Socioplastics names the passage from accumulated material to operative field. It does not begin by placing architecture, art, urbanism, ecology, philosophy, media, pedagogy, technology, body and archive into separate compartments. It begins from the opposite decision: to treat them as materials inside one constructed epistemic environment. The task is not to add disciplines together, nor to decorate one field with references from another, but to produce a grammar through which heterogeneous practices can become mutually legible without losing their singular force. For at least two centuries, knowledge has been organized through division. Each discipline has built its own journals, conferences, protocols of legitimacy, citation habits and internal vocabularies. This has produced depth, but also insulation. When a practice crosses these borders, it is usually called interdisciplinary, transdisciplinary or hybrid. These words often describe aspiration more than construction. They signal the desire to move across fields, but they rarely build the infrastructure that would allow a new field to stand on its own.



Socioplastics  is a field architecture: a system of operators, anchors, vectors, nodes, chapters, books, tomes and cores through which knowledge can be organized, cited, tested, expanded and contested. Its aim is not to replace existing disciplines, but to make them usable as materials within a wider operative space. The field works through scalar growth. Its structure can be read through powers of ten: ten operative vectors form the grammar; one hundred core proximities form the essential vocabulary; one thousand structural anchors form the operative bibliography; ten thousand expanded agents mark the future horizon of the field. This is not a rigid classification system. It is a gradient of legibility. Each scale gives the next one pressure, density and orientation.