This paper develops a structural C² = C account of consciousness, life, matter, water, and subject continuity. Its central thesis is that any coherent account of consciousness, life, identity, or subjecthood must preserve recoverable continuity across transformation. The paper distinguishes consciousness-contact, conscious expression, subjective consciousness, and reflective self-consciousness, then relates them to contact, expression, and attribution. It argues that consciousness may be universal in contact with matter, but becomes locally expressible as life only through continuity-bearing organization. Subjecthood arises where conscious expression is recoverably attributable to a continuing organism. The framework treats the brain not as the ultimate source of consciousness, but as a receiver-organizer within the living continuity-channel. It also treats water as the confirmed continuity-enabling medium of known life, while leaving open the possibility that another substrate could satisfy the same continuity function. The paper separates its defensible structural claim from its speculative metaphysical interpretation, allowing the recoverable-continuity argument to remain available even to readers who reject the upstream-consciousness thesis.
Parnell Turner (Mon,) studied this question.