Ontodynamics and the Emergent Laws in the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
In the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), "Ontodynamics" represents the philosophical and cosmological branch that interprets entropy as the fundamental substrate of all existence. Developed primarily by researcher John Onimisi Obidi, this framework (often referred to as an "entropic cosmology") posits that the universe is an autonomous, self-regulating "entropic computation" where physical laws are emergent rather than fixed.
- Ontological Monism: Asserts that entropy is the "primordial fabric" of reality. Matter, energy, space, and time are not independent entities but localized configurations or "shadows" of a deeper entropic field.
- The Entropic Field: Entropy is treated as an active, continuous, and dynamic "ontic" field (denoted as S(x,t)) that permeates all spacetime, rather than a passive statistical measure of disorder.
- Entropy as a Causal Engine: Unlike classical thermodynamics where entropy describes change, in Entropology, it causes it. All physical phenomena arise from the field's drive to minimize internal constraints and maximize flow. This is Entrodynamics.
- Consciousness and Life: Human consciousness is viewed as an extension of the entropic continuum—a high-entropy system that synchronizes with the universal field.
- The No-Rush Theorem: A foundational principle stating that no physical interaction or event can occur instantaneously. Every process requires a finite "entropic propagation interval," establishing the basis for causality.
- Entropic Time & Light:
- Time (Chronos): Emerges from the irreversible flow of entropy; it is the "memory" of the field's rearrangement.
- Light (Pyros): Reinterpreted as the maximum rate at which the entropic field can reorganize information, providing a thermodynamic explanation for the universal speed limit c.
- The Obidi Action: A variational principle used to derive physical laws (like the Master Entropic Equation) by showing how the universe "optimizes" its entropy flow.
- Emergent Gravity: Gravity is not a fundamental force but an "entropic inevitability" arising from entropy gradients. Objects follow "entropically optimal paths" rather than geometric geodesics.
- Vs. Verlinde's Entropic Gravity: While Verlinde treats gravity as an entropic force, ToE replaces spacetime entirely with an entropic field.
- Vs. Traditional Thermodynamics: It elevates the Second Law from a statistical tendency to a structural law of the universe.
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