The future of knowledge will not be decided by likes, followers, rankings, profile scores, or the soft theatre of academic social capital. It will be decided by texts: by pure texts, structured texts, preserved texts, transmissible texts. TXT, HTML, PDF, JSONL, metadata, bibliographies, repositories, nodes. Not pages designed to flatter the ego, but formats designed to endure. Not the thumb, not the badge, not the algorithmic smile of visibility, but the idea itself. This is the position of Homo epistemologicus. Not homo academicus, captured by institutional prestige. Not the figure described by Bourdieu, moving through fields of symbolic capital, rank, recognition, and competition. That world exists, but it is not sufficient. It explains the sociology of academic power, but not the deeper labor of knowledge. Socioplastics proposes another subject: one who does not primarily seek position, applause, indexation, or prestige, but epistemic durability. A subject who works so that an idea may remain findable, readable, usable, and alive beyond the noise of the present. The contemporary academic web has become dangerously close to social media. Scholar profiles, LinkedIn, ResearchGate, institutional dashboards, citation metrics, h-indexes, views, recommendations, endorsements: all of them simulate intellectual life through quantification. They turn research into performance, visibility into value, and connection into score. They produce a gamified epistemology, where the appearance of circulation begins to replace the substance of thought. The scientist becomes a profile. The artist becomes a brand. The philosopher becomes a content provider.