Socioplastics operates as a recursive textual architecture in which writing ceases to function as commentary and instead becomes load-bearing infrastructure. Organized across three stratified cores—CORE I (Infrastructure & Logic, nodes 501–510), CORE II (Dynamics & Topology, nodes 991–1000), and CORE III (Fields & Integration, nodes 1501–1510)—the corpus builds itself through protocols of semantic hardening, citational commitment, and systemic lock, transforming dispersed blog posts into a geological field held together by lexical gravity and metabolic renewal through recursive autophagia. The ambition is epistemic sovereignty: a system that defines its own operative units, regulates its own coherence, and persists through infrastructural autopoiesis without requiring external validation.



Two concepts drive this machinery. Lexical Gravity names the process by which terms acquire recurrence mass across distributed platforms until they function as attractors, organizing propositions through density rather than persuasion. Recursive Autophagia names the metabolic logic by which the system consumes its own outputs—digesting earlier sediments, converting weblog flow into DOI geology—to generate new structural material. Together they transform the text from a medium of transmission into a territorial instrument: a cyborg assemblage where linguistics becomes structural operator, urbanism becomes territorial model, and synthetic infrastructure becomes the integration layer that holds the field together across scalar thresholds, platform precarity, and the entropic pressures of algorithmic circulation.