A theoretical framework that extends classical thermodynamics to account for energy behavior at cosmic scales, where Noether'
s theorem—energy conservation as a consequence of time-translation symmetry—breaks down because the universe is expanding. In an expanding spacetime, energy is not globally conserved; photons redshift, losing energy, and dark energy appears to increase. Expansionary thermodynamics also explains why living systems (metabolic, far-from-
equilibrium) seem to violate conservation: they are
open systems exchanging energy with their environment, not isolated. It reframes energy "conservation" as a
local, approximate principle valid only in stationary contexts. At cosmic and biological scales, energy flows, transforms, and
even appears to appear or disappear—not because
physics breaks, but because the rules themselves depend on the context of expansion.
Example: "The cosmologist's data showed the universe's total energy seemed to increase over time—a paradox until expansionary thermodynamics explained that in an expanding spacetime, energy conservation doesn't hold. The
rules change when space itself stretches."