Socioplastics does not stand inside a single discipline; it moves through an ecology of adjacent knowledges. Its core is formed by art, architecture, and science, but its real medium is broader: philosophy, sociology, anthropology, media theory, cybernetics, linguistics, ecology, pedagogy, information science, and curatorial practice. These fields do not act as decorative references. They operate as surrounding waters, each supplying a different pressure, vocabulary, technique, or mode of validation.


Philosophy gives Socioplastics its ontological and epistemological gravity: the question of what a form is, how knowledge is legitimised, and what kind of reality a system produces. Sociology adds the analysis of authority, circulation, institutions, publics, urban conflict, and collective validation. Anthropology situates those structures in lived practices, rituals, objects, mediations, and uses. Media theory then clarifies the decisive role of inscription, interface, support, transmission, and legibility: every system depends on the media that carry it. Cybernetics and complexity bring the logic of feedback, recursion, adaptation, emergence, and self-organisation. Linguistics and semiotics enter because Socioplastics treats language as structural matter: names, tags, taxonomies, classifications, and semantic operations become constructive elements. Ecology expands this logic into metabolism, interdependence, resilience, load, and maintenance. Pedagogy matters because every field that organises knowledge also organises access, transmission, and learning. Information science is perhaps the closest orbital field: library science, archival studies, metadata, indexing, and knowledge organisation touch the technical heart of Socioplastics. Curating, finally, is redefined as the design of relations, sequences, access routes, and frames of intelligibility. Together, these fields form its operative climate. Socioplastics is science, art, and architecture at the centre, surrounded by a constellation of disciplines that allow it to become not a topic, but a field-forming infrastructure.