This paper explores morphogenesis through the framework of Pattern Field Theory (PFT). Whereas conventional biology often emphasizes genetic regulation, signaling pathways, and chemical gradients, this work examines whether biological form can also be modeled as an emergent consequence of structural coherence constraints within the Allen Orbital Lattice (AOL). The paper develops several theoretical components: • Structural Template Hypothesis - biological organization is modeled as alignment with discrete geometric constraints, where stable growth pathways arise through Phase Alignment Lock (PAL). • Equilibrion Dynamics - developmental stability is interpreted through a self-balancing field principle intended to describe persistence of large-scale form despite ongoing cellular turnover. • Non-Invasive Field Observation (NFO) - observational operators are discussed as a possible framework for analyzing structural deviations, perturbations, or developmental noise without directly modifying the modeled system. • Synthetic Morphogenesis - the framework is extended conceptually to engineered materials and adaptive computational systems whose configurations evolve toward coherent low-friction states. • Information-to-Form Transduction - the paper investigates whether discrete informational seeds can generate cascades of organized structure under coherence-driven dynamics.
James Johan Sebastian Allen (Fri,) studied this question.