Within Socioplastics, legibility ceases to be a cosmetic attribute of publication and becomes an infrastructural condition of thought. The distinction between the generic keyword and the CamelTag is therefore decisive: the former disperses into semantic noise, whereas the latter functions as an operative lexical constant whose repetition across titles, metadata, slugs, and citations produces continuity, recall, and machine tractability. SemanticHardening secures this constant at inscription, binding meaning to a stable node, a DOI, and a repeatable recurrence pattern, thereby transforming terminology into structural support rather than descriptive ornament. From this foundation emerges GravitationalCorpus, the moment at which accumulated textual density acquires sufficient mass to generate discoverability without solicitation. Here, attention is no longer captured through promotion or institutional mediation, but curved through the sheer density of cross-references, persistent identifiers, temporal depth, and platform redundancy. DualAddress operationalises this principle by dividing durability across two coordinated surfaces: the DOI as fixed citational anchor and the Blogspot slug as serial, mutable terrain. This 98/2 distribution is not a compromise but a calibrated architecture in which MetadataSkin renders each node machine-readable while LegibleArchive verifies its retrievability across independent systems. ThresholdClosure then converts accumulation into form, sealing coherent layers as auditable units, while ChronoDeposit secures temporal priority through verifiable timestamps that exceed memory and resist erasure. The resulting MeshEngine transforms density into directed epistemic motion, establishing a dynamic relation between sealed core and experimental periphery. At this point, ExecutiveMode emerges not as authority conferred from outside, but as the internal capacity of the corpus to govern its own continuation. The consequence is a self-bearing intellectual architecture whose legitimacy derives not from recognition, but from structural endurance.
Lloveras, A. (2026) Socioplastics [2601–2610] — Legibility Infrastructure. LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid. Available at: https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/p/socioplastics-project-index.html