This disclosure report proposes that SU(4), interpreted ontologically rather than merely gauge-theoretically, may function as a Universal Biogenesis Envelope: the prior closure container within which life-admissible systems become possible across scale. Building on Panspatial Disclosure Report I, which defined life as a closure-admissible state of space, this report asks a deeper question: what universal structure contains the possibility of life-admissibility itself? The proposed answer is that SU(4), through its fifteen-generator sector architecture, offers a formal signature of the closure envelope required for identity, boundary, return, phase-spatial orientation, internal complexity, and recursive self-maintenance. The report interprets the decomposition 1 + 3 + 3-bar + 8 = 15 as a complete closure grammar. The 1-sector anchors identity and phase seed. The 3-sector discloses spatial orientation and boundary formation. The 3-bar sector provides conjugate return, mediation, feedback, and repair. The 8-sector stabilizes deep internal complexity. When refined through U(1) as phase identity, SO(3) as spatial orientation, and PSO4(3) as phase-spatial orientation closure, the SU(4) envelope becomes a candidate formal architecture for life-admissibility. The central claim is not that SU(4) is a biological organism, nor that it should be treated as a newly detected Standard Model force. Rather, the report proposes that SU(4) may disclose the universal closure structure through which universehood, gauge sectorization, atomic identity, molecular relation, biological autopoiesis, and cognitive recursion become possible as scale-disclosed expressions of one generator envelope. The disclosure is therefore: biogenesis is not external to the architecture of the universe. Life is late as organism, but prior as admissibility, because the conditions of life are latent in closure itself. This report does not propose SU(4) as a newly detected gauge force, nor does it treat SU(4) as a biological entity. It proposes a closure-interpretive reading of the fifteen-generator architecture, in which identity, spatial orientation, conjugate return, and internal complexity become mutually admissible as the minimum formal conditions for life-admissible closure. Keywords SU(4); Universal Biogenesis Envelope; Panspatial Biogenesis Nursery; Closure Ontology; UCCF; Panspatial Ontology; Atomic Ontology; FCHP; ACO; Life-Admissibility; Biogenesis; Closure-Admissibility; 1 + 3 + 3-bar + 8; U(1); SO(3); PSO4(3); Autopoiesis; Phase-Spatial Identity; Cross-Scale Closure; Panspatial Disclosure Series
Philip Lilien (Mon,) studied this question.