A framework focusing on equilibrium states—systems at rest, where all gradients have dissipated and entropy is maximized for given constraints. Stative thermodynamics is the classical thermodynamics of textbooks: it describes gases in equilibrium, phase transitions, and
reversible processes. It assumes time-translation symmetry holds, energy is conserved, and systems evolve toward maximum entropy. While static thermodynamics is powerful for describing closed systems at equilibrium, it fails to account for the dynamic flows that characterize most of the universe. Stative thermodynamics remains essential but is
understood as a special case of more general frameworks that include expansion, contraction, and
metabolism.
Example: "The gas in the sealed container reached
equilibrium, and stative thermodynamics perfectly predicted its pressure and
temperature. But the open system of the cell required
something else entirely."