MASTER INDEX · SOCIOPLASTICS TOMES I & II Nodes 0001–2000 · 200 Chapters · 20 Books · 2 Tomes

TOME I · FOUNDATIONAL STRATUM

Nodes 0001–1000

BOOK 01 · EPISTEMIC ARCHITECTURE (Nodes 0001–0100)

Tome I, Chapter 01 (Nodes 001–010)

Tome I, Chapter 02 (Nodes 011–020)

Tome I, Chapter 03 (Nodes 021–030)

Tome I, Chapter 04 (Nodes 031–040)

Tome I, Chapter 05 (Nodes 041–050)

Tome I, Chapter 06 (Nodes 051–060)

Tome I, Chapter 07 (Nodes 061–070)

Tome I, Chapter 08 (Nodes 071–080)

Tome I, Chapter 09 (Nodes 081–090)

Tome I, Chapter 10 (Nodes 091–100)


BOOK 02 · FIELD FORMATION (Nodes 0101–0200)

Tome I, Chapter 11 (Nodes 101–110)

Tome I, Chapter 12 (Nodes 111–120)

Tome I, Chapter 13 (Nodes 121–130)

Tome I, Chapter 14 (Nodes 131–140)

Tome I, Chapter 15 (Nodes 141–150)

Tome I, Chapter 16 (Nodes 151–160)

Tome I, Chapter 17 (Nodes 161–170)

Tome I, Chapter 18 (Nodes 171–180)

Tome I, Chapter 19 (Nodes 181–190)

Tome I, Chapter 20 (Nodes 191–200)


BOOK 03 · SYSTEMIC PROTOCOLS (Nodes 0201–0300)

Tome I, Chapter 21 (Nodes 201–210)

Tome I, Chapter 22 (Nodes 211–220)

Tome I, Chapter 23 (Nodes 221–230)

Tome I, Chapter 24 (Nodes 231–240)

Tome I, Chapter 25 (Nodes 241–250)

Tome I, Chapter 26 (Nodes 251–260)

Tome I, Chapter 27 (Nodes 261–270)

Tome I, Chapter 28 (Nodes 271–280)

Tome I, Chapter 29 (Nodes 281–290)

Tome I, Chapter 30 (Nodes 291–300)


BOOK 04 · URBAN REGISTERS (Nodes 0301–0400)

Tome I, Chapter 31 (Nodes 301–310)

Tome I, Chapter 32 (Nodes 311–320)

Tome I, Chapter 33 (Nodes 321–330)

Tome I, Chapter 34 (Nodes 331–340)

Tome I, Chapter 35 (Nodes 341–350)

Tome I, Chapter 36 (Nodes 351–360)

Tome I, Chapter 37 (Nodes 361–370)

Tome I, Chapter 38 (Nodes 371–380)

Tome I, Chapter 39 (Nodes 381–390)

Tome I, Chapter 40 (Nodes 391–400)


BOOK 05 · CONCEPTUAL OPERATORS (Nodes 0401–0500)

Tome I, Chapter 41 (Nodes 401–410)

Tome I, Chapter 42 (Nodes 411–420)

Tome I, Chapter 43 (Nodes 421–430)

Tome I, Chapter 44 (Nodes 431–440)

Tome I, Chapter 45 (Nodes 441–450)

Tome I, Chapter 46 (Nodes 451–460)

Tome I, Chapter 47 (Nodes 461–470)

Tome I, Chapter 48 (Nodes 471–480)

Tome I, Chapter 49 (Nodes 481–490)

Tome I, Chapter 50 (Nodes 491–500)


BOOK 06 · MATERIAL INSCRIPTION (Nodes 0501–0600)

Tome I, Chapter 51 (Nodes 501–510) (DOIs)

Tome I, Chapter 52 (Nodes 511–520)

Tome I, Chapter 53 (Nodes 521–530)

Tome I, Chapter 54 (Nodes 531–540)

Tome I, Chapter 55 (Nodes 541–550)

Tome I, Chapter 56 (Nodes 551–560)

Tome I, Chapter 57 (Nodes 561–570)

Tome I, Chapter 58 (Nodes 571–580)

Tome I, Chapter 59 (Nodes 581–590)

Tome I, Chapter 60 (Nodes 591–600)


BOOK 07 · TERRITORIAL SYSTEMS (Nodes 0601–0700)

Tome I, Chapter 61 (Nodes 601–610)

Tome I, Chapter 62 (Nodes 611–620)

Tome I, Chapter 63 (Nodes 621–630)

Tome I, Chapter 64 (Nodes 631–640)

Tome I, Chapter 65 (Nodes 641–650)

Tome I, Chapter 66 (Nodes 651–660)

Tome I, Chapter 67 (Nodes 661–670)

Tome I, Chapter 68 (Nodes 671–680)

Tome I, Chapter 69 (Nodes 681–690)

Tome I, Chapter 70 (Nodes 691–700)


BOOK 08 · MEDIA THEORY (Nodes 0701–0800)

Tome I, Chapter 71 (Nodes 701–710)

Tome I, Chapter 72 (Nodes 711–720)

Tome I, Chapter 73 (Nodes 721–730)

Tome I, Chapter 74 (Nodes 731–740)

Tome I, Chapter 75 (Nodes 741–750)

Tome I, Chapter 76 (Nodes 751–760)

Tome I, Chapter 77 (Nodes 761–770)

Tome I, Chapter 78 (Nodes 771–780)

Tome I, Chapter 79 (Nodes 781–790)

Tome I, Chapter 80 (Nodes 791–800)


BOOK 09 · MORPHOGENESIS (Nodes 0801–0900)

Tome I, Chapter 81 (Nodes 801–810)

Tome I, Chapter 82 (Nodes 811–820)

Tome I, Chapter 83 (Nodes 821–830)

Tome I, Chapter 84 (Nodes 831–840)

Tome I, Chapter 85 (Nodes 841–850)

Tome I, Chapter 86 (Nodes 851–860)

Tome I, Chapter 87 (Nodes 861–870)

Tome I, Chapter 88 (Nodes 871–880)

Tome I, Chapter 89 (Nodes 881–890)

Tome I, Chapter 90 (Nodes 891–900)


BOOK 10 · SYNTHETIC INFRASTRUCTURE (Nodes 0901–1000)

Tome I, Chapter 91 (Nodes 901–910)

Tome I, Chapter 92 (Nodes 911–920)

Tome I, Chapter 93 (Nodes 921–930)

Tome I, Chapter 94 (Nodes 931–940)

Tome I, Chapter 95 (Nodes 941–950)

Tome I, Chapter 96 (Nodes 951–960)

Tome I, Chapter 97 (Nodes 961–970)

Tome I, Chapter 98 (Nodes 971–980)

Tome I, Chapter 99 (Nodes 981–990)

Tome I, Chapter 100 (Nodes 991–1000) (DOIs)


TOME II · DEVELOPMENTAL STRATUM

Nodes 1001–2000

BOOK 11 · STRATIGRAPHIC EXTENSIONS (Nodes 1001–1100)

Tome II, Chapter 101 (Nodes 1001–1010)

Tome II, Chapter 102 (Nodes 1011–1020)

Tome II, Chapter 103 (Nodes 1021–1030)

Tome II, Chapter 104 (Nodes 1031–1040)

Tome II, Chapter 105 (Nodes 1041–1050)

Tome II, Chapter 106 (Nodes 1051–1060)

Tome II, Chapter 107 (Nodes 1061–1070)

Tome II, Chapter 108 (Nodes 1071–1080)

Tome II, Chapter 109 (Nodes 1081–1090)

Tome II, Chapter 110 (Nodes 1091–1100)







BOOK 12 · LINGUISTIC ARCHITECTURES (Nodes 1101–1200)

Tome II, Chapter 111 (Nodes 1101–1110)

Tome II, Chapter 112 (Nodes 1111–1120)

Tome II, Chapter 113 (Nodes 1121–1130)

Tome II, Chapter 114 (Nodes 1131–1140)

Tome II, Chapter 115 (Nodes 1141–1150)

Tome II, Chapter 116 (Nodes 1151–1160)

Tome II, Chapter 117 (Nodes 1161–1170)

Tome II, Chapter 118 (Nodes 1171–1180)

Tome II, Chapter 119 (Nodes 1181–1190)

Tome II, Chapter 120 (Nodes 1191–1200)


BOOK 13 · EPISTEMOLOGICAL CORES (Nodes 1201–1300)

Tome II, Chapter 121 (Nodes 1201–1210)

Tome II, Chapter 122 (Nodes 1211–1220)

Tome II, Chapter 123 (Nodes 1221–1230)

Tome II, Chapter 124 (Nodes 1231–1240)

Tome II, Chapter 125 (Nodes 1241–1250)

Tome II, Chapter 126 (Nodes 1251–1260)

Tome II, Chapter 127 (Nodes 1261–1270)

Tome II, Chapter 128 (Nodes 1271–1280)

Tome II, Chapter 129 (Nodes 1281–1290)

Tome II, Chapter 130 (Nodes 1291–1300)


BOOK 14 · SYSTEMS DYNAMICS (Nodes 1301–1400)

Tome II, Chapter 131 (Nodes 1301–1310)

Tome II, Chapter 132 (Nodes 1311–1320)

Tome II, Chapter 133 (Nodes 1321–1330)

Tome II, Chapter 134 (Nodes 1331–1340)

Tome II, Chapter 135 (Nodes 1341–1350)

Tome II, Chapter 136 (Nodes 1351–1360)

Tome II, Chapter 137 (Nodes 1361–1370)

Tome II, Chapter 138 (Nodes 1371–1380)

Tome II, Chapter 139 (Nodes 1381–1390)

Tome II, Chapter 140 (Nodes 1391–1400)


BOOK 15 · DECALOGUE PROTOCOLS (Nodes 1401–1500)

Tome II, Chapter 141 (Nodes 1401–1410)

Tome II, Chapter 142 (Nodes 1411–1420)

Tome II, Chapter 143 (Nodes 1421–1430)

Tome II, Chapter 144 (Nodes 1431–1440)

Tome II, Chapter 145 (Nodes 1441–1450)

Tome II, Chapter 146 (Nodes 1451–1460)

Tome II, Chapter 147 (Nodes 1461–1470)

Tome II, Chapter 148 (Nodes 1471–1480)

Tome II, Chapter 149 (Nodes 1481–1490)

Tome II, Chapter 150 (Nodes 1491–1500)


BOOK 16 · CONCEPTUAL ART REGISTERS (Nodes 1501–1600)

Tome II, Chapter 151 (Nodes 1501–1510) (DOIs)

Tome II, Chapter 152 (Nodes 1511–1520)

Tome II, Chapter 153 (Nodes 1521–1530)

Tome II, Chapter 154 (Nodes 1531–1540)

Tome II, Chapter 155 (Nodes 1541–1550)

Tome II, Chapter 156 (Nodes 1551–1560)

Tome II, Chapter 157 (Nodes 1561–1570)

Tome II, Chapter 158 (Nodes 1571–1580)

Tome II, Chapter 159 (Nodes 1581–1590)

Tome II, Chapter 160 (Nodes 1591–1600)


BOOK 17 · URBAN THEORY EXTENSIONS (Nodes 1601–1700)

Tome II, Chapter 161 (Nodes 1601–1610)

Tome II, Chapter 162 (Nodes 1611–1620)

Tome II, Chapter 163 (Nodes 1621–1630)

Tome II, Chapter 164 (Nodes 1631–1640)

Tome II, Chapter 165 (Nodes 1641–1650)

Tome II, Chapter 166 (Nodes 1651–1660)

Tome II, Chapter 167 (Nodes 1661–1670)

Tome II, Chapter 168 (Nodes 1671–1680)

Tome II, Chapter 169 (Nodes 1681–1690)

Tome II, Chapter 170 (Nodes 1691–1700)


BOOK 18 · MEDIA ECOLOGIES (Nodes 1701–1800)

Tome II, Chapter 171 (Nodes 1701–1710)

Tome II, Chapter 172 (Nodes 1711–1720)

Tome II, Chapter 173 (Nodes 1721–1730)

Tome II, Chapter 174 (Nodes 1731–1740)

Tome II, Chapter 175 (Nodes 1741–1750)

Tome II, Chapter 176 (Nodes 1751–1760)

Tome II, Chapter 177 (Nodes 1761–1770)

Tome II, Chapter 178 (Nodes 1771–1780)

Tome II, Chapter 179 (Nodes 1781–1790)

Tome II, Chapter 180 (Nodes 1791–1800)


BOOK 19 · MORPHOGENETIC OPERATORS (Nodes 1801–1900)

Tome II, Chapter 181 (Nodes 1801–1810)

Tome II, Chapter 182 (Nodes 1811–1820)

Tome II, Chapter 183 (Nodes 1821–1830)

Tome II, Chapter 184 (Nodes 1831–1840)

Tome II, Chapter 185 (Nodes 1841–1850)

Tome II, Chapter 186 (Nodes 1851–1860)

Tome II, Chapter 187 (Nodes 1861–1870)

Tome II, Chapter 188 (Nodes 1871–1880)

Tome II, Chapter 189 (Nodes 1881–1890)

Tome II, Chapter 190 (Nodes 1891–1900)


BOOK 20 · FIELD CONSOLIDATION (Nodes 1901–2000)

Tome II, Chapter 191 (Nodes 1901–1910)

Tome II, Chapter 192 (Nodes 1911–1920)

Tome II, Chapter 193 (Nodes 1921–1930)

Tome II, Chapter 194 (Nodes 1931–1940)

Tome II, Chapter 195 (Nodes 1941–1950)

Tome II, Chapter 196 (Nodes 1951–1960)

Tome II, Chapter 197 (Nodes 1961–1970)

Tome II, Chapter 198 (Nodes 1971–1980)

Tome II, Chapter 199 (Nodes 1981–1990)

Tome II, Chapter 200 (Nodes 1991–2000)


Summary Table

TomeBooksChaptersNodes
Tome I (Foundational Stratum)10 (Books 01–10)100 (Chapters 01–100)0001–1000
Tome II (Developmental Stratum)10 (Books 11–20)100 (Chapters 101–200)1001–2000
Total202002000

Master Index for Tome I and Tome II. Each of the 200 chapters contains 10 nodes with their full titles and URLs, organized across 20 books. The structure respects the decimal rhythm of the corpus (10 nodes per chapter, 10 chapters per book, 10 books per tome) and provides a complete navigational map of the Socioplastics project from node 0001 to node 2000.









Socioplastics is a long-term transdisciplinary research project initiated in 2009 by architect and researcher Anto Lloveras. The project operates at the intersection of architecture, urban theory, epistemology, systems theory, and media theory, and is structured not as a conventional publication series but as an evolving epistemic infrastructure. Rather than producing isolated texts, Socioplastics develops a stratigraphic corpus in which writing, indexing, conceptual terminology, datasets, and software environments operate together as a single research system. The project is based on the idea that in the contemporary digital condition, knowledge does not persist primarily through books or isolated academic papers, but through interconnected infrastructures composed of persistent identifiers, distributed repositories, datasets, and semantic metadata. Socioplastics therefore treats writing not only as discursive production but as infrastructural construction. Each text functions simultaneously as a theoretical fragment and as a node within a larger network composed of DOIs, datasets, software repositories, and machine-readable schemas. Over time, the project has developed into a large-scale corpus composed of indexed textual entries, conceptual cores, urban theory essays, glossaries, datasets, and software tools. The corpus is organized through a numerical slug system and stratigraphic logic in which texts accumulate, stabilize, and form conceptual layers. The result is not an archive in the traditional sense, but a structured field of relations in which concepts, texts, and infrastructures are continuously connected and reorganized.


Stratigraphic Structure of the Corpus

The Socioplastics corpus is organized as a stratigraphic textual field. This means that texts are not arranged as isolated essays or books, but as layers within a continuous research terrain. The first major stabilized layer of the corpus consists of the first thousand indexed entries, organized into ten Century Packs, each containing one hundred texts. These packs form what can be considered Tome I of the Socioplastics corpus, representing the foundational stabilized stratum of the project. Within this stratigraphic structure, certain texts function as conceptual anchors. These anchors are not simply important texts; they are structural texts that define the theoretical and operational framework of the project. To ensure long-term citability and archival stability, these conceptual anchors have been registered as DOI publications through Zenodo and Figshare. The DOI functions here as a form of geological fixation within the digital environment: a persistent identifier that stabilizes certain concepts and allows them to be cited, indexed, and retrieved over time. The project currently includes several conceptual cores, each composed of a series of DOI-registered publications. These cores define the main conceptual architecture of the Socioplastics framework and function as load-bearing elements within the overall structure of the corpus.

Conceptual Cores and DOI Publications

The conceptual structure of Socioplastics is organized around multiple cores, each addressing a different dimension of the framework. These cores are published as DOI-registered works to ensure their persistence within academic and archival systems. Core I establishes the Decalogue Protocols, which define the initial operational and conceptual principles of the Socioplastics framework. Core II, titled the Stratigraphic Field, stabilizes the numerical topology, scalar architecture, and relational mass of the corpus. Core III introduces the field structure of the project, connecting linguistics, conceptual art, epistemology, systems theory, architecture, urbanism, media theory, morphogenesis, and dynamics into a unified operational framework. Urban Essays, published through Figshare, form a parallel series focusing specifically on territorial systems, infrastructural asymmetries, energy regimes, and metropolitan dynamics. Together, these DOI publications form the fixed conceptual layer of the project. They are not isolated papers but structural documents that define the framework within which the rest of the corpus operates.

Distributed Research Infrastructure

One of the defining characteristics of Socioplastics is its distributed nature. The project does not exist on a single platform but across a network of interconnected repositories and systems. These include:

  • The main website, which functions as the surface layer and public interface of the project.
  • Zenodo, where conceptual cores and theoretical publications are registered with DOIs.
  • Figshare, where the Urban Essays series is published.
  • GitHub, which hosts the MUSE (Mesh United System Environment) software environment developed as part of the project.
  • Hugging Face, which hosts the Socioplastics Index dataset, a machine-readable index of the corpus designed for computational analysis and machine learning applications.
  • ORCID and OpenAlex, which provide persistent author identification and integration into global scholarly indexing systems.

This distributed structure ensures that the project does not depend on a single platform or institution for its persistence. Instead, the project exists as a mesh of interconnected nodes. Each platform performs a different function: DOI registration, dataset hosting, software development, author identification, or public dissemination. Together, they form an integrated research infrastructure.

The Dataset and Machine Legibility

A central component of the project is the Socioplastics Index dataset, hosted on Hugging Face. This dataset transforms the corpus into a machine-readable structure. The slug system used throughout the project allows each text to be indexed, categorized, and processed computationally. This enables the corpus to function not only as a body of theory but as a dataset that can be analyzed, mapped, and processed by algorithms. In this sense, the Socioplastics corpus operates simultaneously in two domains: the discursive domain of human-readable texts and the machinic domain of datasets and semantic metadata. The project therefore treats writing as a dual-address system: texts are written for human readers but also structured for machine readability through indexing, metadata, and semantic web technologies.

MUSE — Mesh United System Environment

The technical layer of the project is developed under the name MUSE (Mesh United System Environment), a software and conceptual environment designed to manage and operate mesh-based systems, stratigraphic data structures, and distributed knowledge environments. The GitHub repository associated with the project hosts scripts, structural models, and technical components that support the organizational logic of the Socioplastics corpus.MUSE should not be understood simply as software in the conventional sense, but as the technical environment that allows the project to function as an integrated system. If the corpus is the textual layer and the dataset is the machinic layer, MUSE is the operational layer that connects structure, data, and environment.

Semantic Web and Machine-Readable Metadata

The Socioplastics website incorporates JSON-LD semantic metadata based on Schema.org standards. This metadata defines the project as a ResearchProject, Dataset, SoftwareSourceCode, CreativeWorkSeries, and a set of ScholarlyArticle entities linked through persistent identifiers such as DOIs and ORCID. This machine-readable layer allows search engines, academic indexing systems, and knowledge graphs to interpret the project not as a collection of blog posts but as a structured research project with identifiable components: author, organization, publications, dataset, and software. This semantic layer is essential for long-term discoverability. In the contemporary digital environment, what is not machine-readable is often not discoverable. By structuring the project through persistent identifiers and semantic metadata, Socioplastics positions itself within the infrastructures that govern digital knowledge preservation and retrieval.

Keywords and Research Areas

Architecture Theory
Urban Theory
Epistemology
Systems Theory
Media Theory
Digital Humanities
Infrastructure Theory
Knowledge Systems
Transdisciplinary Research
Stratigraphic Urbanism
Distributed Archives
Semantic Web
Conceptual Art
Territorial Systems
Morphogenesis and Growth Models

These keywords reflect the transdisciplinary nature of the project and define its position within the contemporary intellectual landscape.

Suggested Citation

Lloveras, Anto.
Socioplastics — Research Framework and Corpus.
2009–ongoing.

Project website:
https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/

ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0009-0009-9820-3319


Project Infrastructure Links

ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0009-0009-9820-3319

OpenAlex:
https://openalex.org/authors/A5071531341

Project Website:
https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/

GitHub (MUSE):
https://github.com/AntoLloveras

Dataset (Hugging Face):
https://huggingface.co/datasets/AntoLloveras/Socioplastics-Index

Zenodo Publications:
https://zenodo.org/search?q=Anto%20Lloveras

Figshare Urban Essays:
https://figshare.com/authors/Anto_Lloveras

Final Note on the Nature of the Project

Socioplastics should be understood not as a book, a blog, or a conventional research publication series, but as an evolving epistemic infrastructure. Its primary objective is not only to produce theoretical content but to construct a system in which that content can persist, be indexed, be cited, be processed, and remain accessible over long periods of time. The project therefore operates simultaneously as a theoretical framework, a textual corpus, a dataset, a software environment, and a semantic web entity. In this sense, Socioplastics belongs to a category of research practices that treat knowledge not as a set of isolated publications but as an environment that must be built, maintained, and stabilized through technical, conceptual, and institutional structures. The project is ongoing, and its development should be understood as a long-duration process in which texts, datasets, software, and infrastructures continue to accumulate, stabilize, and reorganize into new stratigraphic layers over time.