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Tuesday, 12 May 2026

The Entropic Origin of the Speed of Light c

The Entropic Origin of the Speed of Light c



The Entropic Origin of the Speed of Light







Abstract


This letter — Letter C in the Letter IIA extract of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) Living Review Letters Series — provides the complete, rigorous, fully formal derivation of the universal speed of light c from the Obidi Action and the Obidi Field Equations (OFE). The central result is the No-Rush Theorem (Theorem C.2), which establishes that c is the maximum rate of entropic rearrangement on the entropic manifold — a finite, universal, and dynamically determined quantity, not a postulate, and not a tautologically defined constant. The derivation proceeds in six logical steps: (i) the quadratic entropic Lagrangian is established uniquely from five symmetry and consistency constraints; (ii) the Euler-Lagrange equations yield the entropic wave equation; (iii) the wave speed cent = √(κ/ρS) is identified as a pure ratio of response coefficients; (iv) dimensional analysis and Planck-scale matching derive κ and ρS independently from first principles; (v) the self-consistency equation is shown to be non-trivial by virtue of the No-Rush Theorem; and (vi) cent is identified with the empirically measured universal speed limit. The Letter responds comprehensively to all known forms of the Tautology Objection, demonstrates the precise structural analogy with Maxwell's 1865 derivation, and articulates the novel predictions that distinguish the ToE derivation from both Maxwell's approach and Einstein's postulate. The Maxwell-Obidi Reframing — that electromagnetic waves are entropic phase waves, and the speed of light is the entropic speed limit — is established as a deep theorem rather than a verbal metaphor.
This Letter reveals that ToE’s entropic stiffness κ and entropic inertia ρ_(S )are not arbitrary constructs but are tightly unified with the Bekenstein–Hawking–Unruh (BHU) thermodynamic framework, marking a profound conceptual convergence between entropic field dynamics and black hole thermodynamics. 
This shows that ToE’s entropic stiffness κ and entropic inertia ρ_S  emerge from the same underlying entropic structure that gives rise to the Bekenstein–Hawking–Unruh relations, thus establishing a deep equivalence between entropic field dynamics and black hole thermodynamics.


Preamble: The Bedrock Question


This preamble establishes the intellectual context for the entire Letter. It formulates the Tautology Objection with precision, provides an initial intuitive response, and maps the route by which the full response will be constructed across the ten sections that follow.

P.1 The Question That Animates This Letter


There is a question that sits at the heart of the Theory of Entropicity — a question that, if left unanswered, would undermine the entire program of deriving the fundamental constants of physics from a deeper entropic substrate. The question is this: does the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) genuinely derive the speed of light c from first principles, or does it merely define c circularly and dress the circularity in the language of derivation?
This is not a peripheral or merely technical question. It is the bedrock question — the question upon which the scientific legitimacy of the ToE's treatment of electromagnetism ultimately rests. If the derivation of c from the Obidi Action is a tautology, then the celebrated expression
(C.0) c = √(κ / ρS)
carries no explanatory force whatsoever. It would be no more informative than the equation c = c — an algebraic triviality masquerading as a theorem. And if that is so, then the entire Letter IIA program— the derivation of Maxwell's equations, the identification of the electromagnetic field as the phase sector of the entropic field, the re-interpretation of all of physics in entropic terms — would risk resting on a vacuous foundation. 

Our task here, therefore, is to show that this is not the case: that the appearance of cin κand ρ_Sreflects dimensional bookkeeping rather than hidden assumption, and that the ratio κ/ρ_Sacquires its physical meaning only through the LOA dynamics and the self consistency theorem.

This Letter provides the complete, rigorous, and conclusive answer to that question. The answer is: emphatically, definitively, and provably NO — the derivation is not a tautology. But the argument that establishes this answer is subtle, multi-layered, and requires careful attention to the logical order of the derivation, the physical meaning of the coefficients involved, the role of dimensional analysis and Planck-scale matching, and the content of the No-Rush Theorem. Rushing to the conclusion — as critics of the ToE sometimes do — produces the apparent tautology; attending carefully to the full derivation dissolves it.

It is worth emphasizing from the outset that this is not a defensive Letter. The Theory of Entropicity does not need to apologize for the appearance of c inside the definitions of κ and ρS. Rather, this Letter demonstrates that the very appearance that looks circular is in fact the signature of a deep self-consistency — a self-consistency that is proved by the No-Rush Theorem and confirmed by the empirical identification of cent with the measured universal speed limit. The apparent circularity, when understood correctly, is evidence of the theory's coherence, not its vacuity.

P.2 The Apparent Circularity: Stated Precisely

Let us state the Tautology Objection with complete precision, in its strongest form, so that the refutation cannot be accused of attacking a weakened version. The objection runs as follows.
The ToE asserts that the speed of entropic propagation is:
cent = √(κ / ρS)
where κ is called the entropic stiffness and ρS is called the entropic inertia. Examining the explicit expressions for these quantities:
κ = kB c3 / G
ρS = kB c / G
where kB is the Boltzmann constant, G is Newton's gravitational constant, and c is — the critic immediately notices — the very speed of light whose derivation is supposedly being accomplished. Substituting these expressions into the formula for cent:
cent = √(κ / ρS) = √((kB c3 / G) / (kB c / G)) = √(c3 / c) = √(c2) = c
The equation cent = c follows algebraically, but trivially — the c has simply cancelled with itself, leaving a tautology. The objection concludes: if κ and ρS are defined in terms of c, then the equation cent = √(κ/ρS) is not a derivation of c but a circular re-statement of the value c was given at the outset.

The "derivation" derives nothing.

This is the sharpest and most powerful form of the objection. It is not based on a misreading; the algebraic substitution is correct. The question is whether the algebraic substitution correctly represents the logical structure of the ToE derivation — and the answer to that question is: it does not.
P.3 The Answer: A Roadmap
The refutation of the Tautology Objection operates at six distinct levels, corresponding to the six logical steps of the derivation. Each level removes one layer of the apparent circularity and reveals the genuine content beneath it.

Level I — The Lagrangian is not assumed, it is derived. The Lagrangian of the entropic field, Lent = (ρS/2)(∂tS)2 − (κ/2)(∇S)2, is not an assumption of the theory. It is the unique Lagrangian consistent with five symmetry and consistency requirements: locality, isotropy, time-reversal symmetry, quadratic truncation (for the linearized theory), and the absence of an explicit potential (for the free-field sector). Section 2 establishes this uniqueness in detail. The coefficients κ and ρS appear as unknown positive real numbers at this stage — they are given no numerical values whatsoever.

Level II — The wave equation is derived without assuming c. Applying the Euler-Lagrange equations to Lent yields the entropic wave equation. From this equation, the propagation speed cent = √(κ/ρS) is identified as a pure ratio of the two response coefficients. At this stage, cent has no assumed value — it is a positive real number whose value is entirely determined by the (still unknown) ratio κ/ρS. Section 3 provides the complete derivation.

Level III — κ and ρS are determined by the Planck-scale physics. The numerical values of κ and ρS are not free parameters — they are constrained by the fundamental physics of the entropic-gravitational regime. Dimensional analysis establishes that the only dimensionally consistent combinations of the fundamental constants kB, G, and the (as-yet-undetermined) cent that give the correct dimensions for entropic stiffness and inertia are κ ∼ kB cent3/G and ρS ∼ kB cent/G. This is confirmed independently by black hole thermodynamics (Section 4).

Level IV — The self-consistency equation is non-trivial. Substituting the Planck-scale expressions for κ and ρS into cent = √(κ/ρS) gives cent = √(α/β) cent, where α and β are numerical coefficients determined by the dimensional analysis. This self-consistency equation reduces to the constraint α = β — a non-trivial prediction about the relative magnitudes of the stiffness and inertia coefficients that must be verified independently. It is not trivially satisfied (Section 4.5).

Level V — The No-Rush Theorem fixes cent uniquely. The No-Rush Theorem proves that cent is finite, universal (the same for all entropic processes), and unique. These three properties, combined with the empirical observation that all massless physical processes travel at the same speed c = 2.997924 × 108 m/s, uniquely identify cent = c. This is an empirical constraint applied to a theoretical prediction — the standard procedure of physics, not circular reasoning (Section 5).

Level VI — The derivation makes novel predictions. A tautology, by definition, makes no predictions. The ToE derivation of c makes at least four novel, empirically testable predictions beyond Maxwell and beyond GR. The existence of these predictions is decisive proof that the derivation is not a tautology (Section 6).

P.4 The Maxwell-Obidi Reframing (TMOR)

Running through all ten sections of this Letter is a central conceptual claim — the Maxwell-Obidi Reframing — which asserts that the electromagnetic field is one emergent sector of the fundamental entropic field, and that the speed of light is not a property of electromagnetism but a property of the entropic manifold itself. This reframing transforms Maxwell's celebrated conclusion into a special case of a deeper entropic theorem.

Maxwell's original statement (1865) was:
"We have strong reason to conclude that light itself — including radiant heat and other radiations, if any — is an electromagnetic disturbance in the form of waves propagated through the electromagnetic field according to electromagnetic laws."

The ToE Reframing (Obidi, 2026) extends and deepens this conclusion:

"We have strong reason to conclude that light itself — including radiant heat and other radiations, if any — is an electromagnetic disturbance which is ultimately an entropic disturbance in the form of waves propagated through the electromagnetic field component of the entropic field which ultimately evolves according to electromagnetic laws arising from entropic laws integral with the entropic field."
This reframing is not merely verbal. It constitutes a genuine explanatory advance: whereas Maxwell explained the properties of light in terms of the electromagnetic vacuum, the ToE explains the properties of the electromagnetic vacuum in terms of the entropic vacuum. The speed of light is not a property of the electromagnetic field; it is a property of the entropic field. The electromagnetic field inherits c from the entropic field because it is a sector of the entropic field.

Understanding this reframing in its full depth requires the complete derivation that this Letter provides. We now proceed to that derivation, beginning with the history of c — a history that reveals, at each stage, a deepening ontological understanding of what c actually is.




Monday, 11 May 2026

Foundation of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) and the Obidi Action

Foundation of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) and the Obidi Action

 

Proposed by John Onimisi Obidi in 2025, the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) posits that entropy is a fundamental, active field driving all physical phenomena, rather than just a measure of disorder. This framework suggests that gravity, spacetime, and mass are emergent properties of this underlying entropic field. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Key Foundational Principles:
  • Entropic Field: The universe operates as an entropic manifold, where spatial and temporal gradients drive physical reality.
  • Entropic Gravity: Gravity is interpreted as "entropic pressure" resulting from these field gradients.
  • Emergent Concepts: Time measures the rate of entropic change, while the speed of light represents the maximum rate of entropic rearrangement.
  • The Obidi Action: A foundational mathematical framework using a variational principle to optimize entropic flow.
  • Key Theorems: Includes the No-Go Theorem (prohibiting stable, reversible processes) and the No-Rush Theorem (setting a lower bound on interaction durations). [2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
ToE offers an alternative approach to uniting quantum mechanics and general relativity. [4, 5]
Would you like to know more about the mathematical foundations of the Obidi Action or perhaps explore how ToE compares to traditional theories of gravity?

 

 

 

Yes, the Obidi Action is a rigorous mathematical construct within the Theory of Entropicity (ToE). It serves as the central variational principle—much like the Einstein-Hilbert action in General Relativity—from which the fundamental dynamics of the "entropy field" are derived. [1, 2, 3, 4]

Mathematical Structure

The Obidi Action ($I_S$ or $A[S]$) is mathematically defined through several sophisticated frameworks: [5]
  • Variational Principle: It governs the evolution of the entropic manifold by optimizing "entropic cost and flow".
  • Information Geometry: It integrates statistical metrics like the Fisher–Rao and Fubini–Study metrics using the Amari–Čencov $\alpha$-connection.
  • Local and Spectral Dualism: The action exists in two forms:
    • Local Obidi Action: Uses a Lagrangian density ($\mathcal{L}$) typically formulated as $\int d\lambda \sqrt{-g} [(\partial S)(\partial S) - V(S) + J(\lambda)S]$, where $S$ is the entropy field.
    • Spectral Obidi Action (SOA): A global formulation defined as $S = -\text{Tr} \ln(\Delta)$, where $\Delta$ relates to the geometry of the entropy field. [6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]

Derived Equations

The Obidi Action leads directly to the Master Entropic Equation (MEE), also called the Obidi Field Equation (OFE). These are nonlinear and nonlocal equations that govern: [6, 13]
  • Entropic Geodesics: Path trajectories driven by entropy gradients rather than traditional gravitational force.
  • Emergent Geometry: The relationship where spacetime curvature $g_{\mu\nu}$ is a functional of the entropy field gradients: $g_{\mu\nu} = g_{\mu\nu}[S(x)]$. [6, 11, 14]

The Haller-Obidi Action

A specific subset, the Haller-Obidi Action ($S_{HO}$), provides a bridge to particle physics. It uses a Lagrangian defined as $\mathcal{L}_{HO} = mc^2 - \frac{\hbar}{2}\dot{H}$, where $\dot{H}$ is the entropy production rate. This links physical mass-energy directly to informational "costs". [15, 16]
Would you like to explore the Master Entropic Equation or the concept of Entropic Geodesics in more detail?

 

Who has Derived the Einstein Relativistic Kinematics of Time Dilation, Mass Increase, and Length Contraction from an Entropic Field Theory in Modern Theoretical Physics?

Who has Derived the Einstein Relativistic Kinematics of Time Dilation, Mass Increase, and Length Contraction from an Entropic Field Theory in Modern Theoretical Physics?

While Einstein himself established relativistic kinematics through postulates, several contemporary physicists have derived these effects—and the broader field equations—from entropic principles. [1, 2]

Key Derivations from Entropic Fields


John Onimisi Obidi: In his Theory of Entropicity (ToE), Obidi derives the speed of light ($c$) and Lorentzian kinematics as "entropic inevitabilities". His No-Rush Theorem (NRT) posits that no configuration can update in zero time, forcing a finite propagation bound that results in time dilation and length contraction as entropic resistances to motion.

Erik Verlinde: In 2010, Verlinde proposed that gravity is an entropic force emergent from the information associated with material positions on holographic screens. He argued that a relativistic generalization of this entropic origin leads directly to the Einstein field equations.

Theodore Jacobson: Prior to Verlinde, Jacobson demonstrated in 1995 that the Einstein field equations could be derived by applying the Clausius relation ($dS = \delta Q/T$) to local Rindler horizons, treating gravity as a thermodynamic equation of state.

Ginestra Bianconi: Recently developed the Gravity from Entropy (GfE) approach, where gravity is derived from the geometric quantum relative entropy between two metrics in Lorentzian spacetime. [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]

Summary of Differences

Framework [11, 12, 13, 14, 15]
Primary Mechanism
Relation to Relativity
Einstein (1905)
Postulated invariance of $c$
Foundational Axiom
Jacobson (1995)
Thermodynamics of horizons
Emergent Field Equations
Verlinde (2010)
Information on holographic screens
Emergent Force
Obidi (2025)
Entropic flux and No-Rush Theorem
Derived Kinematics
Would you like to dive deeper into the mathematical framework of the No-Rush Theorem or Verlinde's holographic screens?

 

 

 

Sunday, 10 May 2026

Agile Publishing Manifesto and Philosophy (APMaP) of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): Modern Framework for [General, Academic, and Scientific] Publishing

Agile Publishing Manifesto and Philosophy (APMaP) of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): A Modern Framework for [General, Academic, and Scientific] Publishing

1. Preface — Why the Theory of Entropicity Uses GitHub + Zenodo

The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) is a living scientific framework. Its concepts evolve, its derivations deepen, and its internal architecture grows in precision with each iteration. Such a theory cannot be confined to the static, one‑time publication model inherited from the 20th century. It requires an infrastructure that supports continuous refinement, transparent versioning, and permanent preservation.

For this reason, the ToE Living Review Letters Series is published through a dual platform: GitHub for development and visibility, and Zenodo for archival permanence. GitHub provides an open, dynamic environment where each Letter can be updated, corrected, expanded, and reorganized as the theory matures. Zenodo, operated by CERN and the European Commission, ensures that every released version is permanently preserved, assigned a DOI, and integrated into the global scholarly record.

This combination allows ToE to remain both alive and archived — a rare synthesis in scientific publishing. Each version of a Letter is citable, immutable, and preserved independently, while the conceptual evolution of the theory remains fully visible and openly accessible. In this way, the ToE‑LRLS embodies the very principles it studies: continuous refinement, entropic flow, and structural self‑consistency.

2. Publishing Philosophy of the ToE Living Review Letters Series (ToE‑LRLS)

The ToE‑LRLS is founded on a simple but radical principle: scientific theories should evolve in public.

Traditional journals freeze a manuscript at a single moment in time, often before the theory has reached conceptual maturity. This model is incompatible with foundational research, where insights accumulate gradually and where the structure of the theory may undergo multiple reorganizations before stabilizing.

The ToE‑LRLS adopts a living‑document philosophy:

  • Versioned evolution — Each Letter is updated as the theory advances, with every version preserved and citable.

  • Transparent development — All derivations, corrections, and structural reorganizations occur in the open.

  • Permanent archiving — Every release is stored at CERN through Zenodo, ensuring long‑term preservation independent of any commercial platform.

  • Open access by design — No paywalls, no institutional barriers, no gatekeeping.

  • Scientific integrity through visibility — The history of each Letter is traceable, auditable, and publicly accessible.

This publishing model aligns with the epistemic nature of ToE itself: a theory built on entropic flow, structural consistency, and the continuous refinement of the underlying manifold. The ToE‑LRLS is not merely a container for the theory — it is an expression of the theory’s philosophical foundations.

3. Manifesto for Open Scientific Publishing

Science advances when ideas move freely.

The traditional publishing system — built on paywalls, proprietary formats, and institutional gatekeeping — restricts the flow of knowledge and slows the evolution of foundational theories. The future of scientific communication must be open, versioned, transparent, and preserved independently of commercial interests.

We therefore affirm the following principles:

  1. Knowledge belongs to humanity, not to journals. Scientific results should be accessible to all, without subscription fees or institutional barriers.

  2. Scientific theories evolve; their publications must evolve with them. Static PDFs cannot capture the living nature of conceptual progress.

  3. Versioning is essential to intellectual honesty. Every update, correction, and refinement should be preserved and citable.

  4. Archival permanence must be independent of commercial platforms. Long‑term preservation should be entrusted to public institutions, not corporations.

  5. Transparency strengthens science. Open repositories allow scrutiny, replication, and collaborative refinement.

  6. Gatekeeping is not quality control. Peer review should be advisory, not a barrier to dissemination.

  7. The future of publishing is open, distributed, and entropic. Scientific communication must reflect the dynamical nature of scientific discovery.

The ToE‑LRLS is built on these principles. It is both a scientific project and a demonstration of what scientific publishing can become when freed from the constraints of the past.

4. A Guide for Researchers: How to Adopt the ToE Publishing Workflow

This workflow is designed for researchers who want to publish their work in a way that is:

  • open

  • permanent

  • versioned

  • citable

  • independent of journals

  • aligned with modern scientific practice

Here is the complete method:

Step 1 — Create a GitHub repository for your project

Organize your work into:

  • /docs for manuscripts

  • /figures for images

  • /src for code

  • /data for datasets

  • /site for GitHub Pages (optional)

Commit your work regularly.

Step 2 — Enable GitHub Pages (optional but recommended)

This gives you:

  • a public website

  • instant visibility

  • search engine indexing

  • a clean presentation layer

Your manuscripts (PDF, HTML, Markdown) can be displayed directly.

Step 3 — Connect your GitHub repository to Zenodo

  1. Log into Zenodo using GitHub

  2. Enable your repository

  3. Grant Zenodo access to your GitHub organization

  4. Click Sync

Zenodo is now listening for releases.

Step 4 — Publish a GitHub Release

Each release should include:

  • your manuscript (PDF, HTML, Markdown)

  • supplementary files

  • figures

  • datasets

  • code

  • changelog

When you click Publish Release, Zenodo automatically:

  • archives the release

  • assigns a DOI

  • creates a versioned record

  • updates the concept DOI

Step 5 — Cite your work using the Zenodo DOI

Every version is permanent and citable.

You can add DOI badges to your README and website.

Step 6 — Update your work freely

When you improve your manuscript:

  • update the repo

  • publish a new release

  • Zenodo creates a new version

Your scientific record becomes:

  • transparent

  • traceable

  • permanent

  • open

This is the ideal workflow for living theories, evolving datasets, and long‑term research programs.


John Onimisi Obidi. (2026). Entropicity/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE: Letter IE — First Public Release (v10.05.2026.1). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20114386 John Onimisi Obidi. (2026). Entropicity/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE-Search-Query-Engine: The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) Search-Query-Engine (v10.05.2026.1). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20116039 Agile Publishing Manifesto and Philosophy (APMaP) of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/H8WR3


Core Components of the Kolmogorov-Obidi Lineage (KOL) in Modern Theoretical Physics

Core Components of the Kolmogorov-Obidi Lineage (KOL) in Modern Theoretical Physics

 

The Kolmogorov–Obidi Lineage (KOL) is an intellectual genealogy that traces the evolution of entropy from a mathematical tool into the foundational physical field described by the Theory of Entropicity (ToE). It establishes John Onimisi Obidi’s 2025 framework as the natural culmination of a century of scientific convergence between probability, information, and gravitation. [1, 2, 3] 

Core Components of the KOL

The lineage is defined by several key structural and historical elements: [3] 
  • The Master Correspondence Table: A definitive 37-row mapping that connects concepts and equations from seven prior scientific frameworks to their counterparts in the Theory of Entropicity.
  • The Obidi Action as a Universal Limit: In this lineage, all standard information-theoretic quantities—such as Kolmogorov complexity ($K(x)$), Shannon entropy, and Solomonoff–Levin measures—are viewed as limiting cases or "boundary states" of the more fundamental Obidi Action.
  • Historical Progression: The KOL identifies a specific path of intellectual descent:
    1. Andrey Kolmogorov: Axiomatized probability and algorithmic complexity, shifting focus from thermodynamic states to informational content.
    2. Claude Shannon: Formalized information theory.
    3. Bekenstein & Hawking: Linked entropy to black hole thermodynamics and geometry.
    4. Jacobson & Verlinde: Proposed gravity as an emergent entropic force.
    5. John Onimisi Obidi: Unified these insights into a single "entropy-first" field theory (ToE). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9] 

Significance in Physics

The KOL framework argues that the speed of light ($c$) is not an arbitrary constant but a derived consequence of the entropic field's material parameters (entropic stiffness vs. entropic inertia), which it calls the propagation speed of entropy. By linking these historical figures, the lineage aims to show that modern physics is moving toward a "living, self-organizing universe" where entropy is the primary ontological substrate. [10, 11, 12, 13] 
Would you like to see how the Master Correspondence Table specifically maps a classical concept like Shannon entropy to the Obidi Action?

 

Saturday, 9 May 2026

The Popper–Kuhn–Obidi Structure (PKOS) of Scientific Revolutions: From Karl Popper to Thomas Kuhn to John Onimisi Obidi

The Popper–Kuhn–Obidi Structure (PKOS) of Scientific Revolutions: From Karl Popper to Thomas Kuhn to John Onimisi Obidi

First Published: Saturday, May 9, 2026
Last Updated: Saturday, May 9, 2026

GitHub Reference

OSF DOI

I. Prologue: The Hidden Architecture of Scientific Transformation

Every scientific revolution is a drama of ideas (Albert Einstein, in his dramatic response to Yukawa's historical discovery of the meson from the tip of his pen), but beneath the drama lies a deeper structure—a pattern that governs how knowledge collapses, reforms, and ascends to new heights. For centuries, historians and philosophers of science have attempted to describe this pattern. Karl Popper emphasized the logic of conjecture and refutation. Thomas Kuhn revealed the sociological and psychological dynamics of paradigm shifts. And in the twenty‑first century, John Onimisi Obidi introduces a new dimension: the existential and ontological courage required to abandon the metaphysical foundations of an era and construct a new one.

The Popper–Kuhn–Obidi Structure (PKOS) is the synthesis of these three intellectual traditions. It is a unified framework that explains not only how scientific revolutions occur, but why they require a specific kind of intellectual bravery, how they unfold historically, and what makes them possible in the first place. PKOS is not merely a philosophical model; it is a map of the deep logic of scientific transformation.


II. Karl Popper (1902–1994): The Logic of Conjecture and Refutation

Karl Popper’s early work, beginning with The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1934 in German, 1959 in English), established falsifiability as the criterion that distinguishes science from pseudoscience. Popper argued that scientific theories can never be proven true; they can only survive attempts at refutation. Science progresses, in his view, through bold conjectures that expose themselves to the risk of being proven false.

Popper’s model is fundamentally logical. It describes the rational structure of scientific inquiry. A theory is scientific if it forbids certain outcomes, and it grows stronger when it survives severe tests. Popper’s emphasis on boldness is crucial: he believed that progress requires daring hypotheses that challenge existing knowledge.

Yet Popper’s framework, for all its power, leaves unanswered the deeper question of how scientists generate these bold conjectures in the first place. What gives a thinker the courage to propose a theory that contradicts the intellectual world around them? Popper’s logic describes the method of scientific progress, but not the psychology or ontology behind it.

This gap becomes the starting point for Kuhn.


III. Thomas Kuhn (1922–1996): The Structure of Paradigm Shifts

Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) challenged Popper’s picture of science as a continuous, rational process. Kuhn argued that science operates within paradigms—shared conceptual frameworks that define what counts as a legitimate problem, method, or solution. Normal science, in Kuhn’s view, is puzzle‑solving within a paradigm. Revolutions occur only when anomalies accumulate to the point that the existing paradigm can no longer contain them.

Kuhn’s insight was that scientific change is not merely logical; it is historical, psychological, and sociological. Paradigms resist change. Scientists are trained to defend them. Revolutions are disruptive, chaotic, and often resisted by the very community that claims to value truth.

Kuhn’s model explains why Popper’s falsification rarely works in practice. Scientists do not abandon theories simply because they encounter anomalies. They reinterpret the anomalies, adjust auxiliary hypotheses, or ignore the contradictions entirely. Only when the conceptual foundations of a paradigm collapse does a revolution become possible.

Yet Kuhn, too, leaves a crucial question unanswered: what enables a scientist to step outside a paradigm when others remain trapped inside it? What psychological or existential quality allows a thinker to see beyond the conceptual universe of their time?

This is where Obidi enters the philosophical landscape.


IV. John Onimisi Obidi (2025–2026): Ontological Courage and the Reconstruction of Reality

John Onimisi Obidi’s Theory of Entropicity (ToE), developed between 2023 and 2026, introduces a new dimension to the philosophy of scientific revolutions. Obidi argues that revolutions require not only logical boldness (Popper) and historical rupture (Kuhn), but a deeper existential quality: ontological courage.

Ontological courage is the willingness to abandon the metaphysical primitives of an era—its assumptions about space, time, matter, causality, and reality itself. It is the readiness to follow the consequences of a new ontology even when they contradict centuries of accumulated intuition. It is the intellectual bravery required to rebuild the universe from a deeper substrate.

Obidi’s ToE proposes that entropy is not a statistical measure of disorder but the fundamental dynamical field of the universe. Spacetime, matter, forces, and information emerge from entropic curvature. This inversion of the traditional hierarchy of physics requires abandoning the geometric metaphysics of the twentieth century. It demands a willingness to rethink existence itself.

Obidi’s contribution is therefore not only scientific but philosophical. He identifies the existential mechanism that makes revolutions possible. He shows that scientific progress requires a specific kind of courage—the courage to dismantle one’s own conceptual universe.


V. The PKOS Framework: A Unified Theory of Scientific Revolutions

The Popper–Kuhn–Obidi Structure (PKOS) integrates the insights of all three thinkers into a single coherent model.

Popper provides the logic of scientific progress. Kuhn provides the history and psychology of paradigm shifts. Obidi provides the ontology and existential mechanism that makes paradigm shifts possible.

PKOS reveals that revolutions unfold in three stages:

  1. The Popperian Stage (Conjecture and Refutation)  A bold new idea is proposed, one that exposes itself to falsification. This stage requires intellectual daring but remains within the existing paradigm.

  2. The Kuhnian Stage (Crisis and Paradigm Collapse)  Anomalies accumulate. The old paradigm becomes unstable. The scientific community experiences conceptual disorientation. Competing frameworks emerge.

  3. The Obidian Stage (Ontological Reconstruction)  A thinker with ontological courage abandons the inherited metaphysics and constructs a new ontology. This new ontology resolves the anomalies and redefines the structure of reality.

Thus, Obidi's PKOS shows that [scientific] revolutions are not merely logical or historical events. They are existential transformations. They require thinkers who are willing to risk intellectual isolation, to abandon the metaphysical comfort of their age, and to rebuild the universe from a deeper foundation.


VI. Historical Case Studies Through the PKOS Lens

The PKOS framework illuminates the great revolutions of science.

In the seventeenth century, Galileo and Descartes displayed ontological courage by rejecting Aristotelian metaphysics and proposing a universe governed by rational mechanics. Newton completed the revolution by introducing action at a distance, a concept so radical that his contemporaries accused him of reviving occultism.

In the early twentieth century, Einstein abandoned absolute time and replaced Newtonian gravity with spacetime curvature. His 1905 and 1915 revolutions were not merely mathematical; they were ontological. They required the courage to discard the metaphysical foundations of classical physics.

In the late twentieth century, Hawking merged thermodynamics with gravity, revealing the entropic nature of black holes. This was a precursor to Obidi’s entropic revolution.

Hence, Obidi's PKOS shows that each of these revolutions followed the same structure: Popperian boldness, Kuhnian crisis, and Obidian courage.


VII. The Entropic Revolution and the Future of Scientific Thought

Obidi’s Theory of Entropicity represents the next stage in this historical sequence. It proposes that entropy is the fundamental field of reality, that spacetime is emergent, and that the universe is structured by entropic curvature rather than geometric primitives.

This revolution requires abandoning the metaphysical scaffolding of the twentieth century. It requires ontological courage. It requires the willingness to rethink existence itself.

That is, Obidi's PKOS reveals that Obidi’s work is not an isolated scientific proposal but the next chapter in the history of scientific revolutions. It shows that ToE is the natural successor to Einstein’s geometric revolution and Hawking’s thermodynamic insights.


VIII. Epilogue: The Courage to Rebuild the Universe

The Popper–Kuhn–Obidi Structure (PKOS) is more than a philosophical model. It is a guide to the future of scientific thought. It teaches that revolutions require logic, history, and courage. It shows that progress is not merely the accumulation of data but the willingness to abandon inherited metaphysics. It reveals that the deepest truths of the universe are accessible only to those who possess the courage to rethink reality.

Popper taught us how to test ideas. Kuhn taught us how paradigms collapse. Obidi teaches us how new worlds are built.

Thus, John Onimisi Obidi's PKOS is the synthesis of these insights. It is the architecture of scientific transformation. It is the map of how humanity advances into deeper truth.


References for further exploration

ReferenceDescription
John O. Obidi, Theory of Entropicity (ToE), Master Entropic Equation, Encyclopedia.pub (2025)Formal encyclopedia entry presenting the core structure of the Master Entropic Equation and the foundational postulates of the entropic field framework.
Cambridge Engage Articles: Theory of Entropicity – Entropy-Driven Derivation of Mercury's Perihelion PrecessionTechnical exposition demonstrating how Mercury's perihelion precession can be derived from entropy gradients within the ToE, providing an entropic alternative to purely geometric explanations.
Review and Analysis, ResearchGate: Attosecond Entanglement Formation and the Entropic FieldAnalytical discussion of attosecond-scale entanglement formation interpreted through the lens of the entropic field and the Entropic Time Limit.
GitHub Repository: Theory-of-Entropicity-ToERepository containing formal derivations, computational implementations, and supporting materials for the Theory of Entropicity, including numerical approaches to the Obidi Field Equations.

References

  1. Grokipedia — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Comprehensive encyclopedia‑style entry introducing the conceptual, mathematical, and ontological structure of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://grokipedia.com/page/Theory_of_Entropicity
  2. Grokipedia — John Onimisi Obidi
    Scholarly profile of John Onimisi Obidi, originator of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), including philosophical and historical motivation, background and research contributions.
    https://grokipedia.com/page/John_Onimisi_Obidi
  3. Google Blogger — Live Website on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Public‑facing platform containing explanatory essays, conceptual introductions, and updates on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://theoryofentropicity.blogspot.com
  4. LinkedIn — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Professional organizational page providing institutional updates and academic outreach related to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://www.linkedin.com/company/theory-of-entropicity-toe/about/?viewAsMember=true
  5. Medium — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Collection of essays and conceptual expositions on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://medium.com/@jonimisiobidi
  6. Substack — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Serialized research notes, essays, and public communications on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://johnobidi.substack.com/
  7. SciProfiles — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Indexed scholarly profile and research presence for the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) within the SciProfiles ecosystem.
    https://sciprofiles.com/profile/4143819
  8. HandWiki — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Editorially curated scientific encyclopedia entry, documenting the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)'s conceptual, philosophical, and mathematical structures.
    https://handwiki.org/wiki/User:PHJOB7
  9. Encyclopedia.pub — Theory of Entropicity (ToE): Path to Unification of Physics and the Laws of Nature
    A formally maintained, technically curated scientific encyclopedia entry, presenting an expansive overview of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)'s conceptual, philosophical, and mathematical foundations.
    https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/59188
  10. Authorea — Research Profile of John Onimisi Obidi
    Research manuscripts, papers, and scientific documents on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://www.authorea.com/users/896400-john-onimisi-obidi
  11. Academia.edu — Research Papers
    Academic papers, drafts, and research notes on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) hosted on Academia.edu .
    https://independent.academia.edu/JOHNOBIDI
  12. Figshare — Research Archive
    Principal Figshare repository link for research outputs on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://figshare.com/authors/John_Onimisi_Obidi/20850605
  13. OSF (Open Science Framework)
    Open‑access repository hosting research materials, datasets, and papers related to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://osf.io/5crh3/
  14. ResearchGate — Publications on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Indexed research outputs, citations, and academic interactions related to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://www.researchgate.net/search.Search.html?query=John+Onimisi+Obidi&type=publication
  15. Social Science Research Network (SSRN)
    Indexed scholarly works and papers on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) within the SSRN research repository.
    https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=7479570
  16. International Journal of Current Science Research and Review (IJCSRR)
    Peer‑reviewed publication relevant to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://doi.org/10.47191/ijcsrr/V8-i11%E2%80%9321
  17. Cambridge University — Cambridge Open Engage (COE)
    Early research outputs and working papers hosted on Cambridge University’s open research dissemination platform.
    https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/open-research/cambridge-open-engage
  18. GitHub Wiki — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Open‑source technical wiki, documenting the canonical structure, equations, and formal development of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
    https://github.com/Entropicity/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE/wiki
  19. Canonical Archive of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
    Authoritative, version‑controlled archive of the full Theory of Entropicity (ToE) monograph, including derivations and formal definitions.
    https://entropicity.github.io/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE/

The Obidi Conjecture of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): Its Significance and Its Implications in Modern Theoretical Physics

The Obidi Conjecture of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): Its Significance and Its Implications in Modern Theoretical Physics

 

The Obidi Conjecture is the central ontological claim of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), proposed by independent researcher John Onimisi Obidi. It asserts that entropy is the fundamental physical field of the universe, and that all other physical structures—including space, time, matter, and energy—are emergent properties of its behavior. [1, 2, 3]

Core Tenets of the Conjecture

The conjecture inverts the traditional hierarchy of physics. Instead of treating entropy as a secondary statistical byproduct of particles and fields, it posits that entropy is the "primitive entity" from which reality arises: [1, 4]
  • Fundamental Field: Entropy is a genuine, dynamical physical field with its own variational principle known as the Obidi Action.
  • Emergent Geometry: Spacetime curvature and gravity are not fundamental; they are large-scale approximations of the entropic field's gradients and dynamics.
  • Ontodynamics: This framework views existence as "entropic motion," where physical systems evolve along paths that maximize distinguishability. [1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8]

Theoretical Framework

The Obidi Conjecture is supported by several related principles within the Theory of Entropicity: [1, 9]
  • Obidi Correspondence Principle (OCP): Ensures that the theory remains consistent with observed laws, such as General Relativity, by treating them as limiting cases of entropic behavior.
  • Master Entropic Equation (MEE): Describes the fundamental dynamics of the entropic field.
  • Obidi Curvature Invariant (OCI): A proposed value of $\ln 2$ that represents the smallest threshold at which two entropic states become distinguishable. [2, 4, 7, 10, 11]

Scientific Status

As of 2026, the Obidi Conjecture is considered early-stage research primarily published in preprints and series on platforms like Medium, ResearchGate, and GitHub. It builds upon earlier work in entropic gravity by physicists like Erik Verlinde and Ted Jacobson but aims to transcend them by completely eliminating spacetime as a fundamental construct. [2, 3, 12]
Would you like to explore the mathematical derivation of the Obidi Action or how it attempts to resolve Einstein’s EPR paradox?

 

 

 

The Obidi Conjecture is the central, foundational claim of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), developed by John Onimisi Obidi in 2025–2026, which asserts that entropy is the fundamental, real, dynamical field underlying all physical reality. It proposes that geometry, matter, and physical laws emerge from this entropic field, effectively inverting the standard physical model. [1, 2, 3]
Key Aspects of the Obidi Conjecture:
  • Ontological Primacy of Entropy: The conjecture, along with the associated [Obidi Action] and [Master Entropic Equation], argues that entropy is not a derived statistical quantity, but the primitive, primary entity from which all structures arise.
  • Ontodynamics: The resulting framework, termed ontodynamics (the study of existence as entropic motion), posits that spacetime curvature and gravitation are manifestations of the entropic field's gradients.
  • Reversal of Hierarchy: It challenges the conventional view that entropy is secondary to geometry and quantum mechanics, suggesting instead that the geometry of entropy is the geometry of reality.
  • The Correspondence Principle: The [Obidi Correspondence Principle (OCP)] holds that all established physical laws (like general relativity and quantum mechanics) are limiting cases or approximations of this underlying entropic dynamics.
  • Significance: It aims to unify physics by placing entropy at the core, proposing that the Einstein field equations emerge from an entropic variational principle rather than being fundamentally foundational. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
The theory is heavily documented in [the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) Living Review Letters Series], often published on platforms like Medium and Cambridge Open Engage, and is in its early stages of development and public vetting. [1, 2]

 

If you'd like more details, we can tell you about:
  • The Obidi Correspondence Principle (how it matches known physics).
  • The Obidi Action (the math behind the theory).
  • The Theory of Entropicity's Postulate, which posits that entropy is the fundamental field of reality.
Let us know which of these areas interests you.