"The Question of c" Introduced by Obidi from the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) in Modern Theoretical Physics: Consequences of the Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence (AOC)
The entropic limit interpretation of c in the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) is important because it restructures the foundations of relativity.
It is significant because it reframes the meaning of causality and the origin of spacetime.
Key Aspects of "The Question of $c$"
- Definition of $c$: In Obidi's theory, $c$ is defined as the maximum rate at which the entropic field can reorganize information.
- The No-Rush Theorem: Obidi introduces this theorem to explain why interactions cannot be instantaneous. It establishes $c$ as an entropic limit on how quickly entropy can reconfigure reality.
- Reconciliation of Scales: TQoC seeks to bridge classical and quantum physics by treating $c$ as a "speed limit" for the redistribution of entropy across a unified entropic manifold.
- Alternative to Spacetime Geometry: While standard physics views $c$ as a property of the geometry of the universe, Obidi argues it is a consequence of thermodynamic entropy. [4, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Context of the Theory
Core Aspects of The Question of c
- Definition: Obidi defines c as the maximum rate at which the entropic field can rearrange or redistribute information in the universe.
- Entropic Limit: Instead of being a limit imposed by the geometry of space,
- is a consequence of thermodynamic entropy.
- The No-Rush Theorem (NRT): This theorem within ToE states that no physical interaction can be instantaneous because of this finite, entropic speed limit.
- Distinction from Relativity: While Einstein's Relativity treats c as a fixed, universal constant, TQoC treats it as a "throughput rate" that can be, in certain theoretical contexts, viewed as a consequence of lower-level dynamics.
Context within the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
- The Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence (AOC): This concept was discussed in depth during exchanges between Obidi and Daniel Moses Alemoh, where Alemoh challenged Obidi to reconcile a finite speed of light with superluminal cosmic expansion, leading to this new interpretation.
- Mechanism: In ToE, gravity and time are considered emergent properties of entropy gradients, making the speed of light a necessary consequence of how entropy behaves.
- Redefining Foundations: The ToE program attempts to replace the geometric foundations of general relativity with an entropic framework.
- Definition: Obidi defines c as the maximum rate at which the entropic field can rearrange or redistribute information in the universe.
- Entropic Limit: Instead of being a limit imposed by the geometry of space, c is a consequence of thermodynamic entropy.
- The No-Rush Theorem: This theorem within ToE states that no physical interaction can be instantaneous because of this finite, entropic speed limit.
- Distinction from Relativity: While Einstein's Relativity treats c as a fixed, universal constant, TQoC treats it as a "throughput rate" that can be, in certain theoretical contexts, viewed as a consequence of lower-level dynamics.
- The Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence (AOC): This concept was discussed in depth during exchanges between Obidi and Daniel Moses Alemoh, where Alemoh challenged Obidi to reconcile a finite speed of light with superluminal cosmic expansion, leading to this new interpretation.
- Mechanism: In ToE, gravity and time are considered emergent properties of entropy gradients, making the speed of light a necessary consequence of how entropy behaves.
- Redefining Foundations: The ToE program attempts to replace the geometric foundations of general relativity with an entropic framework.
- Definition of c: In ToE, cis redefined as the maximum rate at which the entropic field can reorganize information, serving as the universal "Entropic Speed Limit" (ESL).
- Fundamental Shift: While relativity views c as a rule of spacetime geometry, TQoC proposes that c is a consequence of thermodynamic entropy.
- The No-Rush Theorem: This theorem within the theory states that no physical interaction can be instantaneous, because the entropic field requires a specific rate of reconfiguration to maintain causal order.
- Causality and Order: The constant c is interpreted as the "logical horizon of causality," ensuring that effects cannot occur before their causes within the entropic field's update rate.
- Origin: The concept was heavily developed in the Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence (AOC) in early 2026, where Daniel Alemoh challenged Obidi to reconcile a finite speed of light with cosmological expansion.
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