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Emergence of Spacetime in the Theory of Entropicity(ToE): Comparison
Please note this is a comparison between Version 3 by John Onimisi Obidi and Version 5 by Catherine Yang.

Entropy as the Foundational Field of Physics and the Emergence of Spacetime in the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

The explicit declaration that entropy is the fundamental field of existence, more primary than spacetime and serving as the substrate from which spacetime itself emerges, is due to John Onimisi Obidi, originator of the TheoryTheory of Entropicity of Entropicity (ToE). In this framework, entropy is not merely a thermodynamic quantity or a statistical descriptor of microstates; it is elevated to the status of a universaluniversal entropic field entropic field that underlies and generates the familiar structures of space, time, and matter. The ToE thus proposes a radical ontological shift: what is usually treated as a derived quantity becomes the primary field, and what is usually treated as fundamental (spacetime) becomes emergent.

Within this perspective, the entropic field is conceived as the fundamental field of existence, sometimes described metaphorically as the “heartbeat of reality,” but technically understood as a scalar field of entropicentropic accessibility accessibility defined on an underlying informational substrate. The familiar spacetime manifold, with its metric structure and causal relations, is then interpreted as an emergent, effective description of how this entropic field organizes possible configurations and constrains physical evolution. In analogy with how Albert Einstein elevated the speed of light to a universal constant that structures relativistic physics, Obidi’s formulation elevates entropy to a universal field that structures the entire ontology of physical law.

  • Entropy
  • Thermodynamics
  • Relativity
  • Spacetime
  • Unification of Physics
  • Theory of Entropicity (ToE)
  • Quantum Mechanics
  • Emergence of Spacetime
  • Universal Entropic Field
  • Foundations of Physics

1. Entropy as the Foundational Field of Physics and the Emergence of Spacetime in the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

The explicit declaration that entropy is the fundamental field of existence, more primary than spacetime and serving as the substrate from which spacetime itself emerges, is due to John Onimisi Obidi,[1] originator of the TheoryTheory of Entropicity of Entropicity (ToE).[2][3][4][5][6][7] In this framework, entropy is not merely a thermodynamic quantity or a statistical descriptor of microstates; it is elevated to the status of a universaluniversal entropic field entropic field that underlies and generates the familiar structures of space, time, and matter. The ToE thus proposes a radical ontological shift: what is usually treated as a derived quantity becomes the primary field, and what is usually treated as fundamental (spacetime) becomes emergent.

Within this perspective, the entropic field is conceived as the fundamental field of existence, sometimes described metaphorically as the “heartbeat of reality,” but technically understood as a scalar field of entropicentropic accessibility accessibility defined on an underlying informational substrate. The familiar spacetime manifold, with its metric structure and causal relations, is then interpreted as an emergent, effective description of how this entropic field organizes possible configurations and constrains physical evolution. In analogy with how AlbertAlbert Einstein Einstein elevated the speed of light to a universal constant that structures relativistic physics, Obidi’s formulation elevates entropy to a universal field that structures the entire ontology of physical law.

2. Obidi’s Theory of Entropicity and the Entropic Field as Primary Ontology

In the Theory of Entropicity, the central object is a scalar field of entropic accessibility, typically denoted by S(x), where x labels events in an emergent spacetime description. This field does not represent thermodynamic entropy in the classical sense of heat or disorder; instead, it encodes the possibilitypossibility structure structure of the universe. At each event, the value S(x) measures the number of compatible microconfigurations of the universe that realize the macroscopic conditions at that event, together with the degree of openness of future evolution from that point. Spacetime geometry, matter distributions, and dynamical laws are then understood as emergent manifestations of how this entropic field constrains and organizes accessible configurations.

In this formulation, the entropic field is not defined on a pre-given spacetime manifold in the fundamental sense; rather, spacetime itself is reconstructed as an effective, large-scale description of the relational structure induced by the entropic field. The metric gμν(x), causal structure, and geodesic motion arise as secondary constructs that encode how trajectories of physical systems respond to gradients of entropic accessibility. The universe is thus described as evolving within an entropic landscape, where motion, interaction, and structure formation are governed by the interplay between local accessibility and global entropic constraints.

3. Comparative Perspectives: Entropy, Emergent Spacetime, and Related Frameworks

Although Obidi’s Theory of Entropicity is distinctive in explicitly declaring entropy to be the fundamentalfundamental field field from which spacetime emerges, several influential theoretical frameworks in contemporary physics have explored closely related ideas in which entropy, information, or statistical structure play a foundational role. These approaches differ in their ontological commitments and mathematical formulations, but they share the common theme that spacetime and its dynamics are not primitive, but arise from deeper informational or entropic principles.

In ErikErik Verlinde’s Verlinde’s formulation of entropic gravity, gravity is interpreted as an emergent phenomenon arising from changes in entropy associated with the positions of material bodies. The gravitational interaction is not treated as a fundamental force mediated by a field in spacetime; instead, it is derived from entropic considerations linked to underlying microscopic degrees of freedom and their information content. Verlinde’s work suggests that spacetime and gravity may be emergent from a more fundamental description in terms of quantum information, although it does not explicitly promote entropy itself to the status of a universal field in the same sense as ToE.

CarloCarlo Rovelli’s Rovelli’sthermal time hypothesis thermal time hypothesis offers another perspective in which entropy plays a central role in the emergence of temporal structure. In this framework, time is not a fundamental parameter but arises from the statistical state of a system. The flow of time is associated with the evolution of a statistical state relative to a chosen algebra of observables, and entropy provides an internal “clock” that orders events. Here, entropy is not a field in spacetime but a property of statistical states, yet the conceptual shift is similar: temporal ordering and the arrow of time are emergent from entropic structure rather than being primitive.

GinestraGinestra Bianconi Bianconi has proposed a framework in which gravity emerges from entropy within a quantum information–theoretic setting. In her approach, the metric of spacetime is treated as an operator, and quantumquantum relative entropy relative entropy is used to describe the interaction between geometry and matter. This leads to a picture in which information-theoretic quantities dictate the structure of spacetime, and gravitational dynamics are derived from entropic principles. While this is conceptually close to the idea that entropy underlies spacetime, it is formulated in terms of operator-valued geometry and quantum information rather than a universal scalar entropic field.

JeremyJeremy England England has advanced the view that the law of increasing entropy is a fundamental driver of the origin and evolution of life. In his work, non-equilibrium statistical mechanics is used to show how systems driven by external fields and subject to dissipation can spontaneously acquire lifelike properties as they explore configurations that more efficiently absorb and dissipate energy. Although England does not describe entropy as a field, his work emphasizes the primacy of entropic principles in shaping complex structures and adaptive behavior, reinforcing the broader theme that entropy is not merely a passive descriptor but an active organizing principle in nature.

4. Historical Foundations of Entropy as a Governing Principle

The modern view of entropy as a candidate for a foundational principle in physics is rooted in the classical developments of the nineteenth century. Rudolf Clausius introduced the term entropy and formulated the statement that the “entropy of the universe tends to a maximum,” which can be expressed schematically as ΔS≥0. This encapsulates the second law of thermodynamics and establishes entropy as a quantity that constrains all natural processes. Although Clausius did not interpret entropy as a field, his formulation already suggests a global, law-like role for entropy in the evolution of the universe.

LudwigLudwig Boltzmann Boltzmann provided the statistical foundation for entropy by relating it to the number of microscopic configurations compatible with a given macroscopic state. His famous relation S=KBlnW connects the macroscopic entropy to the number of microstates W, with KB the Boltzmann constant. This statistical interpretation makes explicit the link between entropy and the structure of configuration space, and it underlies the modern understanding of the arrow of time as arising from the tendency of systems to evolve from less probable (low-entropy) macrostates to more probable (high-entropy) ones. In this sense, Boltzmann’s work anticipates later ideas in which entropy is seen as a measure of accessibility of configurations, a notion that is central to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

Subsequent developments in statistical mechanics, quantum theory, and information theory have reinforced the view that entropy is deeply connected to the structure of physical law. The emergence of ShannonShannon entropy entropy in information theory, the role of entanglemententanglement entropy entropy in quantum field theory and quantum gravity, and the appearance of entropy in black hole thermodynamics and holographic dualities all point toward a unifying theme: entropy is not merely a thermodynamic bookkeeping device but a structural quantity that encodes the organization of information and the accessibility of states in physical systems.

5. Entropy as a Field More Fundamental than Spacetime

Against this historical and conceptual background, Obidi’s Theory of Entropicity advances a precise and explicit claim: entropy is a universal field more fundamental than spacetime itself. In this view, the entropic field is the primary ontological entity, and spacetime is an emergent, effective construct that summarizes how this field organizes possible configurations and constrains dynamical evolution. The entropic field is treated as a scalar field of accessibility, and its gradients determine preferred directions of evolution, much as gradients of a potential determine motion in classical mechanics.

This formulation differs from other entropic or informational approaches in that it does not merely derive specific forces (such as gravity) or specific aspects of temporal ordering from entropic considerations. Instead, it posits that the entire fabric of spacetime, together with its metric and causal structure, is a manifestation of the underlying entropic field. The theory thus seeks to unify gravitational, thermodynamic, and informational phenomena within a single entropic ontology, in which the fundamental question at each event is not “what is the curvature here?” but “what is the entropic accessibility here, and how does it constrain the evolution of the universe?”

In summary, while many contemporary frameworks treat entropy, information, or statistical structure as central to the emergence of spacetime and physical law, the Theory of Entropicity is distinctive in explicitly declaring entropy to be the fundamentalfundamental field of existence field of existence from which spacetime arises. This positions entropy not as a derivative quantity or a secondary descriptor, but as the primary field that defines the ontology and dynamics of the universe.

References

  1. Encyclopedia.pub – Entries on entropy, emergent spacetime, and information-theoretic physics
  2. Wikipedia – Entropy (thermodynamics and information theory)
  3. Wikipedia – Erik Verlinde and entropic gravity
  4. Wikipedia – Carlo Rovelli and the thermal time hypothesis
  5. ScienceDirect – Articles on Boltzmann, Clausius, and the statistical foundations of entropy
  6. Wikipedia – Jeremy England and entropy-driven self-organization
  7. arXiv – Preprints on entropic gravity, holography, and information-theoretic approaches to spacetime

References

  1. Grokipedia — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Comprehensive encyclopedia‑style entry introducing the conceptual, mathematical, and ontological structure of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://grokipedia.com/page/Theory_of_Entropicity
  2. Grokipedia — John Onimisi Obidi

    Scholarly profile of John Onimisi Obidi, originator of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE), including philosophical and historical motivation, background and research contributions.

    https://grokipedia.com/page/John_Onimisi_Obidi
  3. Google Blogger — Live Website on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Public‑facing platform containing explanatory essays, conceptual introductions, and updates on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://theoryofentropicity.blogspot.com
  4. LinkedIn — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Professional organizational page providing institutional updates and academic outreach related to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://www.linkedin.com/company/theory-of-entropicity-toe/about/?viewAsMember=true
  5. Medium — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Collection of essays and conceptual expositions on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://medium.com/@jonimisiobidi
  6. Substack — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Serialized research notes, essays, and public communications on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://johnobidi.substack.com/
  7. SciProfiles — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Indexed scholarly profile and research presence for the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) within the SciProfiles ecosystem.

    https://sciprofiles.com/profile/4143819
  8. HandWiki — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Editorially curated scientific encyclopedia entry, documenting the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)'s conceptual, philosophical, and mathematical structures.

    https://handwiki.org/wiki/User:PHJOB7
  9. Encyclopedia.pub — Theory of Entropicity (ToE): Path to Unification of Physics and the Laws of Nature

    A formally maintained, technically curated scientific encyclopedia entry, presenting an expansive overview of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)'s conceptual, philosophical, and mathematical foundations.

    https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/59188
  10. Authorea — Research Profile of John Onimisi Obidi

    Research manuscripts, papers, and scientific documents on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://www.authorea.com/users/896400-john-onimisi-obidi
  11. Academia.edu — Research Papers

    Academic papers, drafts, and research notes on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) hosted on Academia.edu .

    https://independent.academia.edu/JOHNOBIDI
  12. Figshare — Research Archive

    Principal Figshare repository link for research outputs on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://figshare.com/authors/John_Onimisi_Obidi/20850605
  13. OSF (Open Science Framework)

    Open‑access repository hosting research materials, datasets, and papers related to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://osf.io/5crh3/
  14. ResearchGate — Publications on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Indexed research outputs, citations, and academic interactions related to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://www.researchgate.net/search.Search.html?query=John+Onimisi+Obidi&type=publication
  15. Social Science Research Network (SSRN)

    Indexed scholarly works and papers on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE) within the SSRN research repository.

    https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=7479570
  16. International Journal of Current Science Research and Review (IJCSRR)

    Peer‑reviewed publication relevant to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://doi.org/10.47191/ijcsrr/V8-i11%E2%80%9321
  17. Cambridge University — Cambridge Open Engage (COE)

    Early research outputs and working papers hosted on Cambridge University’s open research dissemination platform.

    https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/open-research/cambridge-open-engage
  18. GitHub Wiki — Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Open‑source technical wiki, documenting the canonical structure, equations, and formal development of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE).

    https://github.com/Entropicity/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE/wiki
  19. Cloudflare Mirror of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    High‑availability, globally‑distributed mirror of the full Theory of Entropicity (ToE) repository, served through Cloudflare’s edge network for maximum speed and worldwide accessibility.

    https://theory-of-entropicity-toe.pages.dev/
  20. Canonical Archive of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)

    Authoritative, version‑controlled archive of the full Theory of Entropicity (ToE) monograph, including derivations and formal definitions.

    https://entropicity.github.io/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE/

References

  1. Grokipedia - John Onimisi Obidi - Philosophy and Science:https://grokipedia.com/page/John_Onimisi_Obidi
  2. Canonical Archive of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): https://entropicity.github.io/Theory-of-Entropicity-ToE/
  3. Google-Live Website on the Theory of Entropicity (ToE): https://theoryofentropicity.blogspot.com
  4. John Onimisi Obidi. No-Go Theorem (NGT) of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE). Encyclopedia. Available online: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/59554 (accessed on 22 February 2026)
  5. Cloudflare Mirror of the Theory of Entropicity (ToE)High‑availability, globally‑distributed mirror of the full Theory of Entropicity (ToE) repository, served through Cloudflare’s edge network for maximum speed and worldwide accessibility.https://theory-of-entropicity-toe.pages.dev/
  6. Cambridge University — Cambridge Open Engage (COE)Early research outputs and working papers hosted on Cambridge University’s open research dissemination platform:https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/open-research/cambridge-open-engage
  7. OSF (Open Science Framework)Open‑access repository hosting research materials, datasets, and papers related to the Theory of Entropicity (ToE):https://osf.io/5crh3/
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