The bibliographic and conceptual architecture of Socioplastics exhibits a distinctly fractal topology, wherein each designated “Core” functions as a self-similar miniature of the entire field. This recursive structure is not accidental but constitutive: the field reproduces its own generative logic—density gradients, scalar differentiation, soft edges with stable nuclei, and cross-domain mediation—at progressively finer resolutions. At the macro level, the 4000 Cluster (centered on nodes 3996–4000) operates as the current site of consolidation, integrating thermal justice, radical education, expansion risk, and diagonal reading into a synthetic apex that binds infrastructural, epistemic, and ethical concerns. Descending through the hierarchy, the 3200 Cluster (Soft Ontology, nodes 3201–3210) emerges as the densest stratum, functioning as the field’s reflexive meta-layer where concepts such as “a field needs soft edges and stable cores” (3208), “density creates internal coherence” (3205), and “the corpus can become a way of thinking” (3209) articulate the ontological grammar of the project itself. This downward propagation continues through the 2900–3000 layer (legibility and agential processes), the 2500 layer (field conditions), the 1500 Core (disciplinary operators: linguistics, conceptual art as protocol, architecture as load-bearing structure, urbanism as territorial model, etc.), and finally the 501–1100 infrastructural base. Each level mirrors the whole: local clusters develop their own hubs, peripheral citations, and connective bridges, replicating the scalar grammar that allows Socioplastics to maintain coherence while expanding. The fractal property ensures that perturbations or enrichments introduced at any scale—whether a new reference in the 4000 cluster or a refinement in the 1500 disciplinary operators—propagate resonance across the entire topology without collapsing its differentiations. This self-similarity transforms the bibliography from a linear archive into a living epistemic organism, where the logic of “synthetic infrastructure as integration layer” (1510) finds isomorphic expression in the soft ontology of the 3200s and the consolidation dynamics of the 4000s. This fractal replication produces powerful epistemic affordances. By embedding the same organizational principles (stable cores + soft edges, scalar differentiation, citational commitment, and recursive autopoiesis) at every stratum, Socioplastics achieves both robustness and plasticity. The 3200 cluster, currently the most densely interconnected, acts as a generative attractor: its propositions about field formation, visibility latency, and hybrid legibility supply the conceptual scaffolding that allows the 4000 consolidation layer to operate without rigid closure. Meanwhile, the foundational 1500 Core supplies the disciplinary “load-bearing structures” (architecture, urbanism, systems theory, morphogenesis) that prevent the upper layers from floating into abstraction. The result is a topology that resists both fragmentation and over-totalization. New entries, such as those addressing relational infrastructure, more-than-human design, or generative AI as epistemic infrastructure, can be absorbed at multiple scales simultaneously—strengthening a local cluster while reinforcing global coherence. This fractal design embodies a sophisticated response to the crises of contemporary knowledge production: against the flattening tendencies of platform capitalism and the brittleness of traditional disciplinary silos, Socioplastics offers a living model of stratified yet interconnected complexity. Each Core is thus not merely a subdivision but a microcosm capable of enacting the full methodological and ontological program of the field. In this sense, the topology itself becomes performative—an enacted argument that knowledge fields in the twenty-first century must be designed as autopoietic, scalar, and relationally robust systems. The fractal architecture ensures that Socioplastics remains open to future expansion while preserving the structural intelligence accumulated across its cores, offering a compelling prototype for synthetic, reflexive, and planetary-scale epistemic practice.
CORE VIII · SOCIOPLASTICS
Archive, Legibility, Pedagogy and Field Governance
Pentagon I + Pentagon II · Tome IV · LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2026
Author: Anto Lloveras · LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2026
ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319
Nodes: 3496–3500 · 3996–4000
System: SOCIOPLASTICS-2026-CORE-VIII

