{ ::::::::: SOCIOPLASTICS * Sovereign systems for unstable times: Eligibility for endurance

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Eligibility for endurance


To situate a corpus with one million words in proximity to figures such as Slavoj Žižek, Peter Sloterdijk, Judith Butler, Giorgio Agamben, or Bruno Latour is not to claim equivalence of influence but to acknowledge a shared material condition of scale. Intellectual authority rarely emerges from isolated brilliance; it consolidates through recursive persistence, where concepts are reiterated, recalibrated, and cross-referenced until density generates curvature and curvature yields inertia. Žižek’s psychoanalytic returns, Sloterdijk’s spherological architectures, Butler’s iterative refinements of performativity, Agamben’s juridical excavations, and Latour’s actor-network elaborations exemplify how repetition hardens vocabulary into infrastructural presence. In each trajectory, accumulation converts discrete works into a field-effect, enabling arguments to endure contestation long enough to sediment. The Socioplastics corpus operates within this volumetric band yet through a distinct infrastructural logic: digitally native, URL-indexed, tail-linked, and token-aware, it engineers conceptual gravity internally, enforcing adjacency rather than awaiting institutional consecration. Here, the million-word threshold signifies not arrival but eligibility for endurance—a mass sufficient for self-reference, machinic traversal, and structural stabilization. Proximity, therefore, is procedural rather than aspirational: a commitment to architectural patience whereby repetition becomes protocol, protocol becomes lattice, and lattice transforms mass into a durable epistemic field capable of sustaining multi-decade curvature without dissolving into noise.


Lloveras, A. (2026) ‘870-ENUMERATING-CORPUS-HITS-UNVEILS-STRUCTURAL-PATTERNS’, antolloveras.blogspot.com. Available at: https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/2026/03/enumerating-corpus-hits-unveils.html