001–010: Foundational Infrastructures
Semantic Hardening: The process of crystallizing fluid concepts into rigid, load-bearing terminologies to resist dilution.
Bibliographic Sovereignty: Establishing an independent, self-indexed repository that does not rely on external institutional validation for its existence.
Stratum Authoring: Treating the act of writing as the physical layering of geological strata within a digital or physical field.
Knowledge as Material: Rejects the idea of "immaterial labor" by insisting that every thought requires a specific energy, hardware, and metadata cost.
Publication as Construction: Shifting the role of the book or post from a mere report to a foundational brick in an ongoing architectural project.
Lexical Gravity: The intentional weight given to specific terms to ensure they anchor an entire conceptual ecosystem.
The Recursive Archive: A system that documents its own documentation process, creating a feedback loop of structural awareness.
Institutional Autonomy: The use of distributed digital tools to simulate the functions of a massive institute within a single-author framework.
Transdisciplinary Integration: Moving past "dialogue" between fields and toward a singular, unified operating system of knowledge.
The Numbered Spine: Using rigorous numerical sequencing as the primary ontological stabilizer for all creative output.
011–020: Spatial and Urban Strata
Urban Geological Decalogue: A protocol for reading the city as a series of pressure fields and metabolic accumulations.
The City as Processor: Treating urban environments not as scenery but as hardware that processes human, financial, and semantic flows.
Metabolic Urbanism: Analyzing the city through its intake of resources and its output of waste, memory, and infrastructure.
Topolexical Sovereignty: The right to name and define a space through a specific, hardened vocabulary.
Spatial Syntax: The hidden grammar of access and exclusion embedded in architectural design.
Pressure Fields: Understanding cultural centers as zones of high semantic and physical density that exert force on the periphery.
Maintenance as Scholarship: The elevation of "upkeep"—of buildings, archives, or ideas—to the status of primary intellectual work.
Infrastructural Intelligibility: The idea that we can only understand what we have built the tools to perceive.
Sedimentation: The slow accumulation of cultural meaning over time, forming a solid base for future construction.
Hydraulic Thought: Using the logic of fluid dynamics to understand how information and power flow through social channels.
021–030: Media and Metadata
The Cyborg Text: A form of writing that acknowledges its own mediation through machines, algorithms, and digital interfaces.
Metadata Tails: The essential technical information that must follow every creative act to ensure its future searchability.
Machine Legibility: Designing content specifically so it can be parsed, indexed, and "understood" by non-human agents.
Searchability as Survival: The proposition that an unfindable concept is a dead concept.
Repository Ecology: The strategic distribution of a project across multiple platforms (GitHub, Zenodo, Figshare) to ensure durability.
JSON-LD as Form: Treating structured data formats as an aesthetic and philosophical choice rather than just a technical one.
The Paratextual Load: Recognizing that the title, tags, and links of a work are as important as the body text.
SameAs Links: The use of semantic web protocols to assert that different digital representations are the same ontological entity.
Platform Metabolism: The ability of a project to ingest the constraints of a platform (like Blogger) and turn them into a formal methodology.
Digital Durability: Engineering digital works to survive "link rot" and platform collapse through redundant archiving.
031–040: The MUSE Architecture
Invariant Core: The central, unchangeable rules of the Socioplastics system that protect it from dissolution.
Experimental Consoles: Adaptable modules that allow for testing new ideas without compromising the Core.
Mesh United System Environment (MUSE): The overarching two-layer architecture that organizes the Socioplastics universe.
Core II Dynamics: The expansion of the system into topological and synthetic infrastructures.
Systemic Lock: A state where the internal logic of a project is so tightly integrated that it becomes resistant to outside interference.
Decadic Logic: The organization of knowledge into sequences of ten, reflecting a human-centric but rigorous structure.
Thousand-Node Volumes: Large-scale conceptual blocks that provide the necessary mass for systemic recognition.
Console Adaptability: The capacity for the system to manifest as an exhibition, a book, or a digital repository.
Structural Integrity: The primary metric for evaluating a conceptual work within the Socioplastics framework.
The Technical Image: An image that functions primarily as a piece of data or a diagram within a larger system.
041–050: Systems and Critical Theory
Kuhn as Tool: The tactical application of paradigm shift analysis to every cultural medium from cinema to dance.
Epistemic Sovereignty: The refusal to allow external paradigms to dictate the value or structure of one’s own research.
FAIR Principles for Art: Ensuring that creative work is Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable.
Grey Literature Dominance: Embracing non-traditional, self-published research as the primary site of innovation.
Recursive Autophagia: A system that consumes its own past versions to fuel its current growth.
FlowChanneling: The intentional direction of semantic and social energy through specific, engineered paths.
Citational Commitment: A rigorous practice of linking and referencing that builds a durable web of meaning.
Paradigm Mutation: Identifying the exact moment when the rules of a specific field (like painting) undergo a systemic shift.
Cognitive Architecture: Using lists and numbering to build a physical structure for thought.
The Socioplastics Decalogue: Nodes 501–510, containing the essential protocols of the entire framework.
051–100: Operative Protocols and Lexicons
Semantic Mass, 52. Lexical Invention, 53. Bibliodiversity, 54. Tactical Metadata, 55. Open Science Integration, 56. The Author as System, 57. LAPIEZA-LAB Affiliation, 58. Madrid as Territory, 59. Web 2.0 Archaeology, 60. AI Era Survival, 61. Self-Versioning, 62. Load-Bearing Theory, 63. The Text as Infrastructure, 64. Documentation as Media, 65. Curatorial Metabolism, 66. Pedagogical Extension, 67. Taxonomy as Power, 68. Narrative Scarcity, 69. Conceptual Friction, 70. The Hardened Nucleus, 71. Stratigraphic Field, 72. Residue Analysis, 73. Channeling Force, 74. Structural Entanglement, 75. Construction over Dissemination, 76. Intelligibility Conditions, 77. Operative Support, 78. Cultural Memory as Technical Problem, 79. Semantic Engineering, 80. Institutional Design, 81. Rejecting the Liquid, 82. Celebrating Density, 83. Pressure Resistance, 84. The Geological Turn, 85. Logistics of Thought, 86. Machine Legibility Threshold, 87. Epistemic Survival, 88. Distributed Institute, 89. Media History as Internal Condition, 90. Quantity as Methodology, 91. Serial Thinking, 92. Sequence as Argument, 93. Nested Scales, 94. Node Positioning, 95. Bibliographic Anchors, 96. Low-Cost High-Density Theory, 97. Independent Protocol Design, 98. Repair as Method, 99. The Living Archive, 100. Socioplastics Sovereignty.