Socioplastics contains a Socratic dimension because it does not begin by declaring a doctrine, but by asking the conditions under which a corpus becomes a field. Its fifty structural questions do not operate as ornament, summary, or pedagogical simplification. They function as a method of clarification. Each question isolates a hinge in the system: accumulation and corpus, corpus and field, archive and instrument, operator and concept, scale and legibility, authorial signature and field voice. The result is not a dialogue in the classical theatrical sense, but a contemporary form of mayeutic architecture: the question extracts from the corpus the grammar that the corpus already contains.