the laws of thermodynamics

English edit

Etymology edit

Variant of the first law of thermodynamics, conservation of energy within an isolated system.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ðə ˈlɔːz əv ˌθɜː(ɹ)mədaɪ̯ˈnæmɪks/
  • (file)

Noun edit

the laws of thermodynamics pl (plural only)

  1. (bodybuilding, slang) The dieting maxim that one needs a calorie deficit to lose body-fat and surplus calories to gain muscle.
    • 2004 December 8, Eugene J Fine, Richard D Feinman, “Thermodynamics of weight loss diets”, in Nutrition & Metabolism[1], volume 1, number 15, →DOI:
      Although no clear experimental error has been demonstrated, critics continue to maintain that something must be wrong because the laws of thermodynamics would be violated [5], that “a calorie is a calorie” [6].
    • 2021 September 6, Tom MacCormick, “The Body Recomposition Handbook”, in T-Nation[2]:
      Most people go wrong by misinterpreting the laws of thermodynamics.
      The Law of Thermodynamics proves that:

      To build muscle, you must store energy or increase muscle protein.
      To lose fat, you must burn energy or reduce stored body fat.

      The mistake? To assume that:

      You must be in an energy surplus to build muscle.
      You must be in an energy deficit to lose fat.
    • 2022 May 30, Eric Trexler, “Should You Cut Before You Bulk?: How Body-Fat Levels Affect Your P-Ratio”, in Stronger By Science[3]:
      These results indicate that people with relatively low and relatively high body-fat can gain fat-free mass to a pretty similar degree in response to resistance training. However, very lean people should accept that fat mass will probably need to increase a little bit to facilitate muscle gain, and they may need to get up to a slightly more comfortable body-fat level before lean mass gains really start to accumulate (for example, every single person under 8% body-fat at baseline had some degree of fat gain, and only one of them gained more than 1kg of fat-free mass). In contrast, people with higher baseline body-fat have a greater capability to “recomp” and are more likely to simultaneously lose a little bit of fat while gaining muscle. It’s important to recognize that these results do not conflict with the laws of thermodynamics or the concept of energy balance dictating weight changes; they simply reflect the fact that the body has both short-term and long-term sensors of energy availability which can influence the regulation of anabolic processes, and that muscle hypertrophy and fat storage are influenced by some distinct regulatory mechanisms.