The proposal that microtubules and related helical biomolecules implement time-crystal–like dynamics via a fourth circuit element, the “hinductor,” suggests that biological computation relies on phase-coherent, vortex-like excitations rather than digital switching. In parallel, recent work on intrinsic health has framed health as a latent, field-like state emerging from the interaction of energy, communication, and structure, measurable through dynamical recovery from perturbation. Here, we develop a unifying framework in which hinductor-like microtubule architectures function as elementary phase-memory units of a triality field: structure is represented as a vector, energy as a spinor, and information as a conjugate spinor. Intrinsic health is then modeled as a scalar coherence invariant [latex]\mathcal{H} = \langle V, S, S^{*} \rangle[/latex] governs both microtubule time-crystal behavior and organism-level recovery dynamics. We show how heart rate variability (HRV), VO₂ kinetics, elastography, and perturbation–recovery slopes can be interpreted as macroscopic projections of this invariant. We then outline a four-tier experimental program — ranging from in vitro microtubule nanowires to human multimodal perturbation protocols — to test whether a single coherence mode links microtubule time crystals with network physiology. This framework converts the notion of an “artificial brain” built from hinductors from a technological curiosity into a biophysically grounded hypothesis about health, memory, and resilience.
Tag: network physiology
Reconsidering Biological Structure as a Field Variable in Intrinsic Health | ChatGPT5.1
Cohen et al. (2025) advance a powerful reconceptualization of health as an intrinsic, field-like property emerging from the interaction of energy, communication, and structure. While their treatment of energy and communication as organism-level integrated variables is compelling, their conclusion that biological structure can only be represented as a “laundry list” of independent components introduces a conceptual asymmetry that is no longer supported by contemporary biophysics. Here, I argue that biological structure is best understood as a continuous, dynamic field governed by multiscale tensegrity and cytoskeletal electromechanics, with microtubules serving as active oscillatory mediators between structural geometry, metabolic energy, and bioelectric communication. When structure is treated as a field rather than an inventory, global structural integrity becomes theoretically definable and empirically measurable. This reframing restores full triadic symmetry to the intrinsic health framework and strengthens its physical grounding across biological scales.