Four nucleotides specify all of life. The question of what they mean mathematically had no complete answer. This paper provides one. The standard genetic code maps 64 triplet codons to 20 amino acids and 3 stop signals through a degeneracy pattern unchanged across all life for over three billion years. Previous analyses ask how well amino acids are assigned within the standard codon table. This study asks a prior question: Can the 64 codons be organized into a coordinate system at all?All 144 positional base-4 coordinate systems compatible with a four-nucleotide alphabet were exhaustively enumerated and tested against constraints derived directly from observed degeneracy patterns. These constraints reference amino acid codon group sizes only. They invoke no biochemistry, no evolutionary assumptions, no functional properties.Of 144 frameworks tested, 142 (98.6%) fail. The two surviving frameworks, UCAG and GACU with 4×16×1 positional weighting, are mathematical mirrors. The center nucleotide carries weight 16, the largest single-nucleotide contribution to any codon address. This is not a choice that was made. It is the only weighting that works.The surviving framework produces outputs never given to the proof: domain boundaries concentrating 50% of amino acids and 100% of stop codons (p < 0.00002), wobble base pairing compatibility across all nine 2-codon amino acids (p < 0.00003), and a correlation between coordinate distance and variant pathogenicity (Cohen's d = 0.68, p < 10⁻²⁴⁰, n = 10,000). None of these were inputs.The genetic code is universal not because evolution converged on it from many alternatives. It is universal because the mathematics permits only one coordinate system.
Bernhard Pfennigschmidt (Fri,) studied this question.