Each node, encoded via CamelTags such as FlowChanneling or LexicalGravity, operates simultaneously as content, address, and protocol, thereby collapsing distinctions between language and infrastructure. This recursive accumulation engenders a stratigraphic field in which repetition, cross-referencing, and dataset integration produce epistemic “mass,” enabling persistence beyond conventional publication formats. The framework’s Decalogue Protocols function as operative axioms, guiding processes like SemanticHardening and CitationalCommitment, while the broader system extends across ten disciplinary domains, from urbanism to systems theory, forming a trans-epistemological matrix. A salient case is the “Kuhn-as-Tool” series, which recontextualises paradigm shifts as transferable analytical instruments across heterogeneous fields, demonstrating the system’s capacity for methodological translation. Crucially, Socioplastics redefines authorship as infrastructural design, where the practitioner engineers conditions for knowledge circulation through DOIs, datasets, and distributed archives. In conclusion, the framework advances a paradigm wherein cities become readable as metabolic systems, and knowledge itself is rendered as a sovereign, self-regulating field resistant to entropy through structural redundancy and semantic consolidation.