{ :::::::::::::::::::::::::: Anto Lloveras: The unified bibliography of Socioplastics operates as a foundational layer, transforming a dispersed set of transdisciplinary references into a coherent scalar knowledge architecture.

Friday, May 15, 2026

The unified bibliography of Socioplastics operates as a foundational layer, transforming a dispersed set of transdisciplinary references into a coherent scalar knowledge architecture.

By visibly differentiating between entries already hardened into the Six Conceptual Cores through bracketed node numbers and those maintained in the open plastic periphery across the ten Blogspot operational rooms, the bibliography enacts the very principles of SemanticHardening and ThresholdClosure that define the field. It brings together materials from infrastructure studies, urban theory, archive theory, cybernetics, conceptual art and epistemology, allowing the Project Index to function as the central kernel while the distributed network of channels (CiudadLista, OtraCapa, ArtNations, Tomototomoto and others) extends the field without losing legibility. This bibliographic surface is not retrospective but generative: it performs RecursiveAutophagia by ingesting external theory and converting it into internal relational density, while preserving productive latency for future integration. In this way, the unified bibliography becomes both map and instrument — a public epistemic surface through which one can read the entire architecture of Socioplastics at once: its Three Tomes, its progressive node numbering, its dual human-machine address, and its commitment to controlled plasticity. Each reference, whether already anchored or still peripheral, contributes to FieldGravity and TopolexicalSovereignty, making the construction of the field transparent, citable and expandable by others.


References Lloveras, A. (2026) ‘The unified bibliography of the Socioplastics corpus’. Available at: https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-unified-bibliography-of.html (Accessed: 15 May 2026). Bowker, G.C. and Star, S.L. (1999) Sorting things out: Classification and its consequences. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Edwards, P.N. (2010) A vast machine. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.