{ :::::::::::::::::::::::::: Anto Lloveras

Monday, June 8, 2026

TransEpistemology and the LexicalGravity of the MasterIndex: Rethinking Conceptual Transfer Where the Architecture Holds Only If You Calculate the Gravity — Anto Lloveras — Socioplastics — LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid — ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319 —

Disciplinary knowledge fails when concepts travel across fields without maintaining their force. We speak of interdisciplinary transfer as if ideas were luggage that could be unpacked in a new context without damage. TransEpistemology proposes a different model: knowledge does not travel; it exerts force across distance. A concept such as field, infrastructure, care, archive, ecology, or platform possesses epistemic mass that bends surrounding disciplinary space, and when it crosses from architecture to anthropology, from art criticism to urban studies, or from philosophy to curatorial practice, what changes is not only the concept but the gravity well it enters. The researcher who borrows without calculating this trajectory is not being interdisciplinary; she is being structurally reckless, launching concepts into orbits they cannot sustain. LexicalGravity names the mechanism by which certain terms accumulate mass. It is not frequency alone that generates gravity, but structural position inside a network of citations, DOIs, repositories, institutions, recursive usage, and conceptual dependency. The term that appears most often is not necessarily the most gravitational; the gravitational term is the one that other terms orbit, the one whose removal would destabilise surrounding arguments. Infrastructure in contemporary urban studies, relationality in art theory, sustainability in policy discourse, and care in feminist thought operate this way: not because they are merely repeated, but because they hold neighbouring vocabularies in place. The MasterIndex therefore operates not as a bibliography but as a gravitational map. It shows which concepts pull hardest on the surrounding field, which deposits have compacted into load-bearing strata, and where new fissures are opening. The index is not a finding aid but a seismograph, registering where conceptual mass has shifted. In digital humanities practice, infrastructures such as OpenAlex, Zenodo, Figshare, ORCID, Google Scholar, and personal publication interfaces do not simply store work; they configure gravitational fields where certain concepts attract visibility, funding, citation, and institutional attention. LexicalGravity explains why sustainability may pull harder than maintenance even when the latter is more precise: the former has accumulated more epistemic mass through repeated positioning in high-visibility nodes. The platform designer who ignores this is not being neutral; she is amplifying inherited gravity without seeing it. The MasterIndex makes such forces visible as a navigational aid. When designing a research platform, curating a collection, building a bibliography, or entering a new field, the question is not only what content to include but which gravitational field one is entering, which existing concepts will bend the trajectory, and which new terms might acquire enough mass to become reference points. In art theory, TransEpistemology explains why certain concepts migrate successfully while others remain structurally homeless. Relational aesthetics crossed into art criticism because participation, spectatorship, and institutional critique already formed a receptive gravity well; other concepts fail not because they are misunderstood, but because the receiving field lacks the density needed to hold them. In curatorial practice, the MasterIndex is the collection database that does not merely list works but maps their gravitational relations. A museum acquisition is not an addition but a recalibration of the field, altering the pull exerted by existing holdings, categories, and histories. What changes when TransEpistemology, LexicalGravity, and MasterIndex operate together is the end of naive interdisciplinarity. Concepts are no longer treated as portable instruments but as bodies with mass, trajectory, and field effects. The architect who borrows from anthropology is not translating; she is entering a foreign gravity well. The curator who moves from art theory to urban studies is not applying familiar tools; she is recalculating the weight of her own vocabulary. The methodological consequence is precise: every research project must begin not only with a literature review, but with a gravitational survey. To survive the crossing, one must first know what pulls, what bends, what collapses, and what still has enough empty space to receive a new orbit.