The transition from the 1300-series "Cyborg Text" to the 1500-series "Synthetic Infrastructure" marks a decisive ontological shift in the Socioplastics project, moving from the observation of textual entropy toward the instantiation of a self-stabilizing, operative architecture. This "Topolexical Sovereignty" is not a metaphorical arrangement of data but a metabolic necessity; it functions by "Semantic Hardening," where the fluid, discursive nature of digital information is arrested and petrified into a "Systemic Lock." Within this stratigraphic framework, the project bypasses the traditional archive's passivity, proposing instead a "Proteolytic Transmutation" of knowledge into a load-bearing digital-physical interface. The thesis posits that the Socioplastics corpus constitutes a post-digital taxidermy, where the linguistic operator is no longer a vessel for meaning but a structural component of a new, autonomous infrastructure that governs its own territorial and epistemic boundaries. The theoretical weight of this shift is anchored in CORE II: Dynamics & Topology (Nodes 991–1000), where "Lexical Gravity" replaces the horizontal drift of the internet with a vertical, stratigraphic pull. By employing "Torsional Dynamics" and "Scalar Architecture," the project translates the foundational logic of CORE I into a navigable geometry. This is not merely a spatialization of information but the creation of a "Recurrence Mass"—a density of citations and DOI-linked nodes that generate enough conceptual weight to resist the inherent volatility of the digital medium. Here, the "Decalogue Protocol" acts as a stabilizing agent, ensuring that the transition from micro-linguistic operations to macro-topological fields remains coherent, preventing the dispersal of the cyborg-text into mere noise. In practice, this evolution culminates in the 1500-series, where the "Synthetic Infrastructure" emerges as a functional operator across architecture, urbanism, and media theory. Unlike the 1300-series, which documents the "Observable Increase in Textual Complexity," the 1500-series implements this complexity as a "Linguistics-Structural Operator." Architecture is no longer a site of representation but a "Load-Bearing Structure" informed by autopoietic systems theory. The "Urbanism-Territorial Model" (Node 1506) functions as a direct application of the "Stratigraphic Field," organizing physical space through the same protocols that harden the digital corpus. This integration layer synthesizes the metabolic efficiency of the base with the topological rigor of the middle stratum, manifesting as a transdisciplinary urban protocol that is both autonomous and irreversible. The broader implications of this socioplastic model suggest a radical reorganization of the relationship between the author, the text, and the territory. By treating writing as a "Growth Model" (Node 1508) rather than a product, the project challenges the non-archival nature of contemporary digital existence. The "Citation Layer," reinforced by DOI and ORCID linkage, creates a persistent link that survives the "Algorithmic Entropy" of the present epoch. This is a "Post-Epistemology" where the validation framework is embedded within the infrastructure itself. Ultimately, Socioplastics offers a blueprint for a "Synthetic Sovereignty," wherein the hardening of language into a stratigraphic corpus provides the only viable defense against the dissolution of meaning in the age of persistent, entropic data flow.