Based on a comprehensive review of entropic gravity, emergent gravity, information geometry, and related fields, the claims of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) cannot be dismissed without some context. In this article, we briefly clarify the context in which the foundational claims of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) have been made, for the avoidance of doubt.
Based on a comprehensive review of entropic gravity, emergent gravity, information geometry, and related fields, the claims of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) cannot be dismissed without some context.
Introduction
Over the past three decades, the fields of entropic gravity, emergent gravity, and information geometry have grown into vibrant disciplines exploring the deep connections between entropy, information, and fundamental physics. Seminal works by Jacobson, Verlinde, Padmanabhan, and Frieden have shown that thermodynamic and information‐theoretic concepts can reproduce, or at least hint at, gravitational dynamics, field equations, and even quantum phenomena. Yet in each of these programs, entropy or Fisher information appears as an emergent bookkeeping device, a constraint, or a geometric auxiliary—never as a bona fide dynamical field in its own right.
The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) breaks from this tradition by promoting entropy itself to a relativistic, propagating scalar field S(x)S(x). It assigns to S(x)S(x) a canonical kinetic term, a self‐interaction potential V(S)V(S), and a universal coupling to the local trace of matter stress‐energy TμμT^\mu{}_\mu. From a single master action, ToE claims to reproduce all classical entropy laws (Clausius relation, Boltzmann H‐theorem, second‐law structure), information measures (Shannon, Gibbs, von Neumann), and entropic‐gravity insights (emergent forces, horizon thermodynamics).
This article provides a comprehensive verification of ToE’s contextual claims in light of prior work, demonstrating that no earlier framework treats entropy as a fundamental, dynamical field. We will:
Before exploring ToE, it is essential to outline how entropy and information have historically entered fundamental physics.
F=T ∇SF = T\,\nabla S
acting on a test mass near a holographic screen. Entropy is a function of the screen’s microscopic degrees of freedom, not a bulk field.
Each of these approaches uses entropy or information as a tool: a constraint, a surface quantity, an emergent force, or a parameter in a statistical inference. None endow entropy itself with relativistic field dynamics.
ToE makes four interlinked assertions that depart from this tradition. We verify each claim against the prior literature.
2.1 Identifying Local Entropy as a Fundamental Field S(x)S(x)
Prior Approaches:
ToE’s Claim: ToE defines a real scalar field S(x)S(x) on spacetime, interpretable as the local entropy density—be it Boltzmann, Gibbs, Shannon, or von Neumann in different regimes. This identification is novel: no existing framework treats entropy as a fundamental field with its own coordinate‐dependent value.
2.2 Endowing S(x)S(x) with Kinetic Term and Self‐Interaction Potential
Prior Approaches:
ToE’s Claim: The master action’s leading piece is
S(0)=∫d4x −g [−12 gμν(∇μS)(∇νS) − V(S)].S^{(0)} = \int d^4x\,\sqrt{-g}\,\Bigl[ -\tfrac12\,g^{\mu\nu}(\nabla_\mu S)(\nabla_\nu S)\;-\;V(S) \Bigr].
Assigning a canonical kinetic term 12 (∂S)2\tfrac12\,(\partial S)^2 and a potential V(S)V(S) lets S(x)S(x) propagate as a true dynamical field. This diverges from prior treatments, where entropy never enters as a canonical degree of freedom.
2.3 Universal Minimal Coupling to Matter via η S Tμμ\eta\,S\,T^\mu{}_\mu
Prior Approaches:
ToE’s Claim: ToE introduces a term
Sint=η∫d4x −g S(x) Tμμ,S_{\rm int} = \eta\int d^4x\,\sqrt{-g}\;S(x)\,T^\mu{}_\mu,
directly linking the entropy field to the local matter/energy content. This unique coupling ensures that matter influences entropy and vice versa, embedding thermodynamics into the fabric of spacetime dynamics.
2.4 Deriving All Classical Entropy Laws via a Unified Action
Prior Approaches:
ToE’s Claim: By applying Euler–Lagrange variation to the ToE action, and Noether’s theorem under global shifts S→S+constS\to S+{\rm const}, one recovers:
No prior single‐action proposal unifies all these results under one roof.
Below is a concise comparison highlighting how ToE extends each prior program.
|
Prior Work |
Key Feature |
ToE Extension |
|
Jacobson (1995) |
δQ=T dS\delta Q = T\,dS on horizons |
Bulk entropy field S(x)S(x) with dynamics |
|
Verlinde (2011) |
F=T ∇SF = T\,\nabla S entropic force |
Kinetic term 12(∂S)2\tfrac12(\partial S)^2 in the Lagrangian |
|
Padmanabhan (2003–10) |
Surface entropy ↔ Einstein–Hilbert action |
Single bulk action for S(x)S(x) replacing multiple surfaces |
|
Frieden’s EPI (1989–) |
Extremize Shannon + Fisher over p(x)p(x) |
Extremize unified action over S(x)S(x), yielding both entropy pieces |
4.1. A New Paradigm for Gravity and Thermodynamics
By making S(x)S(x) the fundamental mediator of interactions, ToE suggests that all forces—not just gravity—may have entropic origins. The kinetic and coupling terms enable ENtropy to act like any other fundamental field (e.g., electromagnetic, Higgs), with its own quanta and excitations. One can imagine entropy waves propagating through spacetime, carrying thermodynamic information as genuine physical signals.
4.2 Quantum Extensions
Promoting S(x)S(x) to a quantum field opens the door to an entropic quantum field theory. Path integrals over SS configurations would count histories weighted by entropy action, potentially connecting to quantum gravity and holography in novel ways. One might derive the Bekenstein–Hawking formula as a one‐loop correction to the entropy propagator.
4.3. Cosmological Applications
An entropy field with potential V(S)V(S) could drive early‐universe inflation or late‐time acceleration, offering a unified thermodynamic account of cosmic history. Unlike conventional scalar fields, S(x)S(x) couples directly to matter trace, leading to testable predictions for structure formation and cosmic microwave background anisotropies.
4.4. Information‐Geometric Interpretation
The kinetic term (∂S)2(\partial S)^2 can be viewed as the Fisher information metric on the entropy configuration space. ToE thus realizes information geometry in a dynamical setting, where the curvature of the entropy manifold influences physical processes. Subleading Fisher corrections naturally emerge as higher‐derivative terms in the action.
Conclusion
The Theory of Entropicity (ToE) represents a genuinely novel and richly layered proposal in the landscape of entropic‐gravity and information‐theoretic physics:
No earlier framework combines these elements into one coherent, relativistic action. By verifying ToE’s contextual claims against the historical record, we conclude that entropy as a propagating dynamical field is an unprecedented—and promising—direction for unifying thermodynamics, information theory, and fundamental interactions.
This article thus lays the groundwork for further explorations into entropic field dynamics, quantum entropic phases, and the gravitational implications of an entropy‐driven Universe.
The above claims of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) are to be understood in the contexts given based on the foundational landscape of physics literature. The Theory of Entropicity's proposed action represents a genuinely novel approach by:
This stands in clear contrast to prior approaches where entropy/information acts as a constraint, an emergent force, or a geometric property, but never as the fundamental, propagating field mediating interactions as proposed here. The novelty of the Theory of Entropicity lies in its combination of these elements within a relativistic field theory framework centered on entropy itself.