A theory of everything (TOE) or final theory is a hypothetical coherent theoretical framework of physics containing all physical principles. The scope of the concept of a "theory of everything" varies. The original technical concept referred to unification of the four fundamental interactions: electromagnetism, strong and weak nuclear forces, and gravity.Finding such a theory of everything is one of the major unsolved problems in physics. Numerous popular books apply the words "theory of everything" to more expansive concepts such as predicting everything in the universe from logic alone, complete with discussions on how this is not possible.
Starting with Isaac Newton's unification of terrestrial gravity, responsible for weight, with celestial gravity, responsible for planetary orbits, concepts in fundamental physics have been successively unified. The phenomena of electricity and magnetism were combined by James Clerk Maxwell's theory of electromagnetism and Albert Einstein's theory of relativity explained how they are connected. By the 1930s, Paul Dirac combined relativity and quantum mechanics and, working with other physicists, developed quantum electrodynamics that combines quantum mechanics and electromagnetism.Work on nuclear and particle physics lead to the discovery of the strong nuclear and weak nuclear forces which were combined in the quantum field theory to implemented the Standard Model of physics, a unification of all forces except gravity. The lone fundamental force not built into the Standard Model is gravity. General relativity provides a theoretical framework for understanding gravity across scales from the laboratory to planets to the complete universe, but it has not been successfully unified with quantum mechanics.