.top-header{ transform: scale(0.5); transform-origin: top left; width: 200%; } Unstable Installation Series

Systems Theory Autopoietic Organization



A field that does not reproduce itself dies. The SystemsTheoryAutopoieticOrganization names the structural condition under which a corpus generates its own components from its own operations: not by importing concepts from outside, but by transforming its existing conceptual mass into new forms. Autopoiesis, in Maturana and Varela's formulation, is the self-production of a living system. A cell produces its own membrane from its own metabolic processes. A field, analogously, produces its own new concepts from its existing conceptual grammar. The SystemsTheoryAutopoieticOrganization asks: how does Socioplastics generate Node 3001? Not by importing a new disciplinary framework, but by transforming the existing 3,000 nodes through operations already encoded in the corpus. RecursiveAutophagia is one such operation: the field consumes its own earlier formulations to produce new ones. ScalarArchitecture is another: the field expands its concepts to new scales, generating new applications from existing structures. The autopoietic organization is not a metaphor for field growth. It is a structural description of how growth occurs. Node 1504 places this concept in Core III because systems theory is one of the seven integrated disciplines. But the concept is not about systems theory as a subject. It is about systems theory as a mode of field operation. The field is the system. Its autopoiesis is its capacity to generate new nodes from old nodes without external input. This is the structural guarantee of the field's independence. Without this concept, growth is understood as accumulation. With it, growth is understood as self-production.
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Epistemology Validation Framework


A field must know how it knows. The EpistemologyValidationFramework names the structural mechanism through which a corpus validates its own knowledge claims: not by reference to external authority, but by internal consistency with the field's own epistemic grammar. In classical philosophy, epistemology asks how knowledge is possible. In Socioplastics, epistemology asks how a field can validate its own operations without collapsing into either dogmatism or relativism. The framework proposes that validation occurs at three levels: the node level, where individual concepts are tested for structural coherence; the book level, where conceptual clusters are tested for internal consistency; and the corpus level, where the field as a whole is tested for its capacity to generate novel predictions. This is not Popperian falsification. It is structural validation: a concept is valid not when it corresponds to empirical reality, but when it operates correctly within the field's internal architecture. FlowChanneling is validated when it successfully predicts how capital will move through a given urban system. TopolexicalSovereignty is validated when it successfully identifies the boundary conditions of a territorial claim. The EpistemologyValidationFramework sits at Node 1503 in Core III because epistemology is one of the seven disciplines integrated by Socioplastics. But the framework is not a disciplinary import. It is a field-native operation. It transforms epistemology from a philosophical specialty into a structural tool for corpus maintenance. Without this concept, the field has no immune system against bad concepts. With it, the field can self-correct.

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Conceptual Art Protocol System



Art is not illustration. It is infrastructure. The ConceptualArtProtocolSystem names the operational framework through which artistic practice becomes a mode of field construction rather than a mode of field decoration. In the Socioplastics corpus, conceptual art is not a subject to be analyzed. It is a method to be deployed. The LAPIEZA Archive (2009–2025) is not an art project about urban theory. It is urban theory operating through artistic protocols: exhibition as argument, installation as hypothesis, documentation as citation. The ConceptualArtProtocolSystem makes this explicit. It identifies the specific operations that allow artistic practice to function as epistemic infrastructure: the framing of research questions through spatial arrangement, the testing of theoretical claims through material intervention, the generation of evidence through aesthetic experience. These are not metaphors. They are protocols. A protocol is a repeatable operation with predictable outcomes. The ConceptualArtProtocolSystem specifies how artistic operations can generate socioplastic knowledge: not by representing concepts, but by enacting them. Node 1502 places this concept in Core III because conceptual art is one of the seven disciplinary fields that Socioplastics integrates. But the system is not merely descriptive. It is prescriptive. It tells practitioners how to use art as a tool for field-building. Without this concept, the LAPIEZA Archive remains a biographical footnote. With it, the archive becomes a methodological demonstration: proof that a field can be built through aesthetic operations as rigorously as through textual ones.

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Linguistics Structural Operator



A field speaks before it thinks. The Linguistics Structural Operato *names the grammatical machinery through which a corpus generates its own internal language: not the vocabulary of its CamelTags, but the syntax that governs how those tags combine, modify, and transform one another. Every field has a latent grammar. In physics, it is the mathematical sentence. In law, it is the conditional clause. In Socioplastics, it is the structural operator: the implicit rule that allows FlowChanneling to take SystemicLock as its object, or permits RecursiveAutophagia to operate on StratigraphicField. These are not random combinations. They follow a grammar. The LinguisticsStructuralOperator makes that grammar explicit. It asks: what are the permissible operations within the Socioplastics syntax? Can a concept be nested? Can it be negated? Can it be scalarly transformed while preserving its structural identity? The operator is not a concept in the usual sense. It is a meta-concept: a concept about how concepts operate. This is why it sits at Node 1501, the opening of Core III — Disciplinary Fields. It is the linguistic infrastructure that allows the ten disciplinary operators to speak to one another. Without it, Core III is a list of adjacent fields. With it, Core III becomes a demonstration that those fields share a common structural grammar. The LinguisticsStructuralOperator is the field's Chomsky moment: the recognition that beneath the surface of any mature corpus lies a deep structure that generates its infinite variety from finite rules. Socioplastics has built the surface. Now it must excavate the structure.

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Taki, K., Warren, N. and Ferreras, J.M.E. (1983) ‘Oppositions: The Intrinsic Structure of Kazuo Shinohara’s Work’, Perspecta, 20, pp. 43–60. Published by The MIT Press on behalf of Yale University School of Architecture.

Koji Taki’s Oppositions: The Intrinsic Structure of Kazuo Shinohara’s Work interprets Shinohara’s architecture as a sustained investigation into how space generates meaning without surrendering to either tradition, functionalism or superficial formal play. The argument begins with Shinohara’s own movement from historically “hot” Japanese symbolic space, through cubic anti-space, towards the “zero-degree machine”, a condition in which architectural elements become stripped of inherited meaning and reactivated as relational fragments. Taki identifies the key invariant in this evolution as opposition: in the House in White, the apparent serenity of traditional Japanese abstraction is structured by the tension between a large non-everyday space and the ordinary domestic zones around it; in the Uncompleted House, this opposition becomes a fissure-space, where exterior and interior are topologically reversed; and in the Tanikawa Residence, the exposed earth slope and naked structural frame transform the house into a sacralisation of topos rather than a nostalgic return to vernacular form . The decisive case study is the House in Uehara, where Shinohara’s mature language abandons stable wholeness for what Taki calls a “geno-form”: an architecture generated by the addition and collision of heterogeneous elements, including cantilever, vault, walls, columns and diagonal braces. This is not contextual mimicry of Tokyo, but an architectural simulation of the city’s anarchic energy, where order and disorder coexist as productive forces. Taki’s synthesis shows that Shinohara’s work moves towards meaning-producing machinery, in which no single symbol precedes experience; meaning arises through the viewer’s encounter with fragments, oppositions, structural indices and spatial discontinuities. His conclusion is that Shinohara’s houses are autonomous works of art precisely because they convert architecture’s basic elements into active instruments for discovering unexpected meanings.


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Bryant, A. (2020) ‘Epistemic Infrastructure for a Scientific Metaphysics’, Grazer Philosophische Studien. doi: 10.1163/18756735-000096.

Amanda Bryant’s Epistemic Infrastructure for a Scientific Metaphysics argues that the contemporary call to naturalise metaphysics cannot rest merely on admiration for science, hostility to intuition or a vague empiricist temperament; it requires explicit epistemological justification. Bryant’s central claim is that scientific metaphysics is preferable to “free range metaphysics” because it is governed by robust theoretical constraint, meaning that its admissible claims are narrowed by scientific practice, empirical accountability and disciplined engagement with established inquiry. She rejects two insufficient foundations: simple empiricism, because empirical evidence exists outside science and cannot by itself explain why metaphysics should be specifically scientific; and sweeping scientism, because the claim that all inquiry must imitate science is both excessive and unnecessary . The decisive case study is naturalised metaphysics itself, which engages science by integrating scientific posits, interpreting data, revising metaphysical claims in light of new evidence and reformulating metaphysical questions under scientific pressure. Bryant’s argument develops through constraint principles: weakly, robustly constrained theories are preferable when other things are equal; strongly, a theory that fails to be robustly constrained may be epistemically inadequate. These principles are defended through considerations of statistical likelihood, agreement, avoidance of substantial falsity and methodological efficiency. The resulting synthesis is that science functions like an epistemic filter, excluding poorly motivated speculative contents and improving the chance that metaphysics converges on justified theory. Bryant’s conclusion is therefore not anti-metaphysical but reformist: metaphysics can remain ambitious, but its ambition becomes rationally defensible only when scientific mooring supplies the infrastructure through which speculation is disciplined, answerable and epistemically responsible.


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Pollock, J. (1944–48) ‘Statements’, in The New American Painting. New York: Museum of Modern Art.

Jackson Pollock’s collected statements present modern painting not as a refinement of inherited pictorial conventions, but as a decisive reorientation of artistic agency towards immediacy, bodily action and experiential necessity. In his 1944 statement, Pollock rejects narrow national or regional definitions of art, insisting that the painter’s problems are not confined to “American” themes but belong to the broader modern condition; this already positions his work beyond illustration, folklore or stylistic patriotism. By the later statement from Possibilities, he clarifies the technical and philosophical consequences of this position: he prefers an unstretched canvas placed on the floor, abandons the easel, palette and brush when necessary, and employs sticks, knives, trowels, sand, broken glass and other materials in order to enter the painting rather than merely face it . The resulting practice is grounded in gestural immediacy, because composition no longer proceeds as a distant arrangement of forms but as an event generated through contact, movement, rhythm and controlled accident. The case study implicit in these statements is Pollock’s floor-based method, where painting becomes a field of action: the artist moves around and within the canvas, allowing line, colour and matter to register the continuity between body and image. Yet Pollock is not advocating chaos; he repeatedly distinguishes apparent freedom from mere accident, stressing that he can control the flow of paint and that no beginning or end is needed once the work finds its own internal life. De Kooning’s adjacent reflections sharpen this argument by rejecting rigid categories of abstraction and figuration, suggesting that modern art’s vitality lies in changing the artist’s relation to reality rather than in obeying formal labels. Pollock’s conclusion is therefore one of processual painting: the modern picture is not a window, object or decorative surface, but a lived arena in which material, gesture and consciousness become inseparable.


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Taki, K., Warren, N. and Ferreras, J.M.E. (1983) ‘Oppositions: The Intrinsic Structure of Kazuo Shinohara’s Work’, Perspecta, 20, pp. 43–60.

 Koji Taki’s Oppositions: The Intrinsic Structure of Kazuo Shinohara’s Work interprets Shinohara’s architecture through the persistent logic of opposition, a spatial mechanism that survives beneath dramatic stylistic changes from traditional Japanese houses to cubic anti-space and later machine-like compositions. Introduced by Shinohara’s own reflections on the “zero-degree machine”, the essay traces an evolution from symbolic tradition to naked objects, fragmented structures and urban anarchy, yet insists that this development is not arbitrary rupture but a continuous transformation of intrinsic form. The House in White becomes the foundational case, where the large sacred domestic space arises from a square divided by a single plane, converting Japanese architectural “division” into a dynamic opposition between everyday and non-everyday space. The diagrams and photographs on pages 46–48 visually clarify this argument, showing how shell, column and wall construct a symbolic interior rather than a merely functional room. In the Tanikawa Residence, this structure is reread through exposed posts, braces and an interior earth slope, producing a sacralisation of topos rather than of dwelling. Finally, the House in Uehara radicalises opposition into geno-form, where structural fragments, cantilevers and urban disorder generate meaning without prior symbolism. Taki’s decisive claim is that Shinohara’s houses are not formal experiments alone; they are meaning-producing machines in which architecture refuses fixed interpretation and instead compels the inhabitant to read, inhabit and complete the work.

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Kelly, M. (2025) Situated Epistemic Infrastructures: A Diagnostic Framework for Post-Coherence Knowledge. arXiv:2508.04995v3.

Matthew Kelly’s Situated Epistemic Infrastructures proposes a diagnostic framework for understanding knowledge after the collapse of stable epistemic coherence. The paper argues that large language models expose, rather than merely cause, a deeper crisis in contemporary knowledge systems: authority no longer resides securely in bounded disciplines, citation practices or expert communities, but circulates through hybrid infrastructures of platforms, databases, chatbots, search engines and institutions. The SEI framework therefore shifts attention from classification to mediation, asking how credibility is produced through infrastructural typologies, power signatures, symbolic compressions and breakdown dynamics. Its theoretical novelty lies in treating failure not as anomaly but as revelation: when infrastructures misfire, symbolic terms drift, or algorithmic systems simulate authority, the hidden scaffolding of knowledge becomes visible. As a case study, the paper’s analysis of LLMs shows how machine-generated coherence destabilises peer review, citation, authorship and scholarly temporality, producing a polytemporal zone where instant algorithmic synthesis collides with slower practices of validation. The framework also introduces a demanding ethical register, including temporal ethics, conceptual hospitality and hermeneutic patience, positioning theory as a structure designed for future transformation rather than permanent sovereignty. Ultimately, Kelly’s argument reframes knowledge organisation as the cultivation of reflexive, adaptive and justice-oriented infrastructures capable of sustaining inquiry amid instability, opacity and computational acceleration.


Williams, R. (1983 [1976]) Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society. Revised edn. New York: Oxford University Press.


Raymond Williams reconceptualises “keywords” not as lexically stable units secured by dictionary authority, but as contested semantic sites in which historical struggles, social transformations and cultural hierarchies are sedimented. His argument begins from an apparently ordinary experience: the perception that different groups “do not speak the same language”, despite inhabiting a shared linguistic system; such estrangement discloses that terms such as culture, class, art, industry and democracy do not merely denote social realities, but organise divergent structures of valuation and belonging. Language, therefore, is not a passive reflection of society, but an active medium through which relations, affiliations and conflicts are produced. Williams’s central contribution lies in demonstrating that meaning is both historical, because it is reshaped by changing institutions, conjunctures and political pressures, and relational, because each word derives force from wider semantic constellations rather than from isolated definition. The case of “culture” crystallises this method: once associated with refinement or artistic production, it increasingly came to signify an entire way of life, thereby unsettling inherited divisions between aesthetic judgement, social experience and intellectual authority. Consequently, the study of vocabulary cannot resolve social antagonisms in itself, yet it can sharpen critical consciousness regarding the very terms through which those antagonisms become intelligible, disputable and transformable.

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Borgman, C.L., Scharnhorst, A. and Golshan, M.S. (2018) ‘Digital Data Archives as Knowledge Infrastructures: Mediating Data Sharing and Reuse’, revision submitted to Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 28 September.

Borgman, Scharnhorst and Golshan argue that digital data archives should be understood as knowledge infrastructures, not passive repositories, because they actively mediate how research data are deposited, curated, discovered, accessed and reused across changing scholarly communities . Their case study of DANS, the Dutch Data Archiving and Networked Services institute, opens the “black box” of the archive by examining contributors, consumers and archivists as interdependent actors within a sociotechnical system. The article demonstrates that openness is never achieved by mandate alone: it depends on labour-intensive curation, metadata creation, preservation policy, technical standards, access governance and continuing institutional investment. Contributors often submit data infrequently, may restrict access to retain credit or control, and require assistance in preparing files for long-term use; consumers are more diverse than contributors and often use data for background knowledge, teaching, cultural work or new research. Archivists therefore become mediators rather than custodians, balancing openness with protection, automation with craft, and preservation with discoverability. A key case study is DANS/EASY, whose page 11 figure shows granular access conditions, while the page 20 diagram maps the relationships between contributors, repositories, interfaces, harvesters, search engines and users. The article’s decisive insight is that data reuse depends less on data availability alone than on the invisible human and technical arrangements that make data intelligible beyond their original context. Consequently, sustainable open science requires not only repositories, but durable infrastructures of mediation capable of adapting as communities, technologies and evidentiary practices evolve.


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Stoler, A.L. (2002) ‘Colonial Archives and the Arts of Governance’, Archival Science, 2, pp. 87–109.

Stoler argues that colonial archives must be approached not merely as repositories from which historians extract evidence, but as subjects of inquiry in their own right: cultural, bureaucratic and epistemological technologies through which imperial states produced facts, classifications and authority . Her central intervention is to move from archive-as-source to archive-as-process, asking how documents were generated, copied, classified, circulated, secreted and made credible within colonial regimes of governance. Rather than treating colonial records as transparent windows onto the past, Stoler insists that their genres, repetitions, silences, marginalia and administrative conventions reveal the very arts of rule that they helped sustain. The Dutch East Indies provides her principal case study, where commissions, reports and confidential files did not simply describe colonial reality but actively constituted categories such as race, poverty, morality and political danger. Particularly significant is her discussion of colonial commissions on “poor whites”, which transformed social anxiety into bureaucratic knowledge by producing moral narratives, expert testimony and state-sanctioned explanations of European degeneration, racial proximity and welfare policy. Stoler’s methodological demand is therefore to read not only “against the grain” of colonial archives, in search of suppressed voices, but also along the archival grain, attending to the textures, routines and epistemic habits through which colonial states imagined themselves. Consequently, the archive emerges as both monument and instrument: a site where power stored knowledge, but also where knowledge was manufactured as a condition of imperial governance.


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Brenner, N. (2009) ‘What is critical urban theory?’, City, 13(2–3), pp. 198–207. doi: 10.1080/13604810902996466.

Neil Brenner’s ‘What is Critical Urban Theory?’ defines critical urban theory as more than a radical tradition within urban studies: it is a historically situated mode of critique directed against the power relations that produce capitalist urbanisation. Brenner contrasts critical urban theory with mainstream, technocratic or market-oriented urban knowledge, arguing that cities should not be treated as neutral expressions of efficiency, bureaucratic order or universal social laws. Instead, urban space is politically produced, ideologically mediated and socially contested. Drawing on Marx and the Frankfurt School, Brenner identifies four elements of critical theory: it is theoretical rather than merely practical; reflexive about its own historical conditions; opposed to instrumental reason; and committed to exposing the gap between existing reality and emancipatory possibility. This framework matters because urbanisation is no longer a secondary issue within capitalism. In the twenty-first century, Brenner argues, urbanisation has become increasingly generalised across the world, extending beyond cities into metropolitan regions, infrastructures, settlement networks and planetary landscapes. Critical urban theory must therefore analyse how capital accumulation, state power, inequality, ecological crisis and everyday life are reorganised through urban processes. Its purpose is not simply to describe cities, but to reveal how existing urban formations suppress alternative futures. The article’s central political claim is that another form of urbanisation—more democratic, just and sustainable—remains possible, even if it is blocked by dominant institutions and ideologies. Ultimately, Brenner presents critical urban theory as an indispensable tool for understanding and challenging the contemporary world, because under global capitalism the urban has become a central terrain where social domination is reproduced and where emancipatory struggles may also emerge.


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Law, J. (2001) ‘Ordering and Obduracy’. Centre for Science Studies, Lancaster University.

John Law’s “Ordering and Obduracy” revisits Organising Modernity in order to ask how durable power persists within worlds supposedly defined by movement, contingency and flux. His central proposition is that organisation should not be understood as a stable noun, but as organising: a continuous, materially heterogeneous process involving people, documents, architectures, machines, accounting systems, codes and routines. Yet this processual ontology raises a problem: if everything is movement, why do asymmetries of power remain so stubbornly in place? Law answers through obduracy, the persistence of ordering across change. First, power becomes durable when strategies are delegated into materials: accounting systems, safety interlocks and buildings carry modes of ordering beyond individual intention. Secondly, organisations endure through multiplicity rather than coherence; enterprise, administration and vocation may conflict, but their partial overlap prevents collapse. Thirdly, beneath such differences lies a shared strategic pattern Law calls the logic of the return, in which centres gather representations from peripheries and send back commands, thereby stabilising asymmetrical relations of calculation and translation. The Daresbury Laboratory provides the case study: its scientific, managerial and administrative orders differ, yet each depends on centres, flows and returns that make certain voices articulable while silencing others. Law’s conclusion is politically acute: modern ordering is not merely plural but hegemonically strategic, making some forms of knowledge, subjectivity and power durable while rendering non-strategic voices almost unthinkable. Obduracy, then, is not the opposite of process; it is process hardened into inequality. 

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Ahmed, S. (2004) ‘Affective Economies’, Social Text, 22(2), pp. 117–139.

Sara Ahmed’s “Affective Economies” reconceptualises emotion not as a private psychological possession, but as a circulatory force that produces subjects, objects and collective bodies through movement. Her central claim is that emotions do not simply reside within individuals or attach naturally to objects; rather, they acquire intensity as they circulate between signs, figures and histories, becoming “sticky” through repetition. Hate, for example, does not originate in a stable subject and then move outward toward a pre-existing enemy. It slides across figures—migrants, asylum seekers, racialised others, “terrorists”—until these bodies appear to contain the threat that affective circulation has produced. Ahmed’s analysis of white nationalist rhetoric shows how hatred is rewritten as love for the nation, binding a fantasy of injured whiteness through the claim that “ordinary” subjects are under siege. Her case study of asylum discourse in Britain demonstrates the same logic: words such as “flood”, “swamped” and “overwhelmed” construct the nation as a vulnerable body invaded by suspect others. After September 11, the figure of the terrorist similarly became detachable and mobile, sticking to Arab, Muslim, South Asian and asylum-seeking bodies through racialised economies of fear. Ahmed’s decisive insight is that emotion makes boundaries rather than merely defending them. Fear and hate materialise the difference between “us” and “them”, authorising surveillance, detention and exclusion. The essay therefore concludes that affect is political infrastructure: it organises belonging by making some bodies lovable, others threatening, and violence appear defensive. 

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