Force is often treated as a primitive element of physical explanation: bodies attract, repel, or constrain one another through fundamental interactions. Yet many experimentally established forces arise only after coarse-graining over hidden degrees of freedom. We develop a general statistical framework showing that a broad class of attractive and restorative forces emerge from non-uniform probability concentration in high-dimensional configuration spaces. Consider a microscopic state space Ω with coordinates x = (q, y), where q is an observable variable and y denotes latent degrees of freedom. If configurations are weighted by an exponential measure μx = (1/Z) exp (−Rx/κ), then marginalization over y induces an effective resistance functional Rₑff (q) = −κ ln P (q), with corresponding force F (q) = −dRₑff/dq. We prove an Entropic Force Theorem: whenever hidden-state multiplicity varies with an observable coordinate, an effective force necessarily appears. In large systems, concentration-of-measure and dimensional amplification render such forces macroscopically robust. Four representative case studies are developed: London dispersion / van der Waals attraction, Asakura--Oosawa depletion forces, the Casimir effect, and polymer entropic elasticity. Though microscopically distinct, each is shown to instantiate the same reduced mechanism: gradients generated by hidden-state structure rather than direct pairwise primitives. This framework provides operational criteria for distinguishing fundamental, hybrid, and emergent interactions, predicts temperature and dimensional scaling laws, and offers experimentally testable signatures. More broadly, it reframes many familiar forces as effective geometric consequences of unseen multiplicity. Force, in such cases, is not imposed from below, but induced from within.
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Amos Otungo Ayienda (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e7143fcb99343efc98dad4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.17613/5e9gk-hvd07
Amos Otungo Ayienda
Solvay (Belgium)
Solvay (Belgium)
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