Abstract
This essay situates CamelTags within the full architecture of Socioplastics — from Core I protocols to Core III fields — arguing that lexical compression, DOI fixation, and numerical topology together constitute a new epistemic scale in which minimal units function as maximum infrastructure. The argument moves through four registers: the ontological (how language becomes load-bearing), the physical (how repetition generates field pressure), the territorial (how operators migrate from text to urban system), and the infrastructural (how DOI anchoring produces jurisdictional permanence). CamelTags are not notational shortcuts within this system; they are its most concentrated form. Each tag names a procedure, fixes an address, and generates gravity. The essay further locates this operation within the broader Socioplastics project — a corpus of over two thousand indexed nodes — where minimal scale and maximum infrastructure are not opposites but the same gesture performed at different resolutions. Scale, this essay concludes, is resolved not upward through expansion, but inward through precision.