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Modern science has made extraordinary progress in cataloguing the mechanisms of life, yet it remains fractured by disciplinary silos. Biology focuses on structure and function, physics on energy and thermodynamics, and cognitive sciences on meaning and mind. But life itself does not occur in isolation — it emerges from the integrative coherence of function, energy, and meaning.
This white paper introduces and develops the Universal Triadic Framework — a model that holds that all living systems are governed by the interdependent dynamics of three irreducible and interrelated dimensions:
- Functional: The organized structures and processes of life that enact specific roles (e.g., proteins, organs, behavior).
- Energetic: The flows of energy that drive change, enable action, and sustain homeostasis (e.g., ATP, membrane potentials, attention).
- Semiotic: The domain of meaning, signal interpretation, and internal representation of what matters (e.g., gene regulation, neural signaling, symbols).
We argue that these three are:
- Necessary: Each is essential for coherent life. Remove any, and the system collapses.
- Sufficient: Together, they provide a complete minimal model for living coherence, healing, awareness, and adaptive evolution.
Through cellular, physiological, cognitive, ecological, and social examples, we demonstrate how this triadic architecture recurs fractally across all levels of life — from biochemical loops to ecosystems and civilizations. Each biological cycle — whether of cell division, metabolic renewal, or consciousness itself — requires structural capacities (function), dynamic flows (energy), and interpretive feedback (semiosis).
This framework offers a unifying model for:
- Healing as the restoration of coherence across function, energy, and meaning.
- Consciousness as the self-organizing flow of attention within semiotic and energetic constraints.
- Evolution as the adaptive transformation of triadic coherence across nested timescales.
Finally, we propose implications for systems medicine, cognitive science, regenerative design, and planetary health, suggesting that this triadic model could serve as the foundation for a new life-coherent paradigm of science and culture.










