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Science Quote by James Prescott Joule

"Believing that the power to destroy belongs to the Creator alone I affirm... that any theory which, when carried out, demands the annihilation of force, is necessarily erroneous"

About this Quote

Joule smuggles theology into physics with the confidence of a man who’s been watching nature keep immaculate accounts. The line reads like piety, but it’s really a boundary marker: a declaration that any scientific framework requiring “annihilation of force” has already failed the smell test. In the mid-19th century, “force” was still the contested word at the center of a messy transition. Heat was argued over as a material fluid (caloric) or as motion; engines were transforming industry; scientists were trying to pin down what, exactly, gets conserved when work becomes warmth.

Joule’s intent is to lock the emerging conservation principle to something sturdier than fashion in theory. By invoking “the Creator,” he gives the conservation of energy a moral gravity: destruction is not merely empirically absent, it’s metaphysically improper. That move does cultural work. It reassures a Victorian audience that mechanistic science doesn’t license nihilism or cosmic waste; it implies an ordered world where losses are only apparent, not real.

The subtext is also tactical: Joule is arguing against models that treat energy-like quantities as dispensable bookkeeping devices. If a theory needs real “loss” to balance its equations, he suggests, it’s not describing nature but patching its own ignorance. There’s an austerity here that matches his experiments: measure carefully, distrust convenient disappearances, assume nature’s ledger always balances. In an era when industrial power made destruction feel newly plausible, Joule insists that physics, properly done, refuses the fantasy of something-from-nothing or nothing-from-something.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Joule, James Prescott. (n.d.). Believing that the power to destroy belongs to the Creator alone I affirm... that any theory which, when carried out, demands the annihilation of force, is necessarily erroneous. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/believing-that-the-power-to-destroy-belongs-to-151032/

Chicago Style
Joule, James Prescott. "Believing that the power to destroy belongs to the Creator alone I affirm... that any theory which, when carried out, demands the annihilation of force, is necessarily erroneous." FixQuotes. Accessed February 3, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/believing-that-the-power-to-destroy-belongs-to-151032/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Believing that the power to destroy belongs to the Creator alone I affirm... that any theory which, when carried out, demands the annihilation of force, is necessarily erroneous." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/believing-that-the-power-to-destroy-belongs-to-151032/. Accessed 3 Feb. 2026.

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James Prescott Joule quote on destruction and conservation
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About the Author

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James Prescott Joule (December 24, 1818 - October 11, 1889) was a Physicist from England.

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