Schrödinger's Dream: A New Wave-Based Approach to Unified Field Theory
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Almost 100 years ago, Erwin Schrödinger’s pioneering contributions provided the foundation for quantum mechanics, yet his deeper ontological vision of a purely wave-based reality was largely sidelined by the rise of the Copenhagen interpretation and its rejection of realism. This paper revisits and extends Schrödinger's wave-based ontology, exploring its potential evolution in light of contemporary physics challenges. The Quantum Ocean Theory (QOT) theory developed here reconceptualizes the quantum ocean as a dynamic, oscillatory field from which all physical phenomena emerge. Through a single wave equation, QOT describes particles as localized standing waves and forces as traveling waves of different frequencies of the underlying medium, with physical constants like the speed of light emerging naturally from the vacuum's underlying properties. All forces emerge organically from the wave equation. Drawing from Schrödinger's philosophical commitments and scientific insights, alongside complementary ideas from Einstein, Whitehead, Bohm, and Bell, we argue that QOT provides both a unified mathematical framework and coherent ontological foundation for physics. The framework offers novel solutions to persistent challenges in modern physics, including the Hubble tension, quantum measurement problem, and the quest for quantum gravity. It makes specific, testable predictions regarding galactic synchrony, early galaxy formation, and quantum coherence phenomena. Beyond its empirical implications, QOT represents a return to the kind of realist, deterministic physics that Einstein and Schrödinger advocated, while incorporating modern insights about non-locality and quantum behavior.