This paper develops a generative-projective framework for reconsidering the ontological status of several foundational terms in modern physics, including particle, neutron, electron, heat, conductivity, membrane, and physical transport. The paper does not deny the empirical success or calculational power of inherited physical theories. Rather, it asks whether many experimentally stable and scientifically indispensable terms have been prematurely treated as ontologically primitive simply because they appear early within regimes of standardized measurement. The central methodological distinction of the paper is therefore the distinction between ontological beginning and measured beginning. What appears first within observation, instrumentation, and calculational formalization may not be first in the order of being itself. From this starting point, the paper proposes that many entities traditionally treated as primitive objects are better understood as stabilized readable outcomes produced under conditions of boundary, capture, projection, and regulated observability. The governing claim is not that particles or measurable physical quantities are unreal, but that they may belong to a later layer of legibility rather than to the deepest generative layer of physical reality. The paper therefore proceeds by ontological ordering rather than reductive compression. Instead of forcing all phenomena into one master-formula, each privileged physical term is examined according to whether it names a primitive layer of reality or a stabilized measurable surface produced through prior structural mediation. The paper begins by reopening the concept of particle itself. Modern physics routinely treats particle-language as the natural starting point of physical description because particles appear countable, localizable, repeatedly measurable, and experimentally robust. The present framework argues that this success may conceal a deeper lateness. A particle is never encountered outside conditions of observability, stabilization, and readable registration. Accordingly, particle is reinterpreted not as a self-subsisting primitive object but as a posterior surface-form: a standardized readable outcome generated when a deeper field becomes experimentally legible through boundary-conditioned measurement. Boundary, capture, and projection are therefore treated as prior to particle-legibility rather than as secondary additions to already complete objects. The slit becomes philosophically central within this reinterpretation because it reveals that observability is not neutral reception but regulated production of measurable form. This displacement of particle-language allows the neutron to be reconsidered structurally rather than merely compositionally. The paper proposes that neutron is better understood not first as a neutral nucleon but as a membrane-like buffering range surrounding a protonic emission-origin. Nuclear stability is thereby reinterpreted through proportionate mediation rather than simple constituent counting. Excess protrusion of the buffering range produces one mode of instability, while excessive withdrawal produces another. Isotopic lifetime is correspondingly reread not merely as the duration before decay but as the measurable endurance of membrane-range admissibility. Stable and unstable isotopes thus become structurally intelligible as differing conditions of proportionate buffering rather than as merely correct or incorrect numerical compositions. The electron is subsequently repositioned within the same grammar of regulated observability. Rather than treating the electron as an ontologically primitive carrier, the paper interprets it as a standardized reading of generative spatial ratio. Slit-like boundary structures, capture-density, and observational regulation become essential to electron-legibility. Localization and distribution are no longer treated as competing primitive truths about an already complete object; instead, they become posterior expressions of how a generative field is captured under differing observational conditions. The electron remains experimentally real and scientifically indispensable, but its reality is relocated from primitive being to stabilized measurable readability. The paper then reopens the concept of heat. Heat is argued not to be ontologically first but to belong to the readable surface of microscale rearrangement, barrier-crossing, residual stress, and distributed dissipation. Thermal measurement is thus interpreted as a stabilized sensory-measurement grammar emerging from prior structural change rather than as direct access to a primitive physical substance or quantity. This reinterpretation also motivates a distinction between thermal transport and charge transport. The paper argues that different forms of transport need not share one universal transmissive grammar merely because they are jointly measurable within the same material regime. This distinction later becomes central in the discussion of graphene and transport asymmetry. To provide a common structural language across these domains, the paper generalizes membrane beyond literal shell-language. Membrane is redefined as barrier-form arising from density differentials rather than as a static enclosing surface. The membrane is neither simple blockage nor unrestricted continuity; it is a regulated condition of selective passage, resistance, mediation, and transition. Spherical microstructure is introduced not as a final ontology but as a human-readable model for understanding how differentiated holding becomes geometrically legible. Membrane thereby functions simultaneously as ontological hint and methodological tool. It reveals a real structural feature of mediated being while also enabling comparison across nuclear stability, observability, transport, chemistry, and material systems. This barrier-form grammar is then extended into chemistry. The paper argues that chemistry becomes possible not simply because already complete units happen to interact, but because structured conditions of selective admissibility, coupling, resistance, and rearrangement are present. Bonding is therefore reread as barrier coupling rather than as the mere addition of relations between complete substances. Chemical reactions become reorganizations of mediated structure rather than brute replacement events among isolated units. Chemistry is thus repositioned within a larger ontology of transition-layer, shared stabilization, and selective rearrangement. Within this broader framework, carbon occupies a privileged position. The paper argues that carbon uniquely combines structural stability with reversible reconfiguration across geological, atmospheric, biological, and energetic regimes. Carbon is therefore treated not merely as one element among others but as a terrestrial axis of circulation and reorganizability. Its ability to maintain stable structures while repeatedly entering new configurations allows it to mediate between persistence and transformation across multiple scales of material organization. Graphene and related carbon architectures become especially important because they function as observational test-sites for selective transport grammar. The paper focuses particularly on cases in which electrical transport and thermal transport cease to obey a single transmissive order, such as in the breakdown of the Wiedemann–Franz relation and in hydrodynamic or Dirac-fluid transport regimes. These cases are interpreted not as anomalies to be eliminated but as evidence that one structural field may regulate different passages according to different barrier grammars. Graphene therefore serves as a privileged material instance in which selective readability, transport asymmetry, and barrier-conditioned transmissibility become experimentally visible. The reinterpretive movement continues into reactor moderation. Light water and heavy water are reread not merely as technical moderator materials but as externally structured regimes governing neutron continuity, capture, and admissibility. Reactor moderation is thereby interpreted as selective regulation of membrane-range continuity rather than simply as neutron slowing in an otherwise neutral space. This extension demonstrates that the paper’s barrier grammar can move from conceptual reinterpretation into technologically measurable nuclear environments. The same logic culminates in a reinterpretation of alpha emission. Alpha decay is traditionally regarded as one of the clearest examples of particle emission from the nucleus. The present framework instead proposes that alpha emission is better understood first as a stabilized measurable ratio-event. The alpha particle remains experimentally measurable, but what is primary is no longer the miniature object itself. What becomes primary is the structured emergence of readable ratio under conditions of nuclear transition and stabilized detectability. In this way, even one of the most classically stable cases of particle-language is reopened within the paper’s broader critique of primitive ontology. The final movement of the paper raises a broader ontological question concerning space and constants. If particle, electron, heat, transport, and measurable emission are all later readable surfaces, then space itself may require reconsideration as more primary than the entities traditionally treated as fundamental. Constants are correspondingly reopened as potentially situated stabilization-values rather than universally self-grounding origins. The paper does not claim to complete this reinterpretation definitively. Instead, it opens the possibility that what physics commonly treats as final units may themselves be derivative compressions emerging within a deeper generative spatial order. Throughout the paper, the aim is not to abolish inherited physics but to reorder its first questions. Existing
Woosung Chang (Thu,) studied this question.