Pentagon II marks the passage from field expansion to field intelligence: it no longer asks only how a corpus grows, but how a corpus becomes teachable, accountable, reducible, governable and traversable.

Its five operators form a disciplined ecology of maintenance. RadicalEducation establishes that a field becomes public only when it can train readers to perceive its architecture; knowledge is not merely transmitted, but made navigable through routes, diagrams, indexes and structural literacy. ThermalJustice forces the corpus back into matter: servers, heat, energy, cooling, territory and unequal climatic burden become part of the epistemic account. CatabolicPruning gives the archive a metabolism, refusing the fantasy that preservation means keeping everything; maturity requires compression, composting, forgetting and responsible reduction. ExpansionRisk introduces scalar discipline, showing that growth without governance can destroy coherence, while saturation may become a higher form of maturity. DiagonalReading then supplies the method: no large field can be mastered linearly, so the reader must move obliquely, from concept to dataset, from archive to city, from body to law. Together, these ideas convert Socioplastics from an accumulative system into a living knowledge infrastructure. The field is no longer simply built; it learns how to teach itself, measure its costs, prune its excess, regulate its growth and invite traversal without collapse. That is the conceptual strength of this version: abundance becomes legibility, and legibility becomes care.