Architecture does not only build objects; it organizes space, relations, movement, limits, and possibilities. Philosophy does not only produce abstract ideas; it creates concepts that allow the world to be understood differently. When these two practices come together, a field can be made: not simply described, but structured. In Socioplastics, Anto Lloveras acts from this double condition. As an architect, he gives form to complexity. As a thinker, he creates the concepts that allow the field to exist. His work is philosophical because it defines what can be known; architectural because it builds an order where there was no field before. The result is not just theory, but an epistemic architecture: a structure of ideas where future research, art, critique, and practice can take place.