We use the word “energy” daily to refer
to different things. We are told, for
instance, that certain food does not
provide sufficient energy; we are told about the
exploitation of energy resources; or we are
warned by the politicians about the energy
crises. When we are tired, we have “no energy.”
We also hear about alternative sources of
energy and the mention, by some religions and
pseudosciences, of spiritual energy—and so on.
But what is energy? In general, and in the
sense used in this book, energy is “the potential
to produce change,” the capacity to act,
transform, or set in motion. Other accepted
meanings that we will use refer to energy as a
natural resource and as the technology
associated with exploiting and using the
resource, both industrially and economically.