In 1961, IBM physicist Rolf Landauer proved something that bridges the abstract and the physical: information is not free. Every bit of information processed, stored, or erased has a minimum thermodynamic cost. Thought — computation — cognition — all produce heat. All increase entropy.
Erasing one bit of information releases at minimum
kT · ln(2) joules of heat (~3 × 10⁻²¹ J at room temperature)
This number is tiny — 3 zeptojoules. But it's not zero. And that non-zero floor is everything. It means information processing has an irreducible physical cost. You cannot compute without paying entropy.
Why This Matters
Landauer's Principle is the fifth proof in Terminus Sui because it bridges two worlds that were previously thought to be separate: the abstract (logic, information, computation) and the physical (energy, heat, entropy).
Before Landauer, you could imagine that information was somehow "above" physics — that logical operations happened in some platonic realm untouched by thermodynamics. Landauer destroyed that escape route. Information is physical. Computation is physical. Even thinking is physical, bound by the same laws that govern steam engines.
This means Gödel's incompleteness (logic), Tarski's undefinability (language), and Turing's halting problem (computation) are not just abstract curiosities — they have physical consequences. The limits of self-reference aren't just logical — they cost energy. Every attempt a system makes to evaluate itself burns resources and increases the entropy it's trying to fight.
The connection to the Second Law:
The Second Law says entropy always increases. Landauer shows that even the ACT OF THINKING about how to decrease entropy itself increases entropy. You can't out-think decay. The tool you'd use to fight entropy (computation) is itself subject to entropy. The system is trapped.
The Theological Translation
Landauer proves something theologians have always known: you can't save yourself by your own efforts. Not because of moral weakness, but because of the structure of reality itself. Every effort you make to maintain order costs energy that increases disorder somewhere else.
Self-improvement is a thermodynamic treadmill. You're burning energy to organize locally while the universe disorganizes globally. You can stay ahead for a while — a lifetime, maybe — but the Second Law always wins. Unless someone outside the system subsidizes the cost.
Grace isn't just a theological concept. It's the name for what physics calls externally sourced negentropy — order that enters the system from outside, covering the thermodynamic cost that the system cannot pay for itself.
Landauer's Principle in one sentence:
You cannot think your way out of decay, because thinking IS decay. The solution must come from outside the system that's thinking.