The core Socioplastics field statement articulates an ambitious wager: a research field can be deliberately designed and made publicly legible before institutional recognition through scalar grammar, recursive numbering, DOI infrastructure, conceptual recurrence, and dual human/machine address. Organised across nodes, packs, books, tomes, cores, datasets, and public indexes, the project treats the archive itself as an active medium of thinking. Key distinctions — Hardened Nucleus vs. Plastic Periphery, Metabolic Library, Synthetic Legibility, Archive Fatigue — provide a coherent vocabulary for navigating abundance. The statement is supported by the Soft Ontology Papers, an extensive bibliography, and concrete technical layers (Hugging Face dataset, public indexes, blog architecture). Rather than presenting a closed theory, Socioplastics performs field formation in real time: numbering, metadata, deposition, indexing, and routing become intellectual operations. This document convincingly demonstrates that contemporary scholarship can move beyond the single monograph toward durable, traversable, living epistemic environments. It is both manifesto and proof-of-concept for post-institutional, infrastructure-aware research.