Socioplastics is a research project created by Anto Lloveras that attempts to build a durable system of ideas rather than a collection of isolated essays. Instead of publishing occasional papers, the project constructs a large conceptual architecture made from hundreds of tightly structured texts. Each text—called a slug—is around 1,000 words long, a rule that forces intellectual compression and removes digressions or filler. The result is a uniform set of building blocks that can be combined systematically. Slugs are organised into decalogues, groups of ten essays that explore one theme from multiple angles. Ten decalogues together form a Century Pack, a neighbourhood of one hundred texts where concepts are repeated, refined, and strengthened through proximity. This repeated use of terms creates what the system calls LexicalGravity: the more often concepts appear in relation to one another, the harder it becomes to think about the topic without them. The project also introduces analytical tools known as CamelTags—specialised terms written without spaces so they function as unique conceptual operators. For example, DisplacementMachine reframes rent not as a simple price but as a force that pushes residents out of neighbourhoods, while FiniteBasin describes territories—such as islands or dense cities—that cannot export their problems elsewhere and must resolve pressures internally. The thinking method guiding the whole project is the Helicoid, a spiral pattern in which ideas return repeatedly but from new angles, deepening analysis each time. The work exists simultaneously on a blog and in research repositories such as Figshare, where some texts become Anchors with permanent digital identifiers, making them citable scholarly objects. Ultimately, Socioplastics aims to build a sovereign intellectual structure—a network of ideas dense enough, interconnected enough, and formally disciplined enough to endure beyond the volatility of digital information culture.
SLUGS
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