Submitted:
28 April 2025
Posted:
29 April 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
- The entropy-weighted Feynman path integral;
- The Born rule as the statistical limit of entropy-stabilized paths;
- The Schrödinger equation as an emergent evolution law in low-curvature regimes;
- Quantization and deformed commutators from entropy curvature;
- Interference as a structural effect of entropy-constrained distinguishability.
2. Entropy Geometry and the Weighted Action
2.1. Overview of the Entropy-Weighted Path Integral Derivation
Assumptions
- Let denote a possible configuration trajectory of the system over time—a path through configuration space. Physical evolution selects among such resolution-distinguishable trajectories.
- Let be a probability distribution over trajectories. This distribution is selected by a principle of constrained entropy maximization: among all possible ensembles of paths, the one realized is the one that maximizes path entropy subject to physical constraints.
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The maximization is performed under two constraints:
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- Average action: , where is the classical action associated with trajectory ;
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- Average apparent entropy: , where quantifies the entropy cost of resolving the trajectory under finite informational precision (see [2]).
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Two Lagrange multipliers govern the constrained maximization:
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- ℏ controls phase coherence (and recovers quantum amplitudes),
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- governs entropy resolution, selecting paths that remain distinguishable under entropy flow.
- The normalization constant Z ensures that defines a proper probability distribution:analogous to the partition function in statistical mechanics. It captures the total entropy-weighted amplitude over all possible trajectories. Here, denotes the functional integration measure over the space of resolution-distinguishable paths —that is, over all trajectories with finite apparent entropy .
Derivation Steps
- Maximize the entropy functional:under the above constraints;
- Solve the resulting variational problem to obtain the path distribution:
- Identify this as the entropy-weighted amplitude structure, with the standard Feynman integral recovered for .
2.2. Axiom 1: Entropy as Structural Generator
2.3. Axiom 2: The Minimal Principle
Minimal Principle (MP): Among all entropy-resolvable configurations, physical trajectories are those that minimize instability under entropy curvature.
3. Stability and the Minimal Resolution Principle
3.1. Entropy-Resolvable Trajectory Space
3.2. Variational Dynamics and Second Variation
3.3. Spectral Structure and Log-Time Operator
- A compact domain ,
- A smooth, strictly positive-definite entropy metric ,
- A perturbation space with fixed or periodic boundary conditions,
4. Emergence of Wave Behavior
- Near entropy-flat configurations, where entropy curvature varies slowly across scales of interest;
- When τ changes slowly compared to the oscillation period of ;
- Over small intervals where the background can be considered effectively constant.
4.1. Resolution, Entropy Flow, and the Asymmetry of Structure
- The past encodes the survival of stable resolution.
- The future reflects the progressive loss of resolvable distinctions under entropy flow.
4.2. Structural Interpretation
4.3. Comparison with Standard Quantum Mechanics
- Quantum behavior is not an imposed structure, but the inevitable outcome of entropy-stabilized distinguishability.
- Wave-particle duality arises because log-periodic modes govern both stable coherence (waves) and localization (quantized modes).
5. Interference and Resolution Structure
5.1. Superposition of Resolution-Stable Modes
5.2. Interference as a Resolution Phenomenon
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- Each mode carries phase information relative to log-time ,
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- Their superposition leads to constructive or destructive contributions to local entropy curvature,
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- The resulting interference pattern reflects the stability or instability of distinguishability across configuration space.
- Constructive interference corresponds to enhanced local distinguishability,
- Destructive interference corresponds to suppression of resolution.
5.3. Application to the Double-Slit Experiment
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- The particle’s trajectory is not a single classical path but a coherent superposition of entropy-stable modes across possible configurations.
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- The absence of which-path information preserves coherence between modes associated with different slit passages.
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- The resulting interference pattern is the structural expression of modal superposition under entropy geometry constraints.
5.4. Summary
- Log-periodic oscillations in entropy geometry are the only entropy-stable modes.
- Interference patterns arise from coherent superposition of these modes.
- Observed quantum phenomena, such as the double-slit interference fringes, reflect the underlying scale-relativistic structure of distinguishability.
5.5. Concluding Perspective: From Geometry to Wave Structure
- The entropy-weighted action selects stationary paths via the Minimal Principle [1];
- Stability under entropy flow requires spectral decomposition of the curvature operator ;
- The only entropy-stable perturbations are log-periodic oscillations: oscillatory modes in logarithmic time that remain stable under entropy curvature flow. These log-periodic modes arise as the structural solutions selected by the scale-relative geometry of distinguishability, where persistence across scales requires coherent phase behavior relative to log-time.
- Interference arises from coherent superposition of these modes, not from dualistic assumptions about particle or wave identity.
6. Conclusions
- The entropy-weighted action as a generalized variational principle;
- The entropy-curvature operator , selecting stable log-periodic modes;
- Quantization as discrete spectral filtering under entropy stability;
- Interference as modal superposition within the geometry of distinguishability;
- The Schrödinger equation and Born rule as limiting cases of entropy-flat dynamics.
7. Philosophical Implications
- The Fourier structure of quantum mechanics arises from the entropy curvature operator , whose eigenfunctions are log-periodic modes . These oscillatory basis functions are selected by the Minimal Principle as the only entropy-stable solutions (see [8], §4–7).
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Infinite sums over quantum modes (e.g., in partition functions, path integrals, or trace formulas) are regularized structurally via the spectral zeta function . This leads to zeta-regularized determinants and finite amplitudes:
Acknowledgments
Appendix A. General Solution of the Entropy Curvature Eigenproblem
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