Why the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) Goes Beyond Entropy-Based Gravity and Entropy Geometry
Entropy and the Search for a Deeper Foundation of Physics
Over the past several decades, entropy has quietly moved from the margins of thermodynamics into the center of theoretical physics. Researchers have increasingly suspected that entropy, information, and geometry are not merely descriptive tools but fundamental ingredients of reality itself. This suspicion has given rise to a family of ideas commonly grouped under entropy-based gravity, information geometry, and entropy-weighted variational principles.
Within this intellectual landscape, a number of important frameworks have emerged. These include thermodynamic derivations of gravity, informational reformulations of spacetime curvature, and entropy-guided quantum formalisms. Each of these approaches has contributed meaningful insights. Yet none of them fully commits to entropy as the primary ontological substrate of the universe.
The Theory of Entropicity (ToE), first formulated and further developed by John Onimisi Obidi, makes precisely that commitment. ToE does not merely use entropy as a tool, a constraint, or an interpretive lens. It declares entropy itself to be the fundamental field from which matter, geometry, time, and motion emerge.
This distinction is not rhetorical. It is structural, conceptual, and far-reaching.
Entropy in Modern Physics: Powerful but Constrained Uses
Most existing entropy-based frameworks treat entropy as something secondary. In some approaches, entropy appears as a bookkeeping device that tracks information loss or uncertainty. In others, it functions as a selection principle that favors certain paths or configurations over others. In still others, entropy emerges statistically from coarse-grained degrees of freedom.
Even in sophisticated entropy-geometry programs, entropy typically lives in configuration space, phase space, or operator space rather than in spacetime itself. It guides probabilities, stabilizes solutions, or weights histories, but it does not act as an autonomous physical field with its own local dynamics.
This methodological restraint is deliberate. Treating entropy as a field immediately raises difficult questions about causality, propagation, time asymmetry, and physical measurability. Most researchers choose to remain safely on the interpretive side of entropy, where such issues can be avoided.
The Theory of Entropicity takes the opposite path.
The Core Ontological Shift Introduced by ToE
The defining move of the Theory of Entropicity is the elevation of entropy from a descriptive quantity to an ontic field. In ToE, entropy is not something we calculate after the fact. It is something that exists everywhere, at every point in spacetime, with its own structure, constraints, and evolution.
Matter is not fundamental in this picture. It is a stabilized pattern of entropy. Geometry is not fundamental either. It is the visible imprint of entropy gradients. Time is not an external parameter; it is the irreversible flow of entropy itself. Motion is not defined relative to spacetime alone but relative to the local capacity of the entropic field to reorganize information.
This single conceptual move reorganizes the entire hierarchy of physics. Instead of starting with spacetime and adding fields, ToE starts with entropy and derives everything else as a projection or consequence.
No existing entropy-geometry framework makes this move in full.
Why Entropy Geometry Alone Is Not Enough
Several modern approaches describe gravity as emerging from informational mismatch or entropic comparison between geometric structures. These ideas are mathematically elegant and physically suggestive. They show how curvature, attraction, and even cosmological acceleration can arise from informational considerations.
However, such frameworks typically rely on dual structures. One geometry is compared to another. One informational state is measured relative to another. Entropy enters as a relational quantity rather than as a physical agent.
The Theory of Entropicity removes this dualism. There are not two competing geometries exchanging information. There is a single entropic field whose internal variations generate everything we observe as matter, curvature, and force.
This monistic structure is essential. It avoids the unresolved question of how two informational entities communicate and replaces it with a single self-interacting field.
Local and Global: The Dual Architecture of ToE
Another key distinction of ToE lies in its insistence on both local and global formulations. Locally, entropy behaves like a field subject to causal constraints and variational principles. Globally, the same theory admits a spectral formulation that captures consistency across the entire structure of reality.
These two descriptions are not alternatives. They are dual aspects of the same theory. The local description governs how entropy evolves and interacts point by point. The global description ensures that these local dynamics remain coherent when viewed as part of the whole.
Most existing frameworks choose one perspective. They either emphasize local field equations or focus on global operator structures. ToE argues that neither is optional. Reality demands both.
Relativity Rewritten: Entropy as the Source of Kinematics
Perhaps the most radical contribution of the Theory of Entropicity is its reformulation of relativistic kinematics. In standard physics, effects such as time dilation, length contraction, and relativistic mass increase are explained geometrically through spacetime transformations and observer frames.
ToE offers a deeper explanation. These effects arise not because spacetime bends or coordinates transform, but because the entropic field has a finite capacity to update physical systems. Motion consumes part of this capacity. As an object moves faster, less entropic capacity remains available for its internal processes. Time slows, lengths contract, and inertia increases as direct consequences of this entropic accounting.
In this view, the speed of light is not a postulate. It is the maximum rate at which the entropic field can reorganize information. Relativity emerges as a bookkeeping rule enforced by entropy itself.
No existing entropy-based framework derives the full structure of special relativity in this way.
Irreversibility as a Fundamental Law
Another decisive difference concerns time. Many entropy-based theories remain time-symmetric at their core and introduce irreversibility only through statistical arguments or boundary conditions.
The Theory of Entropicity does not allow this separation. Irreversibility is built into the theory from the start. The entropic field evolves in one direction. This directional evolution defines time itself.
As a result, ToE does not merely explain why entropy increases. It explains why time exists.
Why Others Did Not Take This Path
It is natural to ask why such a framework did not emerge earlier. The answer is not lack of insight but risk. Treating entropy as a physical field forces one to confront issues that most theories prefer to sidestep: causality limits, measurement constraints, observer dependence, and the origin of time.
Most researchers explore entropy cautiously, embedding it within existing structures. The Theory of Entropicity breaks from this tradition by allowing entropy to dictate the structure of those very frameworks.
This makes ToE harder to formulate, harder to defend, and harder to test. But it also makes it far more encompassing.
The Scope and Ambition of the Theory of Entropicity
The Theory of Entropicity does not compete with entropy-based gravity or entropy geometry by refining them. It subsumes them. Thermodynamic gravity, informational spacetime, emergent geometry, and quantum entropy all appear as limiting cases within a broader entropic field theory.
In this sense, ToE stands to entropy-based physics as quantum theory stands to classical mechanics. It does not negate what came before. It explains why it worked when it did, and why it fails when pushed beyond its domain.
A New Language for Reality
At its deepest level, the Theory of Entropicity proposes a new language for physics. It suggests that reality is not built from particles, fields, or even spacetime, but from the continuous, irreversible computation of entropy.
Matter is frozen entropy. Geometry is organized entropy. Time is entropy in motion. Laws of physics are stable patterns in the way entropy reorganizes itself.
Whether this vision ultimately proves correct will depend on rigorous testing and sustained scrutiny. But as a conceptual framework, it already marks a clear departure from every existing entropy-based theory.
The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) is not just another interpretation of entropy. It is an attempt to make entropy the foundation of everything.