Aging is commonly narrated as scalar biomarker motion, generic molecular damage, or epigenetic drift. The empirical record synthesized here supports a narrower and more structured interpretation. In matched mouse single-cell analyses, the fraction of label-relevant organization carried by coordinated, correlation-coded structure rises from 0.3896 at 3 months to 0.5953 at 18 months and 0.6876 at 24 months, with directional marrow replication (0.323 →0.409 → 0.520) and strongest localization in immune and inflammaging programs. We interpret this as an encoding-regime shift rather than generic noise accumulation. The result motivates a state description rather than a one-number age score. We therefore model aging as a passport-conditioned structured damage field, Dp(x) = Sp(x), Bp(x), Op(x), Rp(x), Cp(x), in which structural-host deviation, boundary hardening, residual outcome lock, route deficits, and continuity state are allowed to move asynchronously. This formulation separates the host question from the route and controller questions and explains why DNA methylation, inflammation, and other age-linked readouts can remain informative without exhausting the aging problem. We further show how this field-based view integrates host stratigraphy, codebook/program geometry, measurement realism, and tissue-specific conditioning. The resulting claim is intentionally bounded. We do not argue that one molecular channel exhausts aging, that every age-associated change is higher-order, or that rejuvenation control is solved. We argue instead that aging is computationally visible as a structured deformation of organized biological state and that this deformation increasingly requires correlation-sensitive rather than marker-only description.
Petr Sramek (Wed,) studied this question.