Ontological Courage: From Linguistics to Philosophy and Physics — The Bridge Between Paul Tillich and John Onimisi Obidi
In the context of contemporary theoretical physics and philosophy, Ontological Courage refers to the intellectual daring required to propose radical shifts in our understanding of reality, specifically associated with John Onimisi Obidi and his Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
- Entropy as Primary: ToE reframes entropy not just as a measure of disorder, but as a fundamental dynamical field.
- Intellectual Courage: The term highlights the boldness required to challenge the "three great pillars" of modern physics (quantum mechanics, general relativity, and thermodynamics) by suggesting they all emerge from a deeper entropic manifold.
- The Obidi Action: This "courage" is manifested in the development of the Obidi Action, a variational principle that governs the dynamics of this entropic field across all physical regimes.
Key aspects of this conceptual bravery include:
- The Entropic Leap: Obidi takes an "entropic leap" by arguing that entropy is not merely a measure of disorder, but the foundational substrate of existence.
- Fundamental Redefinition: ToE proposes that entropy governs the dynamics of spacetime, with the Local Obidi Action defining the coupling of this field to gravity.
- Intellectual Originality: The framework is characterized as a significant act of "intellectual courage" that challenges established, traditional physical paradigms.
- A New Perspective on Time and Gravity: It suggests that what we perceive as gravity and time are emergent, localized expressions of this deeper entropic information field.
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