Contemporary knowledge operates through intertwined material, semantic and computational infrastructures that determine how concepts circulate, acquire authority and remain available for future transformation. FlowChanneling reveals that movement is never neutral, because platforms, bureaucracies and logistical systems privilege particular trajectories of attention, information and resources. These directed flows accumulate through RecurrenceMass, while LexicalGravity and ConceptualAnchors organise interpretation around terms that gradually structure entire epistemic territories. When such vocabularies establish the conditions of recognition, TopolexicalSovereignty emerges; once embedded in protocols, classifications, budgets and interfaces, it develops into SemanticHardening and may ultimately produce SystemicLock. Yet knowledge is equally stratified. StratumAuthoring and StratigraphicField show that archives, institutions and cities preserve multiple temporal layers whose unresolved conflicts remain active in the present. Digital environments intensify this complexity: CamelTagInfrastructure, CyborgText and SyntheticLegibility make conceptual objects searchable and computationally actionable, although excessive accumulation can generate ArchiveFatigue. The case of a planetary research repository illustrates this duality: metadata and interoperable standards can connect dispersed intellectual traditions, but they can also impose dominant categories and marginalise non-standard forms of knowledge. Transformation therefore requires TransEpistemology, which enables passage across disciplines without dissolving their distinct conditions, alongside ProteolyticTransmutation and RecursiveAutophagia, through which systems selectively dismantle their own structures. RadicalEducation supplies the political dimension of this renewal by redistributing authority and participation. Ultimately, resilient knowledge systems must combine stability, plurality and self-revision, converting accumulated complexity into a shared capacity for intellectual and institutional reinvention.



















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