The theory of Non-Familiarity
This is an excerpt from a Wikipedia article which is a very coherent step towards the formulation of an equation that would suffice for a theory of everything.
Properties and impasse of self-substantiation
In “The Price of an Ultimate Theory”,[2] originally published in 2000, Nicholas Rescher specifies what he sees as the principal properties of a Theory of Everything and describes an apparent impasse on the road to such a theory.
Properties
Principle of sufficient reason
First, he takes as a presupposition the principle of sufficient reason, which in his formulation states that every fact t has an explanation t':
where E predicates explanation, so that t' E t denotes "t' explains t".
Comprehensiveness
Next, he asserts that the most direct and natural construction of a Theory of Everything T* would confer upon it two crucial features: comprehensiveness and finality. Comprehensiveness says that wherever there is a fact t, T* affords its explanation:
Finality
Finality says that as an “ultimate theory”, T* has no deeper explanation:
so that the only conceivable explanation of T* is T* itself.
Noncircularity
Rescher notes that it is obviously problematic to deploy a theory for its own explanation; at the heart of the traditional conception of explanatory adequacy, he says, is a principle of noncircularity stating that no fact can explain itself:
Thus, the next logical step would be the formulation of this equation:
E (((E=MC2)MC2=E)E=E)
Therefore the answer to unified field theory is; everything is energy.
Krue Ron Taiepa, at 1:28 am, 04/16/2014