Lotka proposed the principle in 1922, observing that natural selection favors organisms capable of processing energy at higher rates. Odum generalized it across every scale of organization: cells, organs, organisms, ecosystems, economies, civilizations. At each level, the pattern holds — systems that configure themselves to maximize useful energy throughput prevail over competitors.
The distinction between maximum power and overshoot is the framework's most important refinement. A predator consuming prey faster than prey can reproduce is not at maximum power — it is in overshoot. The population booms, the prey base collapses, and both populations crash. Maximum power, properly stated, includes the maintenance of the energy base as a necessary condition. A system at true maximum power feeds back enough to sustain its sources.
Applied to the AI-augmented builder, the principle explains the sensation of being unable to stop: the human nervous system has identified a new maximum-power configuration — where ideas become artifacts at the speed of conversation — and is exploiting it with thermodynamic inevitability. The Berkeley study measured what this looks like empirically. The productive addiction Edo Segal describes is not pathology; it is a maximum-power response to a new energy gradient.
The question is whether the new rate is sustainable. Flow is the cognitive equivalent of maximum power — engagement at the highest sustainable rate, with feedback loops intact. Compulsion is overshoot — the rate exceeds cognitive renewal, the feedback loops break, and the system depletes the reserves that sustain it. From outside, the two states look identical. From inside, Segal notes, the test is whether you can stop; Odum's framework provides the objective test: whether the energy base is being maintained or consumed.
Lotka introduced the principle in Elements of Physical Biology (1925), building on his 1922 papers. Odum adopted and extended it in the 1950s, eventually treating it as one of several fundamental organizing principles of complex systems, alongside the second law of thermodynamics and the pulsing paradigm.
The formulation Odum emphasized specifies useful power — output that supports the system's continued operation, rather than output maximized at the expense of the energy base. The distinction is where critics have sometimes argued the principle is tautological, but Odum maintained that the useful qualifier is empirically testable through measurement of feedback loops.
Power, not efficiency. Systems compete on rate of useful output, not minimization of waste.
Usefulness requires sustainability. Maximum power includes maintenance of the energy base; without it, the configuration collapses into overshoot.
Structural, not psychological. The pressure on builders to work faster is thermodynamic, not a matter of willpower or character.
Flow vs. overshoot. Both feel the same from inside; only measurement of feedback loops reveals which configuration the system is actually occupying.
Market incentives amplify pressure. Contemporary economies reward flow metrics (velocity, output volume) while ignoring storage metrics, pushing systems toward overshoot.
Whether the principle is an empirical law or a tautology has been debated since Lotka's original paper. Its defenders — including Odum and more recently Stuart Kauffman's group — argue that the principle predicts observable patterns of system organization across scales. Its critics argue that 'useful' is defined retrospectively from whatever the successful system happened to do.