Socioplastics is a concrete epistemological method for converting context into organised knowledge. Developed by Anto Lloveras through LAPIEZA-LAB, it takes situated materials—urban fragments, spatial actions, objects, texts, images, references and publication traces—and gives them position inside a structured conceptual system. Its value is not metaphorical. It lies in the capacity to name, relate, document and stabilise materials that usually remain dispersed. The method begins with SituationalFixer: a precise element placed or identified within a specific context. That element becomes an ActivationNode when it generates relations beyond itself. Through RecurrenceMass, repeated use gives the operation weight, showing that the same conceptual mechanism can appear across different situations without becoming generic. PortableMemory then allows objects, documents and images to carry previous contexts into new ones. Socioplastics works because it combines position with record. ChronoDeposit fixes each element in time, while CitationalCommitment links it to sources, references and responsibility. EnduringProof names the accumulated evidence produced by repeated documentation. The system does not ask the reader to believe in a claim; it provides a sequence of traces, names and relations that can be followed. Its public structure depends on LegibleArchive and DistributedInscription. Materials are organised so they can be read, retrieved and connected across formats and platforms. HybridLegibility is crucial here: the work must remain understandable to human readers while also being visible to search systems, metadata structures and digital repositories. Socioplastics is therefore a method of epistemological organisation. It turns context into record, record into relation, and relation into a durable conceptual structure.