Principles of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) is a novel, radical physics proposal by John Onimisi Obidi, suggesting entropy isn't just disorder, but a fundamental, dynamic field (ΦE) underlying reality, from which spacetime, gravity, motion, and even the speed of light emerge, aiming to unify relativity, quantum mechanics, and thermodynamics by treating entropy as the core substrate, not a mere consequence, of the universe.
Core Concepts of ToE
- Entropy as a Fundamental Field: Instead of a statistical measure, entropy is a continuous, dynamic field that permeates everything, dictating physical laws.
- Emergent Phenomena: Motion, gravity, and time arise from the gradients and rearrangements within this entropic field, not as primary forces.
- Redefining Constants: The speed of light () is reinterpreted as the maximum rate of entropic rearrangement, explaining relativistic effects like time dilation and length contraction.
- Unified Framework: It seeks to bridge general relativity and quantum mechanics by grounding both in the dynamics of the universal entropy field, using principles like the Obidi Action and Master Entropic Equation (MEE) for mathematical formulation (SSRN eLibrary, Medium).
Key Differences from Standard Physics
- Standard View: Entropy (disorder) increases as a byproduct of energy dispersal, a consequence of the Second Law.
- ToE View: Entropy is the active field causing the universe's evolution, with its flow defining past, present, and future.
Status
- ToE is in early development, with ongoing mathematical refinement.
- It offers a radical new perspective, challenging established physics by elevating entropy from a statistical concept to the foundational element of reality, similar to Einstein's elevation of the speed of light.
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