I love this quote because it is so expan- sive. And yet, Leonardo didn’t take it far enough, because he was talking only about biological creatures. In fact, not only ani- mals but also rivers, weather patterns, snowflakes, corporations, nations, science, knowledge, culture—you name it—throb and pulse with movement.
Even things that seem just to sit there are, in fact, flow systems. Take that quintessence of stagnation, the mud puddle. There it sits, murky and soupy. And yet, when the sun emerges after the rain, dry air begins to draw moisture from it because of the natu- ral tendency toward equilibrium (in this case, of wet and dry). Before long, the puddle is gone. Soon the dirt begins to crack in telltale, treelike patterns in order to facilitate the flow of mois- ture from the ground to the air. That puddle is, in fact, a vibrant, morphing flow system. If we trained a movie camera on it, we’d see plenty of action.
Human beings are also flow systems, similar to but more com- plex than mud cracks. Internally, the flow of blood carries oxygen and food through a treelike network of blood vessels to organs whose size and shape are just right to enable us to move efficiently per amount of useful energy derived from food. The design of our bodies—just like that of every other animal from sharks to antelopes to great blue herons as well as that of trucks on the highway—has evolved to enable us to cover greater distances per unit of useful energy (food, fuel). And, like trees in the forest, we are also part of other, much larger, flow systems on Earth. When we get in cars, we enter the flow of traffic. In the office, the work we produce flows along with that of coworkers to reach customers through various channels. At the supermarket, tea that flowed from farmers and distributors in Sri Lanka settles into our shopping baskets. As we will see, all these seemingly independent designs are morphing and mating to facilitate our movement.
Step two is to recognize that all flow systems have the ten- dency to endow themselves with a characteristic that was not recognized until the constructal law—design. This property includes the flow system’s configuration (the architecture, geom- etry, shape, and structure) and its rhythm (the predictable rate at which it pulses and moves).
Design does not emerge willy-nilly. To know why things look the way they do, first recognize what flows through them and then think of what shape and structure should emerge to facili- tate that flow. The configuration of a flow system is not a periph- eral feature. It is the defining characteristic. In later chapters we will illustrate this by showing how the shape and structure of seemingly disparate phenomena—including rivers, fish, sprinters, economies, universities, and the Internet—are predicted by the constructal law.
Step three turns our drawing into a movie because designs evolve. Flow systems configure and reconfigure themselves over time. This evolution occurs in one direction: Flow designs get measurably better, moving more easily and farther if possible. Of course, there will be bumps and mistakes: Every trial involves error. But in broad terms, tomorrow’s system should flow better than today’s.
This is the natural phenomenon covered by the constructal law: the generation, ceaseless morphing, and improvement of flow design. This mental viewing enables us to recognize that people, birds, and other animals are flow systems that carry mass on the surface of the globe; that trees and mud cracks are flow systems for moving water from the ground to the air; that universities, newspapers, and books are flow systems for spreading knowledge across the globe. All generate designs that should evolve to better facilitate the flow of these currents. This insight allows us to rec- ognize pattern in phenomena long dismissed as accident.
Consider the snowflake. The prevailing view in science is that the intricate crystals formed by the snowflake have no function. This is wrong. In fact, the snowflake is a flow design for dispersing the heat—called the latent heat of solidification—generated on its surfaces during freezing. As water vapor condenses and freezes it throws off its excess heat. When the ice crystal first forms, its spherical bead is the shape that grows faster than other shapes, the shape that facilitates rapid solidification. When the bead is large enough, needles emerge and enhance solidification (that is, pro- duce ice) faster than the sphere. To facilitate solidification even more, larger snowflakes morph into shapes with more needles that disperse heat. Complexity is finite (modest), and is part of the constructal design that emerges. Complexity is a result, not an objective; not an artist’s wish; and, contrary to current dogma based in fractal geometry, it is certainly not “maximized.”
Now let’s take a closer look at the organized fury of an erupt- ing volcano—a flow system of lava. As it begins its journey through the shaft, the concentration of the mixture of molten rock is such that lava organizes itself into a series of concentric sheaths. In the center is lava of high viscosity (less runny); on the outside is lava of low viscosity (runnier). The low-viscosity lava that touches the solid rock helps it flow. When lava pours out of the volcano, another remarkable phenomenon occurs: The lava seems to select between two flow options, choosing the better way to move at any given time. If the molten rock is moving slowly, it oozes out of the volcano. If it is moving quickly, it generates a different flow configuration—a treelike structure with channels and branches—because this is the better way to move quickly. And, if we know the size of the area that the lava will spread across, we can predict the number of channels that will be generated.
What we are seeing is the mindless lava self-organizing into flow patterns to ease movement. This process happens every- where in nature. Depending on its size and speed, a falling drop of liquid, for example, will become a splat (round disk) or a splash (crown shape). Smaller and slower droplets come to rest as splats. Larger and faster droplets come to rest as splashes. This phenome- non is well established. Your ink-jet printer, for example, depends on it, emitting specific quantities of ink at just the right speed in order to produce precise images. So does the forensic science of blood splatter popularized through TV crime shows. Before the constructal law, no one knew why this splat versus splash happens. As we will explore later in this book, these two shape-generating ways of flowing—slow and short, fast and long—are ubiquitous. In fact, most systems, including every beat of your heart, every breath you take, and the circuits that power your computer and brain, involve both types of flows. Striking the balance between them is a hallmark of natural design.
The constructal law also teaches us that evolution can be observed at all timescales, including during our own lifetime. When we speak of rivers and animals evolving to increase flow access, we are describing very gradual changes. But when lava generates design, droplets of liquid splash and splat, lightning bolts crackle in the summer heat, and snowflakes form against the winter sky, we are witnessing evolution right before our eyes. We can also watch it occur at home. For instance, if you throw some rigatoni into a pot of boiling water, you can watch the tubes tumble around in a disorganized fashion. After a few minutes, something amazing happens. Instead of lying flat, they begin to stand up straight, organizing themselves into a chim- neylike pattern to facilitate the flow of heat and steam. If you prefer rice to pasta, boil some of that. When the water level drops enough, you will see equally spaced chimneys of steam escaping the entire mushy body. An exquisite tapestry of little volcanoes with round shafts is the easiest way for the heat to come out of the boiling mass, and they form every time In both cases, the riddle of design is solved by asking what is flowing. The answer is not rigatoni or rice but heat and steam.
Similarly, if you drop a piece of toilet paper from the top of a tall ladder, it undulates so that it falls like a meandering river. Or when you pour a glass of dark beer, regu- larly spaced eddies emerge around the rim. In both cases, it is not the toilet paper or beer that is generating design but the momentum created when these objects fall. Because of the natural tendency toward equilibrium, the momentum (the movement) is transferred laterally to the surrounding still air and water through the design phenomenon of turbulence. In all instances, design emerges because things flow better with configuration.
Of course, there is no conscious intelligence behind these patterns, no Divine Architect churning out brilliant blueprints. To preempt any confusion, let me make this perfectly clear: The constructal law is not headed toward a creationist argument, and in no way does it support the claims of those who promulgate the fantasy of intelligent design. Anyone who takes excerpts from this book to suggest that I am arguing for a spiritual sense of “designedness” is engaging in an intentional act of dishonesty.
Instead, just as other impersonal, naturally arising phenomena such as gravity, the freezing points of fluids, and thermodynam- ics make things operate in a certain way, flow systems gener- ate better and better flowing designs. Until now, we could only observe the patterns. The constructal law tells us why those pat- terns arise and empowers us to predict how they should change in the future. It reveals that it is not love or money that makes the world go round but flow and design.
This raises the question: How come? What causes the con- structal law? The short answer: We don’t know. The constructal law is what is known in science as a first principle, an idea that cannot be deduced or derived from other laws (if it could, it would be a theorem). It just is—a law of physics that governs the emergence of macroscopic shape and structure in nature. Like all scientific laws, it is a concise summary that encompasses bil- lions of observations of natural phenomena of the same kind. It addresses two of the biggest questions in science: Why does “designedness” (configuration, rhythm, scaling rules) happen everywhere in animate and inanimate systems alike?
Why does the design-generation phenomenon persist in time?
The constructal law is a shout from the rooftops: Everything that flows and moves generates designs that evolve to survive (to live). This is not a desire or objective but the natural tendency, that is, the physics phenomenon.
Product details
- Publisher : Doubleday; First Edition (January 24, 2012)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 304 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0385534612
- ISBN-13 : 978-0385534611
- Item Weight : 1.35 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.43 x 1.16 x 9.53 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,330,971 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,293 in Mechanical Engineering (Books)
- #3,875 in Evolution (Books)
- #10,431 in Physics (Books)
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About the authors

Adrian Bejan was awarded the 2018 Benjamin Franklin Medal for "Thermodynamics and constructal theory, which predicts natural design and its evolution in engineering, scientific, and social systems".
He received all his degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S.1971, M.S.1972, Ph.D.1975). He is the J.A. Jones Distinguished Professor at Duke University:
http://mems.duke.edu/faculty/adrian-bejan.
He authored 30 books and 650 peer-refereed journal articles, and was awarded 18 honorary doctorates from universities in 11 countries, for example the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) and the University of Rome I "La Sapienza".
Through the Wormhole - Did God Create Evolution? - Constructal theory:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMYr-H70VYo&feature=youtu.be
Constructal Law YouTube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR7ecLXTEKVsMSMJI6-IC-A/videos?view_as=subscriber

J. Peder Zane is a writer and editor who has worked at The New York Times and The News & Observer of Raleigh, North Carolina. He is now an Assistant Professor of Journalism and Mass Communications at St. Augustine’s College in Raleigh. He is co-author, with Professor Adrian Bejan of Duke University, of “Design in Nature: How the Constructal Law Governs Evolution in Biology, Physics, Technology and Social Organization,” which Doubleday is publishing this month. He also edited and contributed to two books published by W.W. Norton, "The Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books" (2007) and "Remarkable Reads: 34 Writers and Their Adventures in Reading" (2004). His work has won several national awards including the Distinguished Writing Award for Commentary from the American Society of Newspaper Editors. He is a former member of the Board of the National Book Critics Circle. He is a graduate of the Collegiate School, Wesleyan University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book provides a profound sense of intellectual discovery and explores an interesting concept. They appreciate the accessible, detailed explanation and precise language. The book is described as a wonderful, compelling read for all levels of readers. Readers mention it's valuable for understanding design in nature and flow. However, some feel the pacing is repetitive and difficult to keep their interest.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book's explanation accessible and detailed. They appreciate the precise language and thought, which leads to clear concepts. The concept is simple yet intuitive, reminiscent of Plate. It is written as a story for a general audience.
"...In its deceptive simplicity, the Constructal Law is reminiscent of Plate Tectonics, a theory derived from Alfred Wegener's ability to perceive what..." Read more
"...This man is exceptionally precise in language and thought, and that precision leads to clear explanations...." Read more
"...It is likely to stimulate the creativity of other authors and researchers...." Read more
"...the "access to flows" terminology brings with it is vagueness and ambiguity...." Read more
Customers find the book provides a profound sense of intellectual discovery. They appreciate the author's exploration of an important concept and new ideas. The book is a source of new ideas and a new way of looking at reality for those with genuine interest in the underpinnings of reality. It is informative and gratifying for those with a genuine interest in the underlayings of reality.
"...over time, provides a big picture of the natural world, intellectually gratifying to seekers after a broader understanding of our origins and..." Read more
"...Bejan and J. Peder Zane, this is probably one of the most important books on the social and political aspects of thermodynamics written in the past..." Read more
"...It's an okay read: get his big idea, which could be a new perspective to the uninitiated, and there's also some good nuggets throughout.***..." Read more
"Some interesting ideas in here but it doesn't seem like the author's premise qualifies as a "Law"...." Read more
Customers find the book readable and interesting for all levels. They describe it as a compelling work that explains the operation of the Hubble telescope. Readers mention it's a must-read for physics enthusiasts and those interested in the underpinnings of science.
"Bejan and Zane have written a compelling work, one that displays the thought processes of a beautiful mind in contemplation of a unified theory of..." Read more
"...I have enjoyed the work of Gerald Diamond, in particular, Guns, Germs and Steel, which takes a more geographical approach to our historical narrative..." Read more
"...It's an okay read: get his big idea, which could be a new perspective to the uninitiated, and there's also some good nuggets throughout.***..." Read more
"...in the sciences, the chapter 6 on Hierarchy is an excellent stand alone chapter...." Read more
Customers find the book's design engaging. They say it explains how nature conforms to the Constructal Law, which is simple yet powerful. The book provides an entertaining introduction to the concept.
"...all, this is a book of theory rather than practice, I find Design in Nature compelling and convincing, with a stunning insight on nearly every page...." Read more
"...an implicit law or potential first principle of nature, the Constructal Law, which describes how the tendency for an increasing and more efficient..." Read more
"...the value of this book is as a source of new ideas and a new way of looking at design...." Read more
"...impact in education, philosophy and many areas, including engineering and design...." Read more
Customers find the book's flow interesting. They mention that society itself is a source of flow and contributes to more efficient flows over time. The book teaches about flows in economics, biological systems, flows of information, and ideas. It provides a big picture of how things change to become more efficient.
"...systems acquire configurations that make for easier and more efficient flows over time, provides a big picture of the natural world, intellectually..." Read more
"...we see in nature are the result of a constructal law that favors efficiency of flow. He posits the 3rd law of thermodynamics. &#..." Read more
"...Rivers change to move water efficiently, animals evolve to compete and survive and breed more effectively, human designs change over time to work..." Read more
"...my opinion The James Burke series, Connections, was a better treatment of the flow of ideas...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the physics content. Some find it profound and a fundamental law of physics expressed, while others say there is no rigor in the quantification and the book lacks equations to support the theory.
"...makes the case that adaptation is not confined to biology, and applies to physics. Just so...." Read more
"...7. The book lacks any equations to prop up the theory...." Read more
""Design in Nature" is an inspiring book presenting a new law of physics which teaches about flows...." Read more
"This powerful book is a profound breakthrough that expresses a law of physics so fundamental it's been with us forever but never actually captured..." Read more
Customers find the book's pacing repetitive and boring. They find it hard to keep their interest, with excessive repetition that gets annoying quickly. The style and word choices are not enjoyable for them, making the book seem laughable.
"...Repetition: As my title suggests, the author is seemingly trying to drill his term of "Constructural Law" into your head by massive repetition that..." Read more
"...a "unifying principle for all evolving phenomenon", this book comes off a laughable. What a ridiculously arrogant book. Not recommended." Read more
"...Despite my support, I must add that this book is highly repetitious, if not redundant...." Read more
"This book was very difficult to read and it was hard to keep my interest. I bought this book because it was mentioned in Michio's book...." Read more
Customers find the book self-aggrandizing and arrogant. They say it indulges in generous praise and describing past scientists.
"...What a ridiculously arrogant book. Not recommended." Read more
"...A defect of the book is a tone of grandiosity that detracts more than it adds...." Read more
"...law as a universal all-unifying theory, while indulging in generous helpings of self praise and describing past scientists as having stumbled around..." Read more
"...The book is boring, self-aggrandizing and insufferable. Youtube interview with the first author only confirms the impression from the book...." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2012Bejan and Zane have written a compelling work, one that displays the thought processes of a beautiful mind in contemplation of a unified theory of the universe. Bejan's Constructal Law, which posits that flow systems acquire configurations that make for easier and more efficient flows over time, provides a big picture of the natural world, intellectually gratifying to seekers after a broader understanding of our origins and evolution. His Law is a corollary of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which states that temperature, pressure and gases seek equilibrium in a physical system, and thus flow from areas of higher concentration to those of lower concentration.
This is not, however, a technical work. Design in Nature's crystalline language elucidates for a lay audience Bejan's contention that all of nature, animate and inanimate, conforms to the Constructal Law. Thus we find similarities in the organization of river deltas, pulmonary branching and trees. "Rivers, lightning bolts, trees, and animals are designs that emerge to handle the currents that flow through them and along with them. They do not exist in service to themselves but in service to the global flow. Though we can look at flow systems in isolation, they work hand in glove with all that flows around them, evolving to enhance the movement of everything on Earth."
For Bejan, the biosphere, atmosphere and hydrosphere are all one integrated system of flows, powered by energy from the sun. This makes evolution purposive, not random, although it is influenced by such apparently random events as the meteorite that exterminated the dinosaurs. Nevertheless, its aim is to improve flows in the course of conforming to the Second Law. The flow that Bejan is primarily concerned with is water: "It's no coincidence that animals hover close to sources of water. Almost all animals are composed mostly of water. You can think of animal mass flow as this mass of water moving across the landscape." And consider this mind-bending notion: Bejan suggests that water does not exist to facilitate the growth of trees, but that trees are pumps to distribute water to the drier atmosphere, as the Second Law would dictate.
Time after time, Bejan and Zane clarify for us basic physical processes and phenomena that we assume we're familiar with, casting them in a new light. "Consider the snowflake. The prevailing view in science is that the intricate crystals formed by the snowflake have no function. This is wrong. In fact, the snowflake is a flow design for dispersing the heat--called the latent heat of solidification--generated on its surfaces during freezing."
Reading this book induced in me an almost religious sense of awe. One has the feeling that the real secrets of the universe are being revealed chapter by chapter. And the chapters cover varied aspects of the physical and even cultural worlds: design, evolution, hierarchy, academia, the golden ratio and vision, as well as history. But Bejan makes quite clear from the outset that his "design in nature" has nothing to do with so-called intelligent design. He is talking, rather, about the completely natural forces of physics. One has the feeling that only an engineer could have come up with this theory, one who works with real materials in the real world, yet must employ theory to manipulate them on a broader scale.
At the same time that I enjoyed the profound sense of intellectual discovery, I couldn't help fearing that a theory as wide-ranging and comprehensive as this one might be a tautology: Everything flows because it flows. I countered this doubt partly with my subjective experience. That awe I spoke of, unique in my fairly wide-ranging reading, I feel could only arise in the presence of a genuine new revelation. The flow of ideas through my mind perhaps seeks out the ease of this new intellectual configuration, as the Constructal Law would predict. More importantly, Bejan has conducted many experiments proving his law and is able to make accurate mathematical predictions using it.
For example, he describes assigning a computer the task of moving a steady stream of water from a center of a disk to users on the periphery. It came up with the branching pattern observed in river deltas, lungs and trees. He also elucidates the mathematical ratios that operate in rivers and the branching of trees, which obey laws that govern the relationship of the number of tributaries to the main channel, and their relative sizes, as well as the placement of branches and the ratio of branch size to trunk size. Suspending what he knew empirically, he used the Constructal Law to predict these scaling ratios. In its deceptive simplicity, the Constructal Law is reminiscent of Plate Tectonics, a theory derived from Alfred Wegener's ability to perceive what everyone else overlooked or refused to take seriously: that the world's continents fit together like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.
However, in spite of the beauty of Bejan's theory, I find it somewhat lacking with regard to practical environmental concerns. It's strange, in a book written by a heat transfer specialist, not to find a single reference to climate change. After all, both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science find climate change fully substantiated. Furthermore, Bejan's gleeful endorsement of the notion that man will use more energy, ever more, almost sounds like the academician's version of "Drill, Baby, Drill," although he does make favorable reference to green energy.
These cavils aside, for after all, this is a book of theory rather than practice, I find Design in Nature compelling and convincing, with a stunning insight on nearly every page. It is a source I expect to reread more than once. Zane's exemplary prose is integral to the successful realization of Bejan's ideas and the impact of this remarkable book.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2019There are, at present, only four laws of thermodynamics acknowledged by science. A recent book, deeply rooted in the four laws but going in a new direction is, Design in Nature: How the Constructal Law Governs Evolution in Biology, Physics, Technology and Social Organization.
Written by leading thermodynamics theorist Adrian Bejan and J. Peder Zane, this is probably one of the most important books on the social and political aspects of thermodynamics written in the past ten years but for two very different reasons. One: the author brilliantly describes an implicit law or potential first principle of nature, the Constructal Law, which describes how the tendency for an increasing and more efficient movement of mass and energy through time is ruled by a physical law. This, the book asserts, naturally creates many complex designs that we see in nature that do not violate the laws of thermodynamics. The second reason, which is not quite so flattering, is that his book clearly describes the approach of the modern mind—that despite all his arguing to the contrary, points in the direction that consciousness is either a feature of matter and energy or “the designer” cannot be conceived properly using the imagery of Bejan’s schoolboy God.
Bejan absolutely fails to describe what should be obvious to all but not to those who refuse to look: that the universe is, from the point of view of common sense, not unintelligently self-assembling and that a postulated Fifth Law, negentropy, which assumes some sort of teleology in the universe, really needs to be looked at more closely for a more accurate and scientific accounting of the universe.
Let’s look closely at what Bejan says:
“Of course, there is no conscious intelligence behind these patterns, no Divine Architect churning out brilliant blueprints. To pre-empt any confusion, let me make this perfectly clear: The constructal law is not headed toward a creationist argument, and in no way does it support the claims of those who promulgate the fantasy of intelligent design… [How can he possibly know this from a scientific perspective? Better to take a more agnostic and humble position as in: “we don’t know-period”]. Bejan goes on to say: this raises the question: How come? What causes the constructal law? The short answer: we don’t know. The constructal law is what is known in science as a first principle, an idea that cannot be deduced or derived from other laws (if it could, it would be a theorem. It just is—a law of physics that governs the emergence of macroscopic shape and structure in nature. The constructal law tells us why those patterns arise and empowers us to predict how they should change in the future. It reveals that it is not love or money that makes the world go round but flow and design.”
This is quite amusing from a metaphysical perspective. He knows that intelligent design is a “fantasy” but he doesn’t know why the constructal law works. Just make up first principles and poof—no need to inquire further. This sort of argument, much like natural selection being pimped as the only motor of evolution, is a partial explanation posing as a final theory.
Entropy does create efficient dispersion patterns from original energy sources, and it is also observably true that all flow systems tend to generate better and more complex conduits for the currents that flow through them due to relational factors such as gravity, pressure, time and temperature. This “tendency” simply described doesn’t tell us why such systems should accumulate ever increasing amounts of energy, but it does very well describe the energy output of vice. The tendency of flow systems towards complex arrangements for dispersal, and even self-organization, does not adequately describe moral and intellectual excellence or the human tendency to invest enormous amounts of energy into beliefs and other systems, except as a kind of contextual background for the way all material things behave. If we took Bejan’s analysis seriously, we would have to conclude that all human activity was simply a way of dispersing excess energy—perhaps more like a complex drainage system than the kind of meaning typically ascribed to human activity. What would be the point of organisms, considered as a whole, to harvest energy in ever more complex ways only to then disperse or get rid of it? There is no sense of teleology in Bejan’s system, although he would probably ascribe such meaning to the complex interplay of various forms of energy. I liken this to showing up at a sumptuous banquet in a palace with thousands of well-dressed guests in attendance and arguing that there is no host.
The tendency to invest energy into complex systems of machinery and thought might be thought of as being somewhat alien to the constructal law, except by way of appearance, and much more closely related to negentropy or the tendency to wind things up. Note how negative entropy is described in the dictionary: “Negative entropy, or negentropy, roughly refers to the degree of order or organization within a closed system.” That is only part of what negentropy might mean. Here is an alternative scientific opinion.
“There are, technically speaking, only Four Laws of Thermodynamics but a Fifth Law of Thermodynamics has been proposed by physicist Philip Carr:
“The missing link in thermodynamics as taught in schools today seems to be a concise explanation of why order and structures abound in a universe purported to be driven by a Second Law [popularly known as the Law of Entropy] that states that disorder increases, always and everywhere. This short note is provided in order to stimulate discussion around a possible Fifth Law which predicts what we observe, which is that order and structures should actually predominate in the world in which we live.” Based on this model and observations the proposed 5th Law of Thermodynamics criticizes the notion of stochastically generated order.
"An open system containing a large mixture of similar automatons, placed in contact with a non-equilibrated environment, has a finite probability of supporting the spontaneous generation and growth of self-constructing machines of unlimited complexity."
This proposed Fifth Law of Thermodynamics is also known, in some circles, as negentropy. Negentropy was proposed by the physicist Schrödinger as a kind of free energy that accumulates within systems that store energy but it is facetious to assume that the storage of extra energy might necessarily result in greater order, (and complexity) except by way of increasing the means of storage. The Fifth Law of Thermodynamics supports the notion of creation by an outside force such as the Unmoved Mover or God.
So, let’s get back to Existence. Existence does NOT exist—it IS. Something that does not exist generates all that exists. Energy and mass exist. Therefore, there are only two possible conclusions regarding origin. One: energy is eternal, and concomitantly, consciousness may only be a higher order feature of energy and mass. This is the position of an elevated atheism. Two: all that exists depends on something that does not exist. This is the philosophical and metaphysical explanation of Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas that leaves the door open to providence, grace, honor and beauty. The former is a closed universe going nowhere. When you die you return to energy for re-cycling. End of story. The world of negentropy preserves a universe where honor, beauty and goodness are desirable for more than just subjective reasons. Where is the goodness and beauty in the cold atheism of abortion or the moral weirdness of sexual perversion? The desire for a stochastic or randomly generated universe is a moral-free universe from the perspective of objective morality. A stochastic universe fits the process morality of pure subjectivity and is the universal choice of moralists on the left. Make no mistake about it. The present political tension in the US is really about atheistic morality versus the flawed but traditional morality of the Founders. Conservatives, for all their faults, tend to support the intent of the Founders. What the left thinks it is supporting, in regards to many issues, is nothing but entropy in the guise of concern.
Throw a set of marbles down and watch them roll. They will describe a random pattern of energy dispersion based on various resistances of friction, gravity, direction, etc. What the pattern does not tell you is who threw the marbles.
For a more interesting analysis of causality than that implicitly presented by Bejan, turn to God Has Skin in the Game: How a New Understanding of Politics and the Soul Could Change America by Sean O'Reilly
Top reviews from other countries
P. JungReviewed in Germany on April 21, 20245.0 out of 5 stars This is huge!
If you want to understand the world surrounding you from a fundamental physical perspective, no other book will give you such a complete account as this one.
Why does structure arise despite the second law of thermodynamics? This seeming contradiction, that probably cost Boltzmann‘s life, is being resolved by Bejan in the most elegant, complete and profound manner yet, building on and transcending Prigogine‘s work.
Of course many scientists won‘t like these ideas, because the constructal law’s explanatory power is far superior to their pet framework their job depends on.
After this book, I believe Bejan will eventually get his place in the pantheon of greatest scientists of the world. This would be well deserved.
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Yuri Theodoro Barbosa de LimaReviewed in Brazil on March 24, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Very good
The book is incredible, the constructal law is easy to see in all places, and the possibiliti of application of the cobstructal theory la incredibile
R.RamachandranReviewed in India on January 20, 20185.0 out of 5 stars A Should Read For Students Of Physics,Biology, History And Culture.
This is a very good book on the constructal law, which is a law of physics on the “design” phenomena in nature. It explains the evolution of culture too and I think it is a good tool to understand all such cultural vagaries. Phenomena of creativity, science, technology, networks, hierarchy and communication are evolutionary by default. The features of such constructal designs are well approached through this law to be understood in a new light. Culture and the evolution of culture are brought to light to be understood as manifestations of the phenomenon of design generation and that of the ever-present evolution. Adrian Bejan has done wonderfully to define the law and illuminate it beautifully.
A book worth reading. I will strongly recommend it to students of Physics, Biology, History and Culture.
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Fabrice Vanden BroeckReviewed in Mexico on April 5, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Qué conecta los patrones en la Naturaleza entre sí?
Extraordinariamente acertada e innovadora teoría unificadora sobre las formas en la Naturaleza. De aquí se deriva la logica que explica los patrones como la Esfera, la Espiral, el.Meandro y desfe luego, la Ramificación y su correlación.
HervéReviewed in France on August 18, 20122.0 out of 5 stars A very personal theory book about flow in all domains
The good side of this book is that it can wake you up, if you like design.
The bad side is, I'm afraid to say, much bigger.
Reading the book you feel that the author needs to justify himself two times per page about how good the constructal law is.
No fondamental proof is given about the fact that constructal law governs the Universe (yes, not less than the universe see page 16). Other explanations (minimum energy,..) are set aside in one page, Nobel scientists do not understand anything,... and so on. Only Bejan has understood everything. This is not science.
If I use Mr Bejan's own flow theory to analyse his own book, I see in his "select bibliography":
- 85% of the books are his own or co-author books
- 13% is about heat transfert (Bejan's speciality, real science)
Not much opposition or "natural" information flow indeed in this bibliography.
A big mistake page p92 and p93, no fish lifts his own weight has it travels . If friction is 0, hydrodynamics says that there is no efforts. This is not acceptable in a book of somebody who tells that its vision will revolutionize knowledge

