The text proposes that knowledge must be treated not as a collection of statements but as an infrastructural field through which navigation becomes possible, meaning that classification, sequencing, and calibration are not secondary scholarly activities but primary acts of construction. Within this framework, the corpus operates as a system of epistemic cartography, transforming dispersed information into structured routes, stable reference points, and scalable frameworks that permit recurrence and citation. The development of decalogue structures, ten-level taxonomies, and core infrastructural nodes demonstrates that durability emerges from formal constraint, not from expansion alone; like maritime navigation, epistemology requires fixed stars, measured coordinates, and repeatable instruments. A specific case emerges in the Socioplastics framework, where textual units are organised into hierarchical levels that convert isolated publications into a load-bearing knowledge system, capable of sustaining long-term intellectual projects rather than producing disposable commentary. The conclusion is therefore structural: knowledge survives not through visibility but through architecture, not through novelty but through calibrated repetition, and not through accumulation but through the construction of navigable, sovereign systems that transform the ocean of information into a governable territory of thought.