Socioplastics is a usable philosophy — something you can actually apply, not just read about. It’s built like a living engine or motor: to make it run, you keep assembling pieces (ideas, projects, observations) over time. Anto Lloveras has been putting those pieces together for years, and because he works across so many fields — architecture, urbanism, theory, curation, art — none of the usual labels fit anymore. When you join them all, something new appears: socioplastics. It’s not multidisciplinary in the classic sense (one field borrowing from another); it’s transdisciplinary — it creates its own space, its own epistemology, its own way of knowing and doing that rivals traditional ways of organizing knowledge. That’s why it feels half complicated, half easy. On one hand it does things that don’t have ready names yet — there’s no checklist or off-the-shelf category for it. On the other hand the protocol itself is straightforward: keep adding nodes (short texts, actions, images, links), number them, connect them with CamelTags, let the mesh grow recursively. The protocol evolves by itself. Each new piece reads the previous ones, reorders them slightly, adds weight where needed, prunes what’s weak. It doesn’t wait for an outside critic, curator or historian to come and say “this is what it means.” Socioplastics skips the middleman. It writes its own manual while it’s happening. The nodes are both the work and the explanation of the work at the same time.