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The Substrate Theory of Everything
How One Field Solves All Of Physics
Author: Justin Reed
Narrator: Unknown
Unabridged: 4 hr 24 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Independently Published
Published: 06/11/2026
Categories: Nonfiction, Science, Physics
Synopsis
This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice. The Substrate Theory of Everything: One field. One picture. All of physics.
For a hundred years, physics has been a tale of two views that refuse to speak to each other. Quantum mechanics describes the small — atoms, particles, the strange world of probability and superposition. General relativity describes the large — planets, stars, galaxies, the smooth curved geometry of spacetime itself. Each is one of the greatest intellectual achievements in human history. Each has been tested to extraordinary precision. And yet, these two views don't get along.
Their disagreement has haunted physicists for generations. Why does matter have mass? Why is there something rather than nothing? What is dark matter? What is dark energy? Why is the energy of empty space 122 orders of magnitude smaller than physics says it should be — the largest disagreement between theory and observation in the history of science? Why does quantum mechanics give us probabilities? Why three generations of particles, with masses that span thirteen orders of magnitude in a pattern no one has explained? Why is gravity weaker than electromagnetism by a factor of ten-to-the-forty? What came before the Big Bang? What will come at the end of time?
This book proposes a single answer to all of these questions. Beneath the world we see — beneath the particles, beneath the forces, beneath spacetime itself — there is one underlying field. One thing. The substrate. Everything else is a pattern in it. Mass is a localized knot in the substrate. Charge is a twist in its phase. Gravity is its response to being deformed by mass. Forces are the patterns of how the substrate interacts with itself. Even time is not what we think it is: time is not a smooth continuous flow but a discrete pulse of the substrate, ticking ten-to-the-forty-four times every second, the steady heartbeat of reality itself. From this one idea, with eight supporting principles, the entire edifice of physics rebuilds itself.
For a hundred years, physics has been a tale of two views that refuse to speak to each other. Quantum mechanics describes the small — atoms, particles, the strange world of probability and superposition. General relativity describes the large — planets, stars, galaxies, the smooth curved geometry of spacetime itself. Each is one of the greatest intellectual achievements in human history. Each has been tested to extraordinary precision. And yet, these two views don't get along.
Their disagreement has haunted physicists for generations. Why does matter have mass? Why is there something rather than nothing? What is dark matter? What is dark energy? Why is the energy of empty space 122 orders of magnitude smaller than physics says it should be — the largest disagreement between theory and observation in the history of science? Why does quantum mechanics give us probabilities? Why three generations of particles, with masses that span thirteen orders of magnitude in a pattern no one has explained? Why is gravity weaker than electromagnetism by a factor of ten-to-the-forty? What came before the Big Bang? What will come at the end of time?
This book proposes a single answer to all of these questions. Beneath the world we see — beneath the particles, beneath the forces, beneath spacetime itself — there is one underlying field. One thing. The substrate. Everything else is a pattern in it. Mass is a localized knot in the substrate. Charge is a twist in its phase. Gravity is its response to being deformed by mass. Forces are the patterns of how the substrate interacts with itself. Even time is not what we think it is: time is not a smooth continuous flow but a discrete pulse of the substrate, ticking ten-to-the-forty-four times every second, the steady heartbeat of reality itself. From this one idea, with eight supporting principles, the entire edifice of physics rebuilds itself.