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Wednesday, 29 April 2026

"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 Question of c" Introduced by Obidi from the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) in Modern Theoretical Physics: Consequences of the Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence (AOC)


"The Question of $c$" (TQoC) is a central concept in the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), a theoretical framework introduced by John Onimisi Obidi. [1, 2, 3]
The concept reinterprets the speed of light, denoted as $c$, not as a fundamental geometric constant of spacetime as in Einstein's relativity, but as an emergent property of a deeper "entropic field". [4, 5, 6]

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

Obidi's work, formalized in documents like the Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence (AOC), replaces the Einstein Field Equations (EFE) with his own Master Entropic Equation (MEE) or Obidi Field Equations (OFE). This framework suggests that space, time, and matter are "macro-shadows" or excitations emerging from a more fundamental entropic field. [7, 10, 11, 12]
Would you like to explore the mathematical mechanics of the Obidi Action or how this theory addresses quantum gravity?

 

 

"The Question of c" (TQoC) is a theoretical concept introduced by John Onimisi Obidi within his Theory of Entropicity (ToE), developed between 2025 and 2026. 

 

It reinterprets the speed of light (c) not as a fundamental, geometric constant of spacetime as proposed by Einstein, but as an emergent entropic limit

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. 
Obidi’s  Theory of Entropicity (ToE) represents a radical departure from standard physics, aiming to unify information theory and gravity through the behavior of entropy. 


"The Question of c" (TQoC) is a theoretical concept introduced by John Onimisi Obidi within his Theory of Entropicity (ToE), developed between 2025 and 2026. 

 

It reinterprets the speed of light (c) not as a fundamental, geometric constant of spacetime as proposed by Einstein, but as an emergent entropic limit

 

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, 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. 

 

Context within 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. 
Obidi’s ToE represents a radical departure from standard physics, aiming to unify information theory and gravity through the behavior of entropy. 

 

"The Question of c" (TQoC) is a central concept in John Onimisi Obidi's Theory of Entropicity (ToE), formulated between 2025 and 2026 to recontextualize the speed of light (c) as an emergent entropic limit rather than merely a constant of spacetime geometry. 

 

Here is a breakdown of the key aspects of Obidi's Question of c:
  • 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. 
The Theory of Entropicity argues that space, time, and matter are emergent properties of these entropic gradients, with c being the boundary that defines what can be known in time. 

Reference 

The GitHub /Cloudflare Canonical Archives of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE):

The Theory of Entropicity (ToE)





Zenodo:


Obidi, J. O. (2026). The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) Living Review Letters Series — Letter IC: The Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence on the Foundations of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), Monograph — Volume I, Part 1, Communications on the Formulation and Conceptual Architecture of ToE (Version V1).



Obidi, J. O. (2026). The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) Living Review Letters Series — Letter IC: The Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence on the Foundations of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), Monograph — Volume I, Part 1, Communications on the Formulation and Conceptual Architecture of ToE (Version 2).



Zenodo Book:
Obidi, J. O. (2026). The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) Living Review Letters Series — Letter IC: The Alemoh-Obidi Correspondence on the Foundations of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), Monograph — Volume I, Part 1, Communications on the Formulation and Conceptual Architecture of ToE (Version V1) [Book]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19803791

The Question of c — A New Meaning of Light and the Speed of Light Introduced by the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

The Question of c — A New Meaning of Light and the Speed of Light Introduced by the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)


In the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), developed by John Onimisi Obidi in 2025, the constant $c$ (the speed of light) is reinterpreted as the maximum rate of entropic rearrangement. Unlike standard Einsteinian relativity, which treats $c$ as a starting postulate (an "unexplained given"), ToE derives its constancy and value as a physical necessity of a universal "entropic field". [1, 2, 3, 4]
Key aspects of the "question of $c$" in this framework include:
  • Derivation vs. Postulation: ToE argues that $c$ is not a geometric axiom but a thermodynamic consequence. It emerges from the Master Entropic Equation (MEE), where entropic disturbances are shown to propagate at a characteristic speed $c$ along the null cone of spacetime.
  • The "No-Rush Theorem": This core principle (also referred to as G/NCBR—"Nature cannot be rushed") states that all physical interactions require a finite, non-zero time for the entropic field to redistribute and synchronize states. This finite rate of information and energy redistribution is exactly what manifests as the speed of light.
  • The "Movie Screen" Analogy: ToE suggests that the entropic field acts like a "movie screen" with an absolute refresh rate ($c$). Observers, clocks, and rulers are themselves "projections" of this field. When an observer moves through the field, their tools (clocks and rulers) are physically altered by "entropic stress," which ensures that any measurement of $c$ remains constant.
  • Physical Grounding for Relativity: Relativistic effects like time dilation and length contraction are viewed as physical "entropic resistances" to motion. Moving systems divert entropic resources to maintain structural integrity against "entropic drag," leaving less "budget" for internal clock cycles (time dilation). [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15]
In summary, the Theory of Entropicity treats light not as the cause of the universal speed limit, but as a "tracer" or "manifestation" of the deepest law of the universe: the finite processing speed of entropy. [16, 17]
Would you like to explore the mathematical foundations of the Master Entropic Equation or see how this theory explains quantum entanglement delays?

 

 

The Canonical Archives of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): The GitHub and Cloudflare Archives of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

The Canonical Archives of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): The GitHub and Cloudflare Archives of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)



The canonical archive of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), formulated by John Onimisi Obidi, is located at https://entropicity.github.io/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE/. [1, 2]
This repository serves as the official, version-controlled repository containing the monograph and foundational writings. The theory, which emerged in 2025-2026, posits that entropy is the fundamental, primary ontological field from which geometry, matter, and spacetime emerge, rather than a derived statistical quantity. [2, 3, 4]
Core Components of the Archive:
  • Monograph: The main text presenting the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
  • Concepts: Core definitions including Obidi’s Ontodynamics, Entrodynamics, and the Multi-stage Multi-phase Diffusion Pipeline Model (MSMPDPM).
  • Equations: The Master Entropic Equation (MEE), Obidi Action, and Obidi Field Equations (OFE).
  • Letters: The "ToE Living Review Letters Series" on platforms like Medium or ResearchGate detailing the theory's foundations. [2, 4, 5, 6]
Other Official Channels:
  • Google Live Site: https://theoryofentropicity.blogspot.com
  • YouTube Channel: @TheoryofEntropicityToE
  • Notion Workspace: Obidi's Foundational Physics Manifesto [1, 7]
The theory is heavily based on information geometry and aims to unify thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, and relativity under a single entropic framework. [8, 9, 10, 11, 12]
Would you like me to help you find specific equations, or rather look for the latest Living Review Letter in the archive?

References 




The canonical archive of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), developed by John Onimisi Obidi, is primarily hosted on GitHub. It is designed to serve as the foundational repository for the theory, which proposes that entropy is the fundamental ontological field from which geometry, matter, and physical laws emerge. 
Key Repository Locations
Contents of the Archive
The archive organizes the development of the theory into several key areas:
  • Monograph: The main, structured presentation of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).
  • Concepts: Core definitions and philosophical foundations, including the, "Obidi Conjecture," which states that entropy is the fundamental dynamical field.
  • Equations: Mathematical structures, including the "Master Entropic Equation (MEE)" and "Obidi Field Equations (OFE)".
  • Papers: Links to formal publications and preprints hosted on platforms such as Cambridge Open EngageResearchGate, and Medium.
  • Diagrams & Notes: Visual interpretations of entropic gradients and development notes. 
The theory aims to replace the foundational role of spacetime geometry with an "entropic field," with the archive acting as a record of its development beginning in 2025.