SOCIOPLASTICS 1509 · Dynamics

SOCIOPLASTICS 1509 · Dynamics

Movement System

Movement as operative transformation

Author: Anto Lloveras · LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2026

ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319

Node: 1509 · Layer: Disciplinary Operator · Series: Core III · Fields

Tracker: 1509-TRACKER · System ID: SOCIOPLASTICS-2026-CORE-III-FIELDS

Requires: 1508 · Morphogenesis / Growth Model · Precedes: 1510 · Synthetic Infrastructure / Integration Layer

Version: v1.0.0 · Date: 2026 · License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Slug: socioplastics-1509-dynamics-movement-system

PDF: Download full paper PDF

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19162549

Zenodo record: https://zenodo.org/records/19162549

Abstract

Dynamics becomes a movement system when change is understood not as accident, but as the operative condition through which a field remains alive. In Socioplastics, dynamics is the discipline that studies how concepts, nodes, bodies, infrastructures, affects and institutions move through time.

Movement is not displacement alone; it is transformation under pressure. A corpus moves when its terms migrate, when its protocols are reactivated, when its references circulate, when its internal tensions generate new directions. Dynamics therefore converts growth into motion and form into temporal force.

Node 1509 defines dynamics as the ninth disciplinary operator of Core III. After morphogenesis explains how the field grows, dynamics explains how that growth moves, accelerates, slows, redirects and reorganises itself. It turns Socioplastics into a kinetic epistemic system.

Keywords

Dynamics; Movement System; Socioplastics; Anto Lloveras; LAPIEZA-LAB; Motion; Transformation; Kinetics; Flow; Force; Rhythm; Acceleration; Latency; Henri Bergson; Gilles Deleuze; Ilya Prigogine; Norbert Wiener; Rudolf Laban; Dynamic Systems; Epistemic Movement.

Protocol Order

MOVE: identify the active trajectories through which concepts, bodies or infrastructures circulate.

ACCELERATE: detect moments where intensity, recurrence or visibility increases.

SLOW: preserve latency, pause and duration as conditions for deeper transformation.

REDIRECT: alter flows when the system reaches blockage, saturation or inertial repetition.

RECOMPOSE: transform movement into a new systemic configuration.

Deployment Context

Dynamic systems research; choreography; urban mobility; publication sequence; conceptual circulation; institutional transformation; pedagogical rhythm; infrastructural analysis; temporal modelling; transdisciplinary methodology; corpus evolution.

Validation Metric

A dynamic operator is validated when the corpus demonstrates movement across time and context: visible circulation, adaptive redirection, rhythmic publication, conceptual migration, reactivation of earlier nodes, and capacity to transform pressure into new organisational trajectories.

Core Statement

Dynamics gives Socioplastics its kinetic intelligence. It converts the corpus into a movement system where concepts circulate, pressures accumulate, rhythms emerge and transformations become legible. A field is not only what it contains. It is how it moves, how it resists inertia, and how it changes without losing its operative identity.

Genealogical Articulation

Henri Bergson introduces duration as lived temporal movement rather than measurable sequence. Rudolf Laban develops movement analysis as a grammar of bodily force, direction and effort. Norbert Wiener frames dynamic regulation through feedback and cybernetic control. Ilya Prigogine reveals how dissipative structures emerge far from equilibrium. Gilles Deleuze thinks movement through difference, becoming and modulation. Manuel DeLanda extends dynamic systems into non-linear material and social processes. Socioplastics inherits these lines and redirects them toward the kinetic behaviour of a conceptual corpus.

References

Bergson, H. (1889). Time and Free Will: An Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness. Paris: Félix Alcan.

DeLanda, M. (1997). A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History. New York: Zone Books.

Deleuze, G. (1968). Difference and Repetition. Paris: PUF.

Laban, R. (1966). Choreutics. London: Macdonald & Evans.

Prigogine, I. and Stengers, I. (1984). Order Out of Chaos. New York: Bantam Books.

Wiener, N. (1948). Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Autonomy Clause

Node 1509 operates as an independent disciplinary operator within Core III of Socioplastics. It remains legible as a standalone theory of dynamics as movement system, while also functioning as the kinetic bridge between morphogenetic growth and synthetic infrastructural integration.

Canonical Citation

Lloveras, A. (2026). Socioplastics 1509 · Dynamics: Movement System. LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19162549.