Fields are central to modern physics, yet their ontological status remains contested. Are fields independent entities? Properties of matter? Or something else entirely? Energy-Efficiency Theory (EET) offers a first-principles answer: a field is a continuous distribution of free-state energy—the way energy exists when it is not localized into constrained structures. We define the free-state energy density ϵf (r, t) and show that all physical fields (electromagnetic, gravitational, quantum) are manifestations of free-state energy under different constraints. We distinguish between three types of fields: (1) pure free-state fields (electromagnetic waves in vacuum), (2) projected fields (static magnetic fields from magnets), and (3) quantum fields (free-state backgrounds with quantized excitations). The framework is fully compatible with Maxwell’s equations, general relativity, and quantum field theory, while providing a unified energy-ontological foundation. This paper estab lishes the rule-consequent definition of fields, complementing the particle ontology in companion works.
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Hongpu Yang (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d34eac9c07852e0af9840c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19420715
Hongpu Yang
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