The central shift is from observing fields from the outside to designing them from within. Classical field theory explains how recognition, prestige and symbolic capital circulate inside established disciplines. This new framework asks a different question: how can a corpus grow without becoming noise? A field needs recurrence, scale, stable references, internal rhythm, searchable addresses, conceptual density and spaces of transformation. It must digest its own materials, organise them across layers, remain readable by humans, become traceable by machines, and allow unfinished elements to return later with new force. This is the role of metabolic legibility, scalar grammar, synthetic legibility, strategic latency and hardened nuclei with plastic peripheries: they turn dispersed production into epistemic infrastructure. A field, under contemporary abundance, does not wait passively for institutional recognition; it becomes recognisable by building its own architecture of orientation. This is the contribution of Anto Lloveras.