Synthetic Legibility * Governed Visibility


SyntheticLegibility designates the capacity of Anto Lloveras’ Socioplastics to construct knowledge that remains simultaneously interpretable by human readers and operationally accessible to search engines, databases, indexing systems, and large language models. The operator rejects the presumed opposition between intellectual complexity and technical readability, proposing instead that legibility can itself be designed as infrastructure. Titles, CamelTags, metadata, persistent identifiers, recurrent terminology, internal linking, and structured publication formats collectively produce a multilayered surface through which the corpus can be found, parsed, cited, recombined, and extended. A concept such as TopolexicalSovereignty, for example, functions at once as a theoretically dense proposition, a stable lexical token, a searchable identifier, and a machine-recognisable node within a broader semantic network. SyntheticLegibility therefore exceeds conventional accessibility: its purpose is not merely to simplify information but to engineer multiple channels of intelligibility without sacrificing conceptual precision. The 6,000-plus-node corpus provides a specific case of this principle at scale, because its continued navigability depends upon the conversion of textual density into structured addressability. Through recursive naming, DOI anchoring, indexing, and metadata, the archive becomes readable not only as prose but as a synthetic epistemic environment traversable by heterogeneous agents. The operator is consequently inseparable from questions of power, since what cannot be indexed, recognised, or retrieved risks disappearance within algorithmically mediated culture. Its decisive proposition is that visibility should not be surrendered to external platforms. SyntheticLegibility converts publication into the deliberate governance of discoverability, ensuring that conceptual complexity acquires durable forms through which it can circulate without forfeiting its internal sovereignty.