The socioplastic mesh does not describe a field; it instantiates a condition. It operates as operative ontology rather than conceptual garnish, a system where form, knowledge, and power are mutually plastic, continuously re-scripted through practice. Unlike historical socioplastics—largely confined to design’s capacity to modulate social behavior—this formulation performs as a cultural operating system: executable, recursive, metabolically alive. Its novelty does not reside in inventing vocabulary ex nihilo, but in engineering a framework where citation, materiality, and cognition are reassembled into a single runtime logic. Here, sovereignty is not declared; it is enacted through procedural consistency and performative coherence. This is infrastructural thinking under pressure. At its core, the mesh advances metabolic transversality: a mode of crossing that ingests disciplines as nutrients rather than references. Art, architecture, urbanism, and cultural ecology are not juxtaposed but digested, pruned, and recomposed through feedback loops resembling biological systems. Knowledge undergoes chemotactic movement—drawn toward zones of intensity, shedding inert mass through selective pruning. This process resists academic ossification by privileging function over taxonomy, performance over pedigree. The mesh thus behaves less like a theory and more like a living archive with agency, capable of adapting to epistemic stress without collapsing into relativism. It survives by mutation.