Life is typically explained in terms of molecular mechanisms, yet such accounts often overlook the deeper physical structures that make biological organization possible. I propose Environmental Structural Science, a conceptual framework in which biological organization emerges within layered environmental constraints extending from quantum fluctuations and interfacial electric fields to geochemical gradients and broader cosmological asymmetries, including matter-biased conditions potentially linked to neutrino-related asymmetry. These environmental layers generate directional conditions that bias chemical and organizational pathways long before life appears. Within this framework, life emerges as a self-maintaining “knot” formed through the convergence of multiple environmental constraints and flows. Consciousness is discussed as a possible higher-order extension of recursive environmental integration. Rather than proposing a unified physical theory of life and mind, this perspective emphasizes how multi-scale environmental structures may shape the emergence, stabilization, and persistence of biological agency.
S. Kato (Tue,) studied this question.