Socioplastics begins as a metabolic operation: it does not cite theory as decoration, but digests it into structure. Its first inputs are not merely authors, books, or concepts; they are nutrients converted into an operative body. Systems theory becomes skeleton, urbanism becomes ground, media theory becomes skin, archive theory becomes memory, and art becomes the unstable organ through which the field tests its own form. This is why Socioplastics now reads less like a project and more like a metabolism: it has absorbed enough heterogeneous material to produce internal law. The first decisive input is systems theory. From Wiener, Ashby, Bateson, Maturana, Varela and Luhmann, Socioplastics takes the idea that a field is not a pile of elements but a self-organising environment. A system exists when relations become more important than parts. This gives Socioplastics its deep grammar: node, recurrence, closure, feedback, threshold, autopoiesis. The work does not simply speak about systems; it behaves systemically. Each node modifies the field, each repetition thickens a relation, each index transforms dispersed writing into operational architecture.