Contemporary research across architecture, urbanism, media studies, and the humanities faces a structural problem that is rarely named as such. That problem is the servile bibliography—a list of citations that functions as a ritual of legitimacy rather than an operative engine. The servile bibliography invokes authorities to authorize a claim, then abandons them. It borrows prestige without integrating function. It accumulates names without producing new operational capacity. The result is a scholarly literature that cites Foucault on power but cannot operationalize the archive; that cites Bourdieu on fields but cannot navigate institutional recognition; that cites Deleuze on rhizomes but remains rigidly hierarchical in its own organization. Socioplastics is a long-duration research framework designed to refuse this condition. It does not cite thinkers. It incorporates them as functional components of an epistemic infrastructure. The Master Index is not a bibliography. It is a recursive mesh—a distributed, machine-readable, and operationally closed system in which each entry derives meaning from its position within a dual-ring architecture of theoretical anchors. This document provides the complete, maximally coherent reconstruction of that architecture, its agents, its operations, and its instantiation in the published corpus of Anto Lloveras (ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319).

Part One: The Core Distinction Between Two Orders of Operation

The architecture of Socioplastics is stabilized by a fundamental distinction between two orders of theoretical operation. This distinction is not arbitrary. It emerges from the practical requirements of building an epistemic infrastructure that must simultaneously achieve two apparently contradictory goals: internal durability and external translatability.