Every person is unique. No two people are identical. We differ in physical appearance, personality, fingerprints, heartbeat, gait, and DNA. Such differences are used to identify criminals and in video surveillance of citizens by nation states. Yet in other ways all humans are the same. We all have brains, hearts, and lungs. All our bodies use the same biochemistry to stay alive: whether to breathe oxygen, digest food, or fight infections. On some level we have common aspirations: to survive, to be loved, to be happy, and to find meaning and purpose. Yet these aspirations find many expressions. Humans have certain universal qualities and properties, yet at a finer level of detail there is a particularity of each of these properties. They are at one level the same but are not the same at another level.
All academic disciplines search for universals; they develop categories, concepts, and theories that overarch particularities. Biologists classify species of plants and animals and types of cells and viruses. All biological systems use the same molecules (DNA, RNA, and proteins) and chemical reactions. The same genetic code uses the information encoded in a piece of DNA to make proteins with specific functions. Anthropologists study the immense diversity of human cultures and societies. This diversity can be described in terms of universal concepts such as kinship, family, ritual, community, economics, law, and morality. Linguists study the common structures and grammars of the thousands of different human languages. Although the world we live in is diverse, disciplines have each discovered some universals.
Condensed matter physicists study diverse states of matter and the transitions between them. A surprising discovery is that there is much more universality than might be expected, particularly given the chemical and structural diversity of materials. In this chapter, I will discuss the nature of this universality, how it emerges, and the length scales associated with transitions between different states of matter. Landau’s great insight was that many of the chemical and structural details of materials are irrelevant to understanding phase transitions. Furthermore, a precise classification of different types of phase transitions, into what are called universality classes, can be made. For example, superconducting, superfluid, and a subset of magnetic transitions are in the same class. The determinants of the universality classes are the symmetry of the state and the spatial dimensionality of the system. None of the other details matter.
Many phase diagrams (such as the Figure above) include a critical point, located at the end of a boundary between two different states of matter. A common example is the critical point that occurs at a specific temperature and pressure for a transition between a liquid and a gas. Understanding the physical properties of a material close to its critical point was a great challenge for theoretical physics, lasting a hundred years, and was only solved in the 1970s. The powerful theoretical ideas and techniques that were developed provide a quantitative way to relate the properties of a system at one length scale to properties at a different length scale. These techniques also have application to a wide range of other problems and fields including elementary particle physics, chaos theory, fractals, polymers, and machine learning. New insights were gained into universality and emergent phenomena.
An extract from "The Critical Point," chapter 6, Condensed Matter Physics: A Very Short Introduction











