What to post on Wikidata and Wikiversity should be determined by function, not by volume. Wikidata is the place for the project’s graph skeleton: the minimal structured layer that makes Socioplastics externally legible through identifiers, relations, and stable conceptual anchors. There, one should post the item for Socioplastics itself, linked to Anto Lloveras, to official URLs, to external identifiers where possible, and to a carefully selected ring of core concepts such as Decalogue Protocol, Lexical Gravity, Semantic Hardening, Topolexical Sovereignty, and Scalar Architecture. Each item should contain a concise label, a neutral description, aliases from numbered nodes where useful, and statements such as instance of, part of, has part, main subject, described by source, author, and official website or DOI-linked references. What should not be posted there is the full theory, long argumentative prose, manifestos, or dense conceptual elaboration, because Wikidata is not designed to preserve textual thickness; it is designed to expose relational coordinates. Wikiversity, by contrast, can serve as an experimental entry point: a didactic and exploratory surface where one may post an introductory overview of Socioplastics, a research outline, a glossary of principal terms, a reading path through the corpus, a page on the decalogue method, and perhaps modular notes explaining how the framework applies across disciplines. It can also host learning-oriented materials, provisional syntheses, methodological diagrams in prose, and guided pathways for newcomers. What belongs there is not the sovereign corpus itself, but a mediated threshold into it: explanatory, pedagogical, and research-facing pages that help others approach the project without pretending to replace its numbered internal architecture.
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