Hegel, G.W.F. (2018) The Phenomenology of Spirit. Translated and edited by Terry Pinkard. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit is a philosophical itinerary of consciousness as it discovers that truth is not an inert object standing outside the subject, but a historical and social process through which mind comes to know itself. Its central concept is Spirit (Geist): the living unity of individual self-consciousness, shared practices, ethical life, culture, religion, and knowledge. The work begins with apparently immediate certainty, yet each stage of experience reveals internal contradictions that force consciousness beyond itself. Thus sense-certainty becomes perception, perception becomes understanding, and self-consciousness emerges through the struggle for recognition. The decisive case study is the master–slave dialectic, where domination fails because the master requires recognition from one whom he refuses to recognise, while the bondsman, through labour and fear, gains a deeper relation to reality and selfhood. Pinkard’s introduction emphasises that Hegel saw the book as a “voyage of discovery”, written amid political, intellectual, and social upheaval, especially the French Revolution, Kantian philosophy, and the transformation of the modern university. The Phenomenology therefore unites epistemology, history, politics, and metaphysics: knowledge is not merely possessed, but formed through crisis, negation, and reconciliation. Ultimately, Hegel’s argument culminates in absolute knowing, not as static omniscience, but as the achieved comprehension that truth is the self-developing life of Spirit becoming transparent to itself.


Leibniz, G.W. (1997) Monadology. Translated by Robert Latta, revised by Donald Rutherford.

Leibniz’s Monadology presents a compressed yet formidable metaphysical system in which reality is composed of monads, simple substances without parts, extension, or physical divisibility. The central concept is that every monad is a living mirror of the universe: although no monad has “windows” through which external forces may enter, each contains an internal principle of change, passing from one perception to another through appetition. This doctrine rejects purely mechanical explanations of consciousness, since perception cannot be reduced to the movement of parts, as Leibniz’s famous image of the enlarged thinking machine makes clear. The decisive case study is the relation between soul and body: bodies follow efficient causes, while souls follow final causes, yet both correspond through pre-established harmony, established by God from the beginning rather than through direct causal interaction. This allows Leibniz to preserve individuality, order, freedom, and divine rationality within a universe of infinite interconnection. His principle of sufficient reason further requires that every fact have an explanation, culminating in God as the necessary being who chooses the best possible world from among infinite possibilities. Ultimately, the Monadology converts metaphysics into a vision of universal intelligibility: nothing is inert, isolated, or meaningless; every created being expresses the whole from its own perspective. Leibniz therefore offers not a mechanical cosmos, but a rational, moral, and harmonised plurality grounded in divine wisdom.



Plato (1888) The Timaeus of Plato. Edited with introduction and notes by R. D. Archer-Hind. London: Macmillan and Co. Available in uploaded file.

Plato’s Timaeus, in Archer-Hind’s edition, offers a profound cosmological synthesis in which being, becoming, mathematics, soul, and divine intelligence are brought into a single speculative architecture. Its central concept is the ordered cosmos: the visible universe is not a chaotic aggregate of matter, but a living creature fashioned according to intelligible form by a rational divine craftsman. Against the instability of the sensible world, Plato posits eternal models that give structure to becoming; yet he does not simply abandon the material realm, but explains it as an image of intelligible order. The decisive case study is the creation of the world-soul, where mathematical ratios, harmony, and motion transform the universe into a coherent organism capable of rational circular movement. Archer-Hind’s introduction stresses that the Timaeus functions as a “master-key” to Platonism, because it gathers earlier Greek problems—Heraclitean change, Parmenidean being, and Anaxagorean mind—into a unified metaphysical vision. The dialogue therefore does not merely speculate about physics; it dramatizes the relation between eternal truth and temporal existence. Its account of nature remains mythical and scientific at once, using cosmological narrative to express philosophical necessity. Ultimately, the Timaeus presents reality as intelligible becoming: the world is imperfect because it is generated, but beautiful because it participates in reason, measure, and the Good.


Janko, R. (n.d.) Empedocles, On Nature I 233–364: A New Reconstruction of P. Strasb. Gr. Inv. 1665–6.

Richard Janko’s reconstruction of Empedocles, On Nature I 233–364 reinterprets the Strasbourg papyrus as evidence for the profound unity of Empedocles’ natural philosophy and religious anthropology. The central concept is cosmic mixture: all living beings arise and perish through the combination and dissolution of four elemental roots—fire, air, earth, and water—under the opposing powers of Love and Strife. Rather than separating physics from purification, the papyrus shows that Empedocles could explain the material constitution of the world while simultaneously presenting life as morally burdened by violence, embodiment, and reincarnation. The decisive case study is the fragment containing his lament over meat-eating, where the speaker’s regret links diet, guilt, and cosmic punishment to the same processes that govern biological formation and decay. Janko’s philological argument further strengthens this synthesis by proposing that the papyrus fragments belong to a more continuous passage of Book I than previous editors had allowed, thereby making Empedocles’ poem less disjointed and philosophically more coherent. The result is an image of early Greek thought in which science and religion are not antagonistic categories, but mutually implicated modes of explanation. Ultimately, Empedocles emerges as a poet-philosopher for whom matter is never merely inert: it is animated by attraction, repulsion, suffering, and ethical consequence. His cosmology therefore becomes a tragic metaphysics of life itself.

Aristotle (2016) Ética a Nicómaco. Translated by Patricio de Azcárate. San José: Editorial Digital Imprenta Nacional.

Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics establishes happiness not as pleasure, wealth, honour, or momentary satisfaction, but as the highest and most complete end of human life. His central concept is eudaimonia, commonly translated as happiness or flourishing, which designates the condition of living well through the excellent exercise of human capacities. Since every art, inquiry, and action aims at some good, Aristotle argues that there must be a supreme good sought for its own sake, and this good is happiness. Yet happiness cannot be reduced to passive possession; it consists in activity of the soul in accordance with virtue. The decisive case study is Aristotle’s analysis of the specifically human function: plants live and animals perceive, but human beings uniquely act according to reason. Therefore, the good life is realised when reason governs desire, choice, and conduct through stable virtues such as justice, courage, temperance, and practical wisdom. Aristotle also recognises that external goods—friends, political stability, material sufficiency, and good fortune—support happiness, although they do not constitute its essence. His ethics thus avoids both crude hedonism and abstract idealism: happiness is neither mere feeling nor detached contemplation alone, but a sustained form of rational excellence embodied in action. Ultimately, Aristotle presents ethics as a practical science whose aim is not simply to know the good, but to become capable of living it.



Fidora, A. and Sierra, C. (eds.) (2011) Ramon Llull: From the Ars Magna to Artificial Intelligence. Barcelona: Artificial Intelligence Research Institute, IIIA-CSIC.

Ramon Llull: From the Ars Magna to Artificial Intelligence presents Llull as a pivotal precursor of formal reasoning, whose medieval project unexpectedly anticipates central ideas in logic, computation, and artificial intelligence. The core concept is the Ars lulliana, a universal method designed to analyse fundamental concepts, represent them through symbolic notation, and recombine them by rule-governed procedures in order to generate rational conclusions. Originally intended to persuade Muslims and Jews through shared principles rather than scriptural authority, Llull’s system exceeded its missionary context by proposing a general science of knowledge. Its most innovative feature lies in its combinatorial architecture: letters, diagrams, rotating figures, tables, binary and ternary relations, and structured questions operate as instruments for producing and testing arguments. A decisive case study is Llull’s alphabet of principles, in which concepts such as goodness, greatness, difference, concordance, virtue, and vice are formalised and recombined, thereby prefiguring later aspirations toward a universal calculus. The volume explicitly connects this legacy to Leibniz’s characteristica universalis, Frege’s formal logic, graph theory, semantic networks, generative systems, and even social choice theory. Yet Llull’s thought remains distinct from modern computation because his elementary language is not anti-metaphysical; it is grounded in a theological vision of reality as relational, ordered, and intelligible. Ultimately, Llull’s significance lies in converting reasoning into a mechanisable art of discovery, making him not a modern computer scientist, but a profound ancestor of algorithmic thought.




Spinoza, B. (2017) Ethics Demonstrated in Geometrical Order. Edited and translated by Jonathan Bennett. Available in uploaded file.

Benedict Spinoza’s Ethics Demonstrated in Geometrical Order constructs one of modern philosophy’s most radical accounts of freedom, not as arbitrary choice, but as lucid participation in necessity. Its central concept is the identity of God or Nature: there is only one infinite substance, and every finite thing is a mode or expression of that substance. Consequently, human beings are not independent kingdoms within reality, but determinate beings whose thoughts, desires, and actions arise from the universal causal order. This doctrine might appear to abolish liberty; yet Spinoza reverses the ordinary assumption by arguing that bondage consists precisely in being governed by inadequate ideas and passive affects. Freedom emerges when the mind understands the causes of its emotions and transforms confused passion into active rational power. The decisive case study is the transition from human bondage to intellectual freedom in Parts IV and V: fear, hatred, envy, and sadness diminish one’s power of acting, whereas adequate knowledge generates joy, self-command, and the “intellectual love” of God. Spinoza therefore offers an ethics without moralistic blame, since actions are explained through causes rather than condemned as metaphysical failures. His philosophy culminates in blessedness, a condition in which the human mind recognises itself as part of an eternal intelligible order. Ultimately, Spinoza’s ethical project teaches that liberation is not escape from necessity, but the disciplined comprehension of it.



Bacon, F. (2004) The Advancement of Learning. Project Gutenberg. Transcribed from the 1893 Cassell & Company edition by David Price. Available in uploaded file.

Francis Bacon’s The Advancement of Learning offers a foundational defence of knowledge as a disciplined, moral, and public enterprise rather than a decorative possession of the educated elite. Bacon rejects the suspicion that learning corrupts faith, weakens political judgement, or encourages idle speculation; instead, he argues that rightly ordered inquiry enlarges human capacity while remaining subordinate to ethical purpose. His central concept is the advancement of learning itself: the systematic enlargement, correction, and practical application of human understanding. Against scholastic disputation and ornamental eloquence, Bacon promotes a form of inquiry grounded in observation, method, and utility. Learning, for him, must not become verbal excess, sterile controversy, or intellectual pride; it must be directed towards “the glory of the Creator and the relief of man’s estate”. The work’s case study is Bacon’s critique of inherited Aristotelianism, which he regards as powerful in argument yet insufficiently fruitful in producing works that benefit human life. This diagnosis allows him to recast education, science, and governance as mutually reinforcing domains: a learned state is better equipped to deliberate, innovate, and administer justice. Ultimately, Bacon’s essay inaugurates a modern conception of knowledge as organised inquiry in the service of collective improvement. Its enduring significance lies in transforming learning from a private accomplishment into a civic responsibility and from contemplation alone into an engine of historical reform.


Here is a ranked list of the top 10 fields that form the strongest backbone of the project, based on citation density, nodal connectivity (especially around Core VII 3200s, Core III 1500s, and 4000 cluster), and conceptual integration:

Summary of Span vs. Depth * While Socioplastics touches 20+ fields, these top 10 constitute the dense, highly interconnected core. The remaining fields (Political Theory, Feminist/Queer Theory, Decolonial Studies, Education, AI Ethics, Linguistics, History, etc.) function as important supporting layers that feed into the main hubs rather than acting as primary structural cores.

Where New Disciplines Are Born: Relational Agency, Tangential Activation, and the Emergence of a Synthetic Field * The founding of a new knowledge field is among the rarest events in intellectual life — rarer, certainly, than the founding of a new university department, which may merely reclassify existing knowledge under a new administrative heading. Genuine field-founding — the construction of a space in which problems can be posed that were not previously posable, in which a vocabulary is coined that did not previously exist, in which the relations between established disciplines are reorganized rather than merely sampled — requires a kind of institutional independence that the university, in its current configuration, is structurally unable to provide. It requires, instead, what might be called a relational agency: a small, autonomous, multiply-positioned organism whose lack of departmental identity is not a deficiency but a structural advantage, whose location at the intersection of several established fields allows it to operate on their tangencies, and whose independence from external validation processes permits it to sustain theoretical commitments over the long durations that genuine field-building demands. LAPIEZA-LAB, founded in Madrid in 2009 as a para-institutional curatorial and research laboratory, and the Socioplastics theoretical system it has produced across nearly two decades of continuous practice, constitute precisely such a case — and the logic of their emergence illuminates something important about where new disciplines come from, and why they are so scarce.


The first obstacle to genuine field-founding within the contemporary university is structural, and Pierre Bourdieu identified it with precision decades before its effects became as visible as they are today. In becoming more autonomous, the functioning of a field increases its closure effects: the greater its autonomy, the more the field is produced by and produces agents who master and possess an area of specific competence, and the more the field functions in accordance with the interests inherent in its characteristic activity, the greater the separation from the laity and the more specific become the capital, the competences, and the sense of the game. This closure dynamic, which Bourdieu observed as a general feature of field formation, has intensified dramatically in the contemporary academy under the combined pressures of departmental funding structures, citation metrics, peer review gatekeeping, and the professionalization of research careers. A scholar in 2026 who operates within a recognized disciplinary field — architecture, media theory, environmental psychology, linguistics — accumulates capital by deepening their position within that field: by publishing in its recognized journals, citing its established authorities, attending its conferences, and training students who will reproduce its conventions. The incentive structure is entirely conservative. The scholar who ventures across disciplinary boundaries does not accumulate capital in two fields; they risk losing it in both. Disciplines function as social fields — dynamic, relational, internally heterogeneous assemblages — in which the position of each agent is determined by the specific rules of the field, the agent's habitus, and the agent's capital. To abandon the rules, or to play by rules from a different field, is not a form of freedom within the system but a form of exit from it — with all the costs that exit implies. The consequence is a widespread and largely unacknowledged intellectual timidity. Scholars who are genuinely capable of synthetic thinking — who possess the formation, the range of reading, and the conceptual agility required to work across disciplinary boundaries — consistently choose not to, because the institutional penalties for doing so are immediate and the rewards, if they come at all, arrive too late and are too diffuse to offset the career damage. What fills the space vacated by genuine disciplinary risk is a kind of performed interdisciplinarity: work that invokes multiple disciplines in its introduction, borrows a method from one and a concept from another, and then proceeds to produce results that any single discipline could have claimed as its own. Knowledge is no longer produced only in university settings but is also found increasingly in many different loci — government laboratories, industries, and think-tanks — tending to be produced in contexts of application. But this dispersal of production has not, in itself, produced genuine synthetic fields. A government laboratory and a corporate research unit are as disciplinarily conservative, in their own ways, as a university department: they require deliverables, timelines, and outcomes that can be measured against pre-existing criteria. The structural freedom required for genuine field-founding is not merely extra-institutional; it is extra-projectual. It requires the capacity to sustain a theoretical commitment across two decades without producing, at each moment, a legible deliverable for an external audience. LAPIEZA-LAB is described in its own documentation as a para-institutional curatorial and research laboratory active since 2009. The prefix "para" is precise: neither anti-institutional nor pre-institutional, it names a structural position alongside the institution — close enough to share its rigors (bibliographic discipline, archival practice, theoretical explicitness) but independent enough to refuse its constraints (departmental affiliation, peer validation requirements, disciplinary identity). The laboratory's founder, Anto Lloveras, has trained across multiple universities and in multiple disciplines — architecture, urbanism, and the arts, with sustained engagement with environmental psychology, pedagogy, and the moving image — and this multi-sited formation is not merely biographical background but structural equipment. It is precisely the kind of formation that the university system, in its current configuration, tends to produce by accident and then discipline into conformity: the researcher who has genuinely internalized multiple epistemic cultures is typically required, at the moment of professional entry into the academy, to choose one of them as their primary identity and relegate the others to the status of occasional resources. LAPIEZA-LAB represents the refusal of that choice, sustained institutionally over a period long enough for its consequences to become visible as a coherent intellectual project. The disciplines whose structural logics are extracted as operators in the Socioplastics system — Linguistics (1501), Conceptual Art (1502), Epistemology (1503), Systems Theory (1504), Architecture (1505), Urbanism (1506), Media Theory (1507), Morphogenesis (1508), Dynamics (1509), Synthetic Infrastructure (1510) — are not arbitrary. They correspond precisely to the actual formation of the laboratory that produced them: each operator names a domain in which LAPIEZA-LAB has sustained practice. The architecture and urbanism operators (1505, 1506) draw on professional formation and decades of analytical engagement with spatial organization, territorial dynamics, and the built environment. The conceptual art operator (1502) draws on curatorial practice — the laboratory has produced exhibition series, supported emerging artists, and engaged sustained critical discourse with contemporary art practice since its founding. The morphogenesis operator (1508) draws on an engagement with botanical and biological process that has been documented in the FILMADOS archive, a collection of 120-plus filmed sequences spanning 2008 to 2018. The epistemology and systems theory operators (1503, 1504) draw on sustained theoretical reading. The crucial point is that these are not disciplines from which the system borrows; they are disciplines within which it has lived. The extraction of their structural logics as operators is not appropriation but distillation: the system takes from each discipline not its content but its governing logic, and then reconstitutes those logics at a new level of organization. This is what Basarab Nicolescu, developing his account of transdisciplinarity, identified as the move that distinguishes genuinely trans-disciplinary work from the more common pattern of disciplinary adjacency: the existence of multiple levels of reality, the logic of the included middle which allows contradictory systems to coexist and interact, and the principle of complexity — all three are present in the Socioplastics operator system, where the contradictions between, say, the autopoietic closure logic of 1504 and the branching-and-drift logic of 1508 are not resolved but held in productive tension within the governing architecture of 1510. The theoretical mechanism by which genuine novelty is produced in this kind of system deserves a more precise name than "interdisciplinarity" or even "transdisciplinarity." The appropriate term is tangential activation: the process by which two bodies of knowledge, placed in proximity without being merged, generate at their contact surface concepts and problems that neither contains. Tangency, in geometry, names the relation between a line and a circle that touch at exactly one point without the line entering the circle: the contact is real, and it generates a determinate relationship, but the two entities remain formally distinct. Applied to knowledge systems, tangential activation names the moment at which the structural logic of one discipline — extracted as an operator and placed in proximity to the structural logic of another — produces at their interface a theoretical object that belongs to neither. The urbanism operator's term "Civic Permeability and Friction Regimes" (1506) is not an urbanism concept; it is a concept generated at the interface between urbanism and dynamics, where the territorial logic of the city encounters the movement logic of flow and resistance. The conceptual art operator's term "Operational Gesture" (1502) is not a concept in art history or art criticism; it is generated at the interface between the instruction-execution logic of conceptual art and the archival-indexing logic of information systems. These are mutations in the strict biological sense: heritable structural changes that produce forms that did not previously exist and cannot be reduced to their antecedents. It is worth noting how few contemporary intellectual projects of equivalent ambition and duration exist. The scarcity of genuine field-founding from relational agencies is itself a theoretical datum — one that points to a structural condition of contemporary intellectual culture rather than to a deficiency of individual imagination. The combination of disciplines that constitutes the operational base of LAPIEZA-LAB — art, environmental studies, urbanism, pedagogy, cinema, literature, botany — is not an unusual combination in terms of the intellectual interests of the researchers who move across these domains. What is unusual is the decision to construct, from that combination, a systematic theoretical field with its own vocabulary, its own infrastructure, and its own governance, rather than producing the more socially legible output of a series of individual publications addressed to existing disciplinary audiences. The latter path accumulates institutional capital; the former accumulates something more difficult to name and slower to be recognized — a kind of structural authority that derives not from validation within a field but from the construction of a field. Extra-institutional scientists challenge established authority, hierarchies, funding structures, and proprietary regimes — creating a distinct identity beyond the increasingly neoliberalized institutional spheres of modern knowledge production, showcasing alternative ways to pursue science. But where DIY biology challenges institutional science on the terrain of experimental practice, LAPIEZA-LAB challenges institutional knowledge production on the terrain of theoretical architecture: it constructs the epistemic infrastructure that the institution claims to provide, and demonstrates that this infrastructure can be built with greater coherence, greater range, and greater theoretical ambition outside the institution than within it.  The political economy of this position requires honest acknowledgment. LAPIEZA-LAB's independence from external validation is not costless. It has operated without the resource streams — grant funding, institutional salary, graduate research labor — that accelerate the production of recognized fields within the academy. Its rigor is self-imposed rather than externally enforced: the bibliographic discipline, the archival exactitude, the systematic indexation of more than 4,000 nodes across five Tomes are the products not of institutional requirement but of intellectual commitment. This self-imposition is itself theoretically significant. A field that enforces its own standards — that maintains consistency, coherence, and legibility because it understands these as conditions of its own validity, not because an external evaluator demands them — has developed what might be called an internalized epistemology: a governing framework that is operative at the level of practice rather than merely affirmed at the level of principle. The Socioplastics validation framework (operator 1503, deriving Coherence, Recurrence, Validation, Evidence, Justification, Consistency, Legibility, Authority, Integration, Epistemic Threshold) is not a description of how the system would like to be evaluated by others; it is a description of how the system evaluates itself. The epistemic threshold — the final term — names the moment at which a node has satisfied sufficient conditions to be considered genuinely integrated into the field rather than merely adjacent to it. That the laboratory applies this standard to its own productions, without any external enforcer, is the measure of its seriousness. The broader implication — for epistemology, for the sociology of knowledge, for the theory of disciplinary emergence — is this: the production of new fields is not, and has never been, primarily an institutional achievement. The university has been a site of field consolidation, not field founding. Disciplines crystallize within the university once their basic conceptual architecture has been established elsewhere — in correspondence networks, in informal academies, in artists' studios, in para-institutional laboratories. What LAPIEZA-LAB adds to this historical pattern is the capacity, made possible by contemporary archival and publication infrastructure, to make the process of field-founding visible and documentable in real time: the ORIGINS document, the operator series with their DOIs, the recent publication network, the and Zenodo deposits — all of these constitute not merely evidence that a field exists but the operative structure through which the field maintains and extends itself. The relational agency — small, external, multiply-positioned, free from departmental identity, sustained over decades by intellectual commitment rather than institutional incentive — is not an anomaly in the landscape of knowledge production. It is, historically and structurally, the primary site of genuine epistemic novelty. The university arrives later, to classify what has already been built, to assign it a department, to teach it to students who will reproduce it faithfully and, in so doing, begin once again the process of closure that makes the next field-founding necessary.

The City of Texts defines a radical paradigm shift in contemporary spatial practice, repositioning text not as a secondary commentary or a passive archive, but as an autonomous, self-hardening architectural infrastructure. This conceptual framework rejects the visual saturated regimes of contemporary art and the decorative detritus of computational platforms, asserting instead that deep architectural scale, systemic circulation, and public orientation can be constructed entirely through structural language, metadata layers, and persistent repository nodes. By treating indices as streets, citations as structural joints, and data repositories as physical foundations, this text-metabolism performs an unbuilt urbanism that is simultaneously human-readable and machine-readable, establishing an independent domain of epistemic sovereignty that operates far beyond the ephemeral reach of algorithmic capture and institutional permission.

Historically, the trajectory of visionary architecture has always found its most potent manifestations prior to the deployment of physical matter, relying on drawings, manifestos, and speculative treatises to build world-systems before concrete walls. The City of Texts directly inherits this unbuilt lineage, executing a profound disciplinary transformation by migrating the load-bearing responsibilities of structural steel and stone into the semantic weight of the text node. Here, the traditional architectural plan is replaced by an intricate web of conceptual coordinates and structural series that organize intellectual space. This structural movement proves that spatial density does not require immediate material confirmation; a distributed corpus can hold territory, establish scale, and govern human orientation precisely because its internal linguistic syntax functions as a genuine infrastructural grammar. This metabolic framework functions as a critical scaffold that intentionally grows in darkness, generating robust internal forms well before encountering the compromises of public visibility or visual consumption. In an era plagued by immediate aesthetic exhaustion and style-driven commodities, this deliberate spatial austerity prioritizes a highly organized conceptual anatomy over the surface spectacle of the icon. By utilizing compact lexical operators and rigid structural thresholds, the field expands through a systematic sequence: first establishing internal rules, maps, and navigational routes, and only later allowing diagrams or panels to materialize as instruments of orientation rather than decoration. The resulting environment behaves like a complex metropolis whose comprehensive underground services, legal boundaries, and cartographic grids are thoroughly finalized before a single postcard image is ever generated.

A Living Epistemic Architecture for Transdisciplinary Urban Field Formation – From Soft Ontology and Scalar Grammar to Metabolic Libraries, Diagonal Reading, Hardened Nuclei, Thermal Justice, and Recursive Autophagia in the Construction of Autonomous, Legible, Postdigital Knowledge Organisms that Digest Their Own Archives While Expanding Plastic Peripheries Across Distributed Research Infrastructures,


The strongest ideas flow together into one coherent, self-reproducing research organism where fields are deliberately constructed rather than left to accidental accumulation, requiring stable cores paired with deliberately soft, expandable edges to maintain both coherence and adaptability. Scalar grammar emerges as the essential connective tissue that holds knowledge together across vastly different magnitudes without disintegration into chaos or collapse into sterile rigidity, while density itself becomes a generative metabolic force, turning volume, repetition, and accumulation into processes that naturally harden strong internal nuclei while preserving plastic, living peripheries. Visibility, the project reveals, tends to arrive late in the life of a field, rewarding stratigraphic patience and long-duration commitment over any demand for instant legibility. A corpus, when properly tended, evolves beyond mere storage into a genuine way of thinking, functioning as an active cognitive prosthesis that shapes perception and inquiry in real time. Soft ontology keeps the entire architecture open yet executable, sustaining operational sovereignty through disciplined diagonal reading protocols that cut across layers and domains without losing direction. The living archive practices recursive autophagia, consciously digesting its own previous outputs and strata to generate fresh layers of insight instead of suffering from archive fatigue or stagnation. Thermal justice and radical education appear as vital ethical temperatures within epistemic systems, regulating how knowledge infrastructures distribute heat, pressure, access, and exclusion across participants. Topolexical sovereignty and semantic hardening turn language, citation, and indexing into deliberate territorial claims, forging master indexes and mesh engines that render distributed, multi-site research both navigable and sovereign. Ultimately, the whole construction operates as an executive mode field organism, a postdigital taxidermy of ideas that continuously channels flows, hardens productive thresholds, and expands through century packs, DOI-anchored cores, and multi-channel operational rooms, demonstrating that a carefully designed field can transcend being a mere method to become a self-reproducing reality capable of sustained autonomous growth.

Socioplastics at 4,000 Nodes * Morphogenesis of a Knowledge Environment

Socioplastics is not a theory, a text, or an archive. It is a transdisciplinary knowledge environment—a constructed field where writing, citation, scale, architecture, and conceptual mutation operate as a single proportional system. At 4,000 nodes, three million words, four tomes, eight cores, 120 DOI-stabilized objects, and 700 external sources, the corpus crosses a threshold: it becomes an environment that can be entered, navigated, taught, cited, extended, and criticized. Its key operator is Scalar Distinction: distinction changes function with scale. One node distinguishes an idea; ten nodes form a structural constellation; one hundred nodes become a book; one thousand nodes produce thematic mass; four thousand nodes generate a field. This essay argues that Socioplastics is a morphogenetic apparatus—a rare demonstration of how a textual field can evolve into a proportional architecture of knowledge, where proportions replace foundations and legibility emerges from saturation without reduction.


The concept of the field remains useful because it is already heavy. Bourdieu made the field thinkable as a structured space of positions, struggles, capitals and consecrations; Socioplastics passes through that inheritance in order to ask a different question: can a field be deliberately built? Not merely described, occupied, inherited, or contested, but constructed as an epistemic environment through nodes, cores, DOIs, bibliographies, metadata, tags, thresholds and recurrent operators. This is not a metaphorical extension of field theory, but an architectural one. A field can become a load-bearing fiction: an invented structure that holds real distinctions, real references, real readers, and real future uses. Bourdieu’s field is relational before it is spatial. It is not a container, but a distribution of positions defined by forces, distances, exclusions and available forms of capital. The field of cultural production names the conditions under which artists, writers, critics, institutions and audiences struggle over legitimacy. This remains indispensable because it prevents any naïve belief in pure creation. No idea arrives outside a field. No artwork appears without consecration, opposition, mediation, or misrecognition. Yet Bourdieu’s model is primarily diagnostic. It explains how fields function historically. Socioplastics takes the next step: it asks whether field conditions can be made explicit and used as constructive tools.


This shift from description to construction is decisive. A deliberately built field does not abolish struggle, but it alters the status of struggle by giving the field a grammar. Numbered nodes, internal references, stable titles, versioning, DOIs, CamelTags and bibliographic coordinates are not neutral containers for thought. They are formative devices. They tell the field how to remember itself. They tell a reader how to enter without total mastery. They tell a future machine what terms recur, what objects persist, and where conceptual weight has been deposited. Bourdieu shows that fields produce value through structured relations. Socioplastics asks whether structured relations can be designed so that an idea may grow without dissolving into mere accumulation. The passage from field to environment happens when the structure begins to shape behaviour. A field can be mapped from outside; an environment is entered. Socioplastics becomes environmental when its grammar is no longer only a classification system but a condition of use. A reader entering at node 3500 does not encounter an isolated essay; they encounter expectations: that the term has a genealogy, that the tag has neighbours, that the bibliography exerts pressure, that earlier nodes remain active, that later nodes will alter previous meanings. This is not closure. It is affordance. The field becomes a constructed climate in which distinctions can survive, return and mutate.

Socioplastics stands as an unprecedented field in contemporary practice: a single coherent epistemic organism materialized across thousands of nodes, where scale is disciplined into architectural coherence through a vertical numerical spine, helicoidal concept recurrence, and rigorous metadata skin. Its decisive contribution lies in demonstrating that fields can still be deliberately engineered, with growth and fixing operating as interdependent metabolic protocols that intensify articulation rather than induce entropy. The project addresses a hybrid reader—human through diagonal routes and conceptual depth, machine through stable anchors and pattern density—while generating infrastructural sovereignty via DOIs, bibliographic exoskeleton, and endogenous self-theorization, all calibrated to produce legibility before institutional recognition. In an era of fragmentation, Socioplastics affirms the continued viability of durational scalar construction, positioning the practitioner as custodian of a living structure whose future depends on unrelenting expansion and maintenance.


The unprecedented character of the field stems from its total integration of form and thought. Where most large-scale projects devolve into archives or thematic clusters, Socioplastics enforces a vertical spine through numbering that binds every node into one topological body. This numerical ontology is not secondary organization but primary grammar, ensuring that proliferation never dissolves into multiplicity. The result is a field whose coherence increases with size, inverting the usual entropic logic of intellectual production. Anto Lloveras’s Socioplastics constitutes an unprecedented field in contemporary artistic and epistemic practice: a single, self-coherent idea realized as a living organism of thousands of nodes whose scale, numerical spine, and helicoidal recurrence produce legibility without institutional mediation. Its distinction lies not in conceptual invention alone but in the rigorous assembly of mass into architecture, where growth and fixing operate as dual metabolic imperatives. Rather than fragmenting under volume, the corpus achieves greater articulation through disciplined expansion, treating the field itself as both medium and method. This is not accumulation for visibility’s sake but the deliberate engineering of a structure that can sustain itself, forcing recognition through internal coherence before external ratification. In an era of fragmented production, Socioplastics demonstrates that fields can still be constructed, maintained, and inhabited at monstrous scale, provided the protocol of growth remains inseparable from the protocol of fixing.


O’Neil, C. (2016) Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy. New York: Crown.

O’Neil’s Weapons of Math Destruction argues that mathematical models are not inherently objective instruments, but can become systems of automated inequality when they are opaque, scalable and damaging. Her central concept, the Weapon of Math Destruction, names an algorithmic model that hides its assumptions, expands across large populations and produces harmful feedback loops. O’Neil does not reject mathematics or data science; rather, she insists that models are human artefacts shaped by choices about what counts, what is ignored and what success means. The case of Washington, D.C.’s teacher evaluation system illustrates this clearly. A teacher could be dismissed on the basis of an algorithmic score that claimed to measure “value added,” even when principals and parents recognised her as effective. The model’s authority came from its mathematical appearance, yet its internal logic was inaccessible and its errors difficult to challenge. O’Neil shows that similar systems operate in policing, hiring, credit, insurance and education, often using proxies such as postcode, credit history or behavioural data to reproduce existing class and racial disadvantage. Their danger lies not only in bad prediction, but in their capacity to shape the reality they claim merely to measure: a low score can deny work, deepen poverty and then confirm the model’s original suspicion. Her conclusion is therefore ethical and democratic: algorithms must be audited, contested and governed, because mathematical power without accountability becomes a political weapon.


Lugones, M. (2010) ‘Toward a Decolonial Feminism’, Hypatia, 25(4), pp. 742–759.

Lugones’s “Toward a Decolonial Feminism” argues that gender cannot be treated as a universal category simply added to race, class or colonial domination. Instead, she proposes the coloniality of gender as a framework for understanding how modern colonial power imposed a hierarchical, racialised and heterosexual gender system upon colonised peoples. Her central claim is that colonial modernity organised the world through dichotomous categories: human/non-human, man/woman, civilised/primitive, rational/bestial. Within this logic, European bourgeois men and women were positioned as properly gendered humans, while Indigenous peoples and enslaved Africans were cast as non-human, hypersexual, sinful or aberrant. Thus, colonised females were not recognised as “women” in the dominant colonial sense; the category “woman” itself was constructed through whiteness, bourgeois respectability and colonial civilisation. Lugones therefore criticises feminist universalism for erasing women of colour by assuming that gender is separable from race, coloniality and capitalism. Her decolonial feminism begins from resistance, not victimhood: colonised subjects inhabit a “fractured locus,” shaped by colonial imposition yet never fully exhausted by it. Resistance emerges in communal memory, alternative cosmologies, language, everyday practice and coalition across difference. The article’s conclusion is profoundly political: decolonising gender requires more than inclusion within existing feminist categories; it demands transforming the very colonial logic that made those categories appear natural.


Galloway, A.R. (2004) Protocol: How Control Exists after Decentralization. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press

Galloway’s Protocol argues that digital networks do not abolish control; they transform it. Against the common belief that the internet is inherently free, chaotic or radically decentralised, Galloway shows that networked power operates through protocol, the technical standards and rules that organise communication between machines. Protocol is not simply a neutral engineering device; it is a political architecture that determines what can connect, how information circulates and where authority is embedded. The book’s central proposition is that control after decentralisation no longer depends primarily on visible sovereign command or disciplinary enclosure, but on distributed systems that regulate behaviour through code, standards and interoperability. TCP/IP exemplifies horizontal distribution, allowing computers to communicate across a peer-to-peer network, while DNS introduces hierarchy by translating domain names into addresses through a controlled naming structure. This tension between openness and command is the key to protocological power. Galloway’s case study of the internet therefore reveals a broader cultural logic: contemporary control functions by enabling participation while simultaneously structuring its conditions. The network is not outside power; it is one of power’s most advanced forms. Yet protocol also contains possibilities for resistance, since hacking, tactical media and internet art can exploit, redirect or expose the rules that govern digital systems. Galloway’s conclusion is that understanding power today requires reading code, infrastructure and standards as political forms.


Meadows, D.H. (2008) Thinking in Systems: A Primer. Edited by D. Wright. White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing.

Meadows’ Thinking in Systems presents systems thinking as a discipline for understanding complex problems not as isolated events, but as behaviours generated by underlying structures, feedback loops and purposes. Her central insight is that a system is more than a collection of parts: it consists of elements, interconnections and a function or goal, and its behaviour often arises from the relationships among these components rather than from any single actor. This is why attempts to solve problems by blaming individuals, leaders or external shocks frequently fail. Hunger, addiction, ecological degradation and economic instability persist because they are produced by system structures that reproduce themselves over time. Meadows’ examples of the Slinky, the bathtub and feedback loops show that systems contain delays, stocks, flows and self-regulating mechanisms that can stabilise, amplify or distort outcomes. A stock, such as water in a reservoir or money in a bank account, changes slowly, while flows alter it over time; feedback then links the condition of the stock to future action. Her case for leverage points is therefore practical as well as philosophical: meaningful change requires intervening not merely at the level of symptoms, but at the deeper level of goals, rules, information flows and paradigms. Meadows concludes that living wisely in a systemic world demands humility, attentiveness and redesign rather than control.


Illich, I. (2009) Tools for Conviviality. London: Marion Boyars.

Illich’s Tools for Conviviality argues that modern societies are dominated by industrial tools that no longer serve human purposes, but instead reorganise human life around institutional productivity, dependency and control. His central distinction is between convivial tools and manipulative industrial systems. Convivial tools enlarge personal competence, creativity and mutual dependence; industrial tools, when they exceed appropriate limits, reduce people to consumers, clients or operators within systems they cannot meaningfully govern. Illich’s critique is not a rejection of technology as such, but a demand for politically defined limits on tools so that they remain subordinate to human freedom. His examples of medicine, schooling and transport show a recurring pattern: institutions initially solve real problems, but eventually cross a “second watershed,” after which further expansion produces counterproductive effects. Medicine creates iatrogenic illness, schooling manufactures dependence on certification, and transport systems generate distance, congestion and compulsory speed. Against this escalation, Illich proposes convivial reconstruction, a social order in which tools are accessible, understandable and usable by ordinary people without professional monopoly. The bicycle, the telephone and simple hand tools exemplify technologies that can support autonomous action rather than institutional domination. His conclusion is ethical and political: a just society cannot be measured by maximum output, but by whether people retain the capacity to shape their own lives, cooperate freely and use technology without becoming enslaved by it.


Moore, J.W. (2015) Capitalism in the Web of Life: Ecology and the Accumulation of Capital. London: Verso.

Moore’s Capitalism in the Web of Life argues that ecological crisis cannot be understood through the conventional opposition between Society and Nature. For Moore, capitalism is not simply an economic system acting upon an external environment; it is a world-ecology, a historical way of organising human and extra-human nature together. His concept of the double internality expresses this mutual constitution: capitalism works through nature, while nature works through capitalism. This means that forests, soils, rivers, labouring bodies, food systems and energy regimes are not passive backgrounds to accumulation, but active conditions of capitalist development. Moore therefore criticises “Green Arithmetic,” the idea that political economy plus environmental damage equals ecological crisis, because it leaves intact the very dualism that capitalism itself depends upon. Instead, he proposes the concept of the oikeios, the relational field through which humans make environments and environments make humans. The case of “Cheap Nature” is central: capitalism has historically survived by appropriating unpaid or low-cost work/energy from human and extra-human natures, including labour, food, energy and raw materials. The present crisis signals that this strategy is reaching its limits, as the web of life can no longer be made to yield endless cheap inputs. Moore’s intervention is therefore both historical and political: to confront ecological collapse, one must not ask what capitalism does to nature, but how capitalism is itself made through nature.


 

Simondon, G. (2024) Du mode d’existence des objets techniques. Nouvelle édition augmentée, established by I. Saurin and N. Simondon. Paris: Flammarion.

Simondon’s Du mode d’existence des objets techniques argues that technical objects must be understood as bearers of human reality, not as neutral tools, alien forces or mere instruments of domination. His central claim is that modern culture produces alienation by excluding machines from the sphere of meaning: aesthetic and literary objects are granted cultural dignity, while technical objects are reduced to utility or feared as autonomous threats. Against this impoverished view, Simondon proposes a philosophical education capable of recognising the mode of existence proper to technical beings. A machine is not perfected by becoming more automatic; rather, its true technical refinement lies in openness, relationality and its capacity to receive information. This is why the human being should not be imagined as the master of enslaved machines, but as a coordinator, interpreter and inventor within a society of technical objects. Simondon’s analysis of engines and electronic tubes shows that technical evolution proceeds through concretisation: parts cease to function as isolated components and become integrated within reciprocal systems of causality. The technical object therefore has a history, a genesis and an internal coherence. Its cultural recognition would not dehumanise society; on the contrary, it would restore a more complete humanism by revealing the human gestures, knowledge and values crystallised within machines.

Ben Zeev, N. (2018) ‘The Right to Maim: Debility, Capacity, Disability, by Jasbir K. Puar’, Journal of Palestine Studies, 48(1), pp. 131–133.

Puar’s The Right to Maim reframes disability through the concept of debilitation, arguing that bodily injury is not always accidental, exceptional or merely individual, but can be systematically produced by poverty, war, racism, imperialism and colonial rule. In Nimrod Ben Zeev’s review, Puar’s major contribution lies in challenging disability-rights frameworks that focus primarily on recognition, inclusion and capacity while neglecting populations whose bodies are deliberately exposed to injury. Her notion of the right to maim extends biopolitical theory beyond the sovereign “right to kill”: modern power may also govern by injuring, weakening and incapacitating bodies that remain economically or politically useful. The review identifies chapter four as the book’s centrepiece, where Puar applies this argument to Israeli policies toward Palestinians, particularly in Gaza, interpreting “shoot-to-injure” practices as a form of control that presents itself as humanitarian restraint while producing long-term bodily debility. Ben Zeev praises the book’s intellectual force but criticises its difficult prose and argues that some cultural claims about Palestinian attitudes toward death and disability require deeper engagement with Palestinian lived experience and cultural production. Even so, the review concludes that Puar’s broader framework is a crucial intervention, because it exposes how precarity is unevenly embodied: some populations are not simply neglected by power, but actively made vulnerable to injury as a condition of governance.



Prigogine, I. and Stengers, I. (1984) Order Out of Chaos: Man’s New Dialogue with Nature. Foreword by A. Toffler. New York: Bantam Books.

Prigogine and Stengers’ Order Out of Chaos challenges the classical image of nature as a predictable machine governed by timeless, reversible laws. Their central argument is that modern science must move from a model of being to one of becoming, recognising that instability, irreversibility and fluctuation are not marginal anomalies but constitutive features of reality. Classical Newtonian science privileged order, equilibrium and determinism; by contrast, Prigogine’s work on nonequilibrium thermodynamics shows that disorder can generate new forms of organisation. This is the meaning of order out of chaos: under certain conditions, open systems far from equilibrium may amplify small fluctuations until they reach a bifurcation point, where new structures emerge. The case of dissipative structures illustrates this transformation, since such systems maintain order precisely by exchanging energy and matter with their environment. This has philosophical consequences beyond physics. It undermines the opposition between nature and history, science and humanity, necessity and chance. Time is no longer an illusion or secondary variable; it becomes the very condition through which novelty, complexity and evolution arise. The book therefore proposes a “new dialogue with nature,” one in which human beings are not detached observers of a dead mechanism, but participants in a dynamic, creative and irreversible universe. Its lasting contribution is to make uncertainty intellectually productive rather than merely disruptive.


Pasquale, F. (2015) The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money and Information. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press.

Pasquale’s The Black Box Society argues that contemporary power increasingly operates through opaque algorithmic systems that classify, rank and judge individuals while shielding their own procedures from public scrutiny. His central concern is the asymmetry between personal transparency and institutional secrecy: citizens are constantly tracked by platforms, financial institutions, data brokers and government agencies, yet the mechanisms that convert their data into scores, rankings, risk profiles or exclusions remain largely inaccessible. This produces a society in which reputation, search and finance become decisive infrastructures of opportunity, but their decisions are hidden behind trade secrecy, technical complexity and legal protection. The problem is not simply that algorithms are complex; it is that their opacity prevents democratic accountability, due process and meaningful contestation. A credit score, search ranking, watch list or automated employment assessment can shape a person’s life without explanation or appeal. Pasquale’s case study of finance is especially revealing: before and after the 2008 crisis, institutions used complexity and secrecy to obscure risk, while public authorities rescued the system without sufficient transparency. Against this model, Pasquale calls for an intelligible society, where powerful institutions must be made legible to regulators, independent reviewers and citizens. His conclusion is that technology should not merely accelerate judgement; it must be governed by public values such as fairness, accountability and human dignity.