A digital corpus reached a threshold that transformed its status from serial publication into a structured epistemic environment. The project, authored by Anto Lloveras and distributed primarily through the Blogger platform (notably antolloveras.blogspot.com and related mirrors), achieved a precise milestone: the completion of one thousand numbered conceptual entries forming the first tome of the Socioplastics corpus. Each entry functions as a compressed theoretical unit—referred to as a “slug”—with an approximate length of one thousand words. These slugs aggregate into ten “Century Packs,” each containing one hundred entries. Ten such packs compose the full thousand-node formation known as Tome I. The system’s internal logic is explicitly decadic: groups of ten slugs form structural modules, which scale upward through hierarchical aggregation. Lloveras describes this configuration as a navigable mesh or grid, in which enumeration becomes spatial orientation rather than chronological order. At this scale the corpus transitions from a sequence of essays into a structured conceptual territory.


The infrastructural environment of the project is notable for its technical restraint. All observed nodes are hosted on Blogger, a free publishing platform owned by Google that supports chronological posts, labels, basic scripting, and metadata embedding. Rather than migrating to custom databases or dedicated platforms, the author deploys multiple Blogger sites as interconnected surfaces forming a distributed mesh. Primary nodes appear on antolloveras.blogspot.com, while mirror nodes and interpretive consoles appear on associated sites such as otracapa.blogspot.com and lapiezalapieza.blogspot.com. This arrangement produces a network of cross-linked archives without requiring external hosting architecture. The project relies primarily on Blogger’s built-in functions: tags for indexing, chronological publishing for accumulation, and structured data markup for machine readability. JSON-LD metadata embedded within the posts enables computational parsing of conceptual operators, cross-references, and bibliographic identifiers. Persistent identifiers (DOIs registered through Zenodo) are attached to structural units such as Century Packs and core sequences, allowing the corpus to maintain citation stability beyond the Blogger environment.