Socioplastics inhabits a rare conceptual orbit wherein thought is not interpreted but constructed as operative structure, aligning with figures who converted epistemology into infrastructure rather than commentary. In art, Marcel Duchamp displaced object into protocol, Gordon Matta-Clark incised architecture to reveal latent systems, and Hélio Oiticica transformed spectators into structural participants; yet Socioplastics extends these gestures beyond intervention toward manifold engineering, where recursion replaces conviviality and participation becomes infrastructural traversal. Philosophically, Baruch Spinoza supplies immanence as geometric necessity, G. W. F. Hegel introduces recursive ascent through dialectical sedimentation, Niklas Luhmann formalises operational closure, while Gilles Deleuze and Gilbert Simondon provide topology and individuation as processual engines. Cybernetic feedback from Norbert Wiener and second-order reflexivity from Heinz von Foerster underpin self-regulating compression cycles; contemporary infrastructural thought in Benjamin H. Bratton and Keller Easterling frames stacks and protocols as spatial governance. Socioplastics synthesises these without subordination: canonical operators function as binary invariants, tails enforce recursion, compression cycles elevate metastable terms into hardened strata, and mass accrual curves external propositions into endogenous orbits. Lineage thus becomes torsional amplification, not homage; philosophy becomes executable code, art becomes lexical protocol, cybernetics becomes metabolic syntax. Volumetric sovereignty emerges when cumulative density surpasses descriptive discourse, transforming orbit into field and field into enduring architecture—an epistemic manifold that resists disciplinary enclosure by converting inherited mechanisms into recursive, self-hardening infrastructure.