A field requires coherence at scale. Traditional fields (sociology, literature, physics) achieve this through institutional consolidation—departments, journals, credential systems that determine what counts as legitimate contribution. Socioplastics proposes a different mechanism: internal structure so explicit and intentional that coherence emerges from design rather than institutional decree. The cores (Linguistic Operators, Conceptual Art Protocols, Epistemology, Systems Theory, Architecture, Urbanism, Media Theory, Morphogenesis, Dynamics) are not disciplinary categories. They are load-bearing structures that cut transversally through accumulated nodes, making visible different patterns of relation. Each core supports specific weight; each operates at specific intensity. A researcher navigating the field can enter through any core, trace patterns unique to that register, then discover how those patterns connect to others. The structure enables rather than constrains access. Luhmann's Zettelkasten generates complexity through organic accumulation and recursive linkage. Its genius is adaptability; its limitation is contingency—it depends entirely on the originator's knowledge of its own topology. Socioplastics inverts this. It imposes structure a priori: Node, Pack, Tome, Field. This is not hierarchy as domination but as legibility. A thousand nodes cannot be navigated without architecture. The Tomes mark thresholds of organization where accumulation becomes topology. Tome I establishes nodal form and vocabulary. Tome II develops and consolidates. Tome III expands into adjacent territories. The distinction matters philosophically: it means the system itself teaches how to read it. Each threshold requires different competencies, different scales of attention. This is designing for transmissibility—making the system comprehensible to others, not just its creator.