Life as the Universal Operator proposes that life is not a biological exception but a minimal, substrate‑independent mechanism. The paper defines life as a coherence‑preserving operator that takes in difference, generates a response, stabilizes that response as structure, and remains open to new inputs. This recursive process—difference → response → preservation → openness—produces the full range of living behavior across scales. By treating life as a relational operator rather than a material category, the paper unifies biological, cognitive, cultural, and civilizational systems under a single mechanism. Development becomes recursive deepening, identity becomes temporal continuity, gender becomes a stable direction in the manifold, and collapse becomes loss of dimensionality. Time itself emerges as the internal record of the operator’s recursion. The result is a general theory of life grounded in coherence, recursion, and relational structure—capable of explaining how systems adapt, persist, and transform from cells to civilizations.
Denis Bailwy (Tue,) studied this question.