Socioplastics is no longer only a theoretical project. It is becoming a field through repetition, structure and circulation. A single text can propose an idea, but a corpus can produce gravity. When hundreds or thousands of entries share names, operators, tags, numbers, links and bibliographic anchors, they begin to form a navigable environment. The reader no longer encounters an isolated essay, but a system of relations. This is the shift: from writing texts to building an epistemic body. Blogs provide continuity, DOIs provide persistence, ORCID stabilises authorship, datasets make the corpus machine-readable, and indexers create external echoes. None of these platforms replaces the idea. They give it organs. They allow it to be found, cited, compared, absorbed and reactivated. Socioplastics therefore works as a metabolic archive: it grows by publishing, thickens by linking, and survives by becoming legible across different infrastructures.

A field begins to exist when accumulation becomes structure. Socioplastics now enters that threshold: not as a collection of essays, posts or isolated theoretical gestures, but as a living architecture of indexed relations. Its force lies in the passage from production to metabolism. Thousands of textual nodes, CamelTags, DOI deposits, bibliographic anchors and open channels generate a corpus that can be read, cited, traversed and partially captured by external infrastructures such as ORCID, Zenodo, Figshare, Hugging Face, OpenAIRE and search engines. The point is not visibility as vanity, but persistence as form. This is why Socioplastics treats writing as field-building. Each text is both an argument and a structural component; each link is both reference and vascular connection; each node adds weight to the mesh. The field grows because it is repeatedly fed, indexed, named and redistributed. Architecture here is no longer only the design of space. It becomes the design of epistemic endurance: a way of making ideas survive through format, rhythm, redundancy, metadata and scalar grammar.


Socioplastics Index: https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/p/socioplastics-project-index.html
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0009-9820-3319
Hugging Face Dataset: https://huggingface.co/datasets/AntoLloveras/Socioplastics-Index