GravitationalCorpus designates the condition through which Anto Lloveras’ Socioplastics transforms cumulative textual production into relational mass capable of attracting, organising, and recontextualising subsequent knowledge. The operator rejects the assumption that a corpus is merely an aggregate of discrete documents; instead, it proposes that sustained accumulation generates qualitative effects once sufficient density, recurrence, and internal connectivity are achieved. Each new node enters an already charged field of terms, operators, citations, metadata, and cross-references, thereby acquiring meaning not only from its local proposition but from its position within the expanding system. In this sense, gravity functions as an epistemic model: recurrent concepts attract neighbouring formulations, established lexical clusters bend interpretation, and densely connected regions acquire disproportionate structural influence. A newly introduced operator, for example, may initially possess limited force, yet repeated citation and integration across multiple tomes progressively increase its capacity to organise adjacent concepts. The specific development of the 6,000-plus-node corpus demonstrates this transition from accumulation to attraction. At such density, the archive no longer behaves as a flat sequence of publications; it becomes a GravitationalCorpus in which earlier and later materials continuously modify one another through proximity, recurrence, and retrieval. The result is a self-intensifying field where scale produces not merely volume but coherence, navigability, and conceptual pressure. GravitationalCorpus therefore articulates a decisive principle of Socioplastics: intellectual mass is not created by quantity alone, but by the sustained engineering of relations among accumulated units. The corpus becomes sovereign when its internal density begins to determine how new material is encountered, interpreted, and absorbed.