<div>I'm about halfway through The Corrections now...just encountered this on page 272 of the first ed. hardcover:<div><br></div><div>"Unfortunately, metal in its free state - a nice steel stake or a solid bras candlestick - represented a high level of order, and Nature was slatternly and preferred disorder. The crumble of rust. The promiscuity of molecules in solution. The chaos of warm things. State of disorder were vastly more likely to arise spontaneously than were cubes of perfect iron. According to the Second Law of Thermodynamics, much <i>work</i> was required to resist this tyranny of the probable - to force the atoms of a metal to behave themselves."</div>
<div><br></div><div>A direct reference to entropy, and I can detect as much when comparing the children's upbringing to how they view life as adults.</div><div><br></div><div>Despite this, I'm detecting more of an <i>As I Lay Dying</i> parallel, what with the quickly fading patriarch with little narrative input and the divergent views of the other characters whose backstories are being filled in. However, I <i>am </i>still only halfway through the book, so perhaps the next 280 or so pages will change my thoughts.</div>
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