The Accelerator Loop (AL) of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): Obidi's Loop (OL) in Perspective
The ponderomotive conceptual loop of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), developed by John Onimisi Obidi, operates on a self-referential feedback mechanism where entropy is redefined not just as a measure of disorder, but as a foundational, active, and physical field that dictates all physical processes. This loop describes how accelerated movement demands more entropy to maintain structural coherence, which in turn acts as inertial resistance.
- The Foundational Premise (Entropic Field): Reality is composed of a continuous, dynamic entropic field, not an empty spacetime container. All matter and energy are organized, localized structures within this field.
- The Accelerator Loop (Obidi’s Loop):
- Acceleration/Velocity: When an object (a structure of the field) accelerates to high velocities, it requires more energy to maintain its internal order.
- Entropic Allocation: The entropic field must allocate a higher "entropic cost" or "computational load" to keep the object consistent and coherent in motion.
- Increased Effective Mass: This increased demand for entropy manifests physically as an increase in the object's effective inertial mass.
- Resistance: The increased mass demands even more energy to continue accelerating, creating a feedback loop where the harder a system pushes to accelerate, the more resistance it faces from the field's need to maintain consistency.
- The No-Rush Theorem: This principle closes the loop by stating that no interaction can happen in zero time. The entropic field takes a finite, minimum time to rearrange itself during any change of state.
- Emergent Consequences: As a result of this loop, relativistic effects (time dilation, length contraction, and mass increase) are derived as, and interpreted as, physical consequences of moving through this field, rather than geometric artifacts.
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