Adrian Bejan's Blog, page 9

August 9, 2021

The physics law that will help you better understand your organization and make it thrive

I’ve never been a huge fan of boundaries and how they divide things that should be connected, into separate entities (Yes, obviously, some boundaries are useful, but many of them are obstacles). It’s why I have always been intrigued by solutions and concepts that unite the arts, math, business, physics, etc. Traditionally, those disciplines tend to be regarded as completely different, but the truth is that they are all examining the same: human nature and its context….

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Published on August 09, 2021 03:59

February 22, 2021

How all design is derivative of the physics of the universe

How all design is derivative of the physics of the universe

https://www.facebook.com/aurodesignschool/videos/420424909018112/

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Published on February 22, 2021 10:10

January 29, 2021

December 12, 2020

The Development of Research in Socioeconomic Inequalities and Social Stratification: A Bibliometric Analysis

Today, one can observe the socioeconomic inequalities in all kinds throughout the world. Many international organizations are dealing with this topic from a broad perspective, analyzing almost every issue within the specific frame of socioeconomic inequalities. Some assume that socioeconomic inequalities and social stratification receive insufficient attention; others think that socioeconomic inequalities, which affect social and economic structures from a multidimensional perspective, both among and within countries, have not been adequately studied. Therefore, we conducted a detailed bibliometric analysis of publications on socioeconomic inequalities and social stratification in the Scopus database. This paper deals first with the numbers and percentages of such publications over time, and then as with their distribution according to the academic discipline. Their changes in number and percentages social stratification the relevant disciplines are also analyzed, along with the universities, research institutions and funding relationships. Finally, the number of citations and citation relationships within the field are discussed. Thus, the research frame of socioeconomic inequalities is analyzed within the framework of a bibliometric analysis, after which the results are discussed with quantitative data. As a result of these analyses, we conclude that there has been an increasing interest in socioeconomic inequalities since the 1970s, an interest that, for the last ten years, has been directed toward the systematic and theoretical analysis of this extremely complex issue.


The Development of Research in Socioeconomic Inequalities and Social Stratification: A Bibliometric Analysis by Lutfi Sunar and Umit Gunes

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Published on December 12, 2020 03:10

December 6, 2020

Coronavirus Invasion and Neanderthal Retreat

An avalanche of articles is asking why Africa was relatively untouched by the coronavirus. NBC News put it bluntly: Covid models predicted devastation in Africa, but the reality is starkly different [1].


Last March, at the start of the pandemic, I predicted the African exception. Here I share with you what I wrote then, and I conclude with the science that has just occurred, which supports my prediction:


1. The nonuniform distribution of susceptibility to the coronavirus corresponds to the nonuniform distribution of Neanderthal DNA.


2. The human susceptibility was inherited from the Neanderthals, which is why those with zero Neanderthal DNA (in Africa) are less susceptible.


3. The Neanderthals declined to extinction because of virus induced diseases, not because of Darwinian competition with allegedly superior humans.


Any new ‘connection’ is an opportunity for new scientific research. This means to take a fresh look at the available body of data on virus spreading. It means to ask new questions about known facts.


This new understanding would make it easier to anticipate the spreading of diseases, and to offer help to those who are threatened the most.


Full PDF of “Coronavirus Invasion and Neanderthal Retreat”

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Published on December 06, 2020 09:18

June 19, 2019

The Constructal law explained – video from the Franklin Institute

BF-01 This very explanatory video on the Contructal law was made by the Franklin Institute for the medals ceremony, when Adrian Bejan received the 2018 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Mechanical Engineering.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgEBTPee9ZM

 


 

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Published on June 19, 2019 22:24

June 11, 2019

“The Evolving Design of Our Life” Adrian Bejan’s article in LA+DESIGN magazine

LAD-09-Cover


As an interdisciplinary journal of landscape architecture, LA+ DESIGN magazine delves into the role of design in times of transformative technological and environmental change where nothing on Earth, or even in space, seems beyond the reach of designers. 


In the last issue (09, Spring 2019) of LA+DESIGN engineer and physicist Adrian Bejan outlines his constructal law, which predicts natural design and its evolution in engineering, scientific, and social systems in his article “The Evolving Design of Our Life“.


LAD-09-Bejan.jpg


 


 

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Published on June 11, 2019 14:25

April 15, 2019

Keep it Juicy! Physics Says Time DOES Fly

[image error] Time seems to fly as we age. The Keep It Juicy! blog author, Helen Mitternight, talks to physicist Adrian Bejan about the physics of how that happens and how to slow time.


Listen online, the 17th of April 2019.


 


 

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Published on April 15, 2019 13:59

February 23, 2019

Science and The Origin of Living Things

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Adrian Bejan, J.A. Jones Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Duke University, delivers a thought-provoking analysis of the mechanics of life, energy, and the science of our natural world.” – futuretechpodcast.com


Listen to this podcast on  futuretechpodcast.com!


 

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Published on February 23, 2019 09:56

February 3, 2019

Physics, Biology and Economic Inequality

Adrian Bejan’s revolutionary theory proposes that the same laws of nature produce rivers, trees, human beings and wealth distributions.
[image error]

Alan Krassowski @ https://medium.com/@dappsec/what-is-decentralization-3467e40ce899


 


“What nature try to do on its own, we tend to do in our life movement, because we too are part of the flowing nature.”


A piece by Peder Zane on the Wall Street Journal 


Alternatively source WSJ Weekend Interview 2 FEB 2019
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Published on February 03, 2019 15:25