SOCIOPLASTICS 2510 · Threshold Closure
The Seal That Stabilises Without Ending
Core IV · Field Conditions · Nodes 2501–2510
Author: Anto Lloveras · LAPIEZA-LAB · Madrid · 2026
ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319
Node: 2510 · Layer: Field Conditions · Series: Core IV · Field Conditions
Tracker: 2510-TRACKER · System ID: SOCIOPLASTICS-2026-DECALOGUE-IV
Requires: 2509-AGONISTICSPACE · Precedes: Core V
Version: v1.0.0 · Date: 2026 · License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Slug: socioplastics-2510-threshold-closure-the-seal-that-stabilises-without-ending
Zenodo record: https://zenodo.org/records/19890721
Abstract
Threshold Closure names the seal that stabilises a corpus without ending it. After latency, activation, autonomous formation, coherence, dimensioning, mesh force, gravitational mass, anchoring and agonistic tension, Core IV reaches a threshold: not a final stop, but a stabilising edge.
Closure is not termination. It is the operation that allows a field to become readable as a completed layer while remaining capable of future extension. The threshold marks a boundary, gathers the sequence, protects its internal logic and prepares the passage toward the next core.
Node 2510 establishes closure as a field condition. A corpus must know how to seal a phase without freezing its movement. Threshold Closure defines this delicate operation: to stabilise the architecture, confirm the decalogy and leave the system open to further formation.
Keywords
Threshold Closure; The Seal That Stabilises Without Ending; Socioplastics; Anto Lloveras; LAPIEZA-LAB; Core IV; Field Conditions; Corpus Closure; Epistemic Threshold; Knowledge Infrastructure; Structural Stabilisation; Open Closure; Conceptual Architecture; Recursive Corpus; Decalogue Seal; Transdisciplinary Research.
Field Condition
SEAL: mark the boundary of the sequence without cancelling future movement.
STABILISE: convert the ten nodes into a coherent Core IV layer.
CONFIRM: make the field conditions legible as a complete decalogical structure.
PROTECT: preserve the internal logic of the corpus against dispersion or premature dissolution.
OPEN: ensure that closure becomes a threshold toward further cores rather than an endpoint.
Deployment Context
Decalogue closure; Core IV completion; DOI-indexed sequence; conceptual archive; master index; publication layer; research infrastructure requiring a stable threshold between one completed field condition and the continuation of the Socioplastics system.
Validation Metric
Threshold Closure is validated when the sequence becomes recognisable as a complete layer: ten nodes, stable metadata, sequential dependency, internal coherence, DOI persistence, retrievable PDFs, canonical citation, index readiness and an explicit opening toward future development.
Core Statement
Threshold Closure defines the corpus as a sealed but unfinished architecture. The seal gives form, protects coherence and marks completion of a phase. Yet it does not end the system. It turns completion into passage.
Genealogical Articulation
Threshold Closure belongs to the genealogy of thresholds, rites of passage, architectural joints, archival seals, system boundaries and open works. It shifts the question from ending to stabilising. The decisive task is not to close the corpus absolutely, but to define the boundary through which the next structure can begin.
References
Van Gennep, A. (1909). Les rites de passage. Paris: Nourry.
Eco, U. (1962). The Open Work. Milan: Bompiani.
Derrida, J. (1995). Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Luhmann, N. (1995). Social Systems. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Turner, V. (1969). The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure. Chicago: Aldine.
Autonomy Clause
Node 2510 operates as an independent executable unit within Core IV of the Socioplastics Decalogue. It can be read alone as a theory of open closure and threshold stabilisation, while completing the sequence initiated by Node 2501 and preparing the passage toward subsequent cores.
Canonical Citation
Lloveras, A. (2026). Socioplastics 2510 · Threshold Closure: The Seal That Stabilises Without Ending. Core Decalogue IV, Tome III. LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19890721.