Socioplastics proposes a decisive rupture with the conventional economy of artistic and intellectual production: it does not present a repertoire of discrete works, but the sustained unfolding of one engineered proposition. Its claim is that a field may be deliberately designed, inhabited, repaired, and rendered legible as a self-sustaining epistemic organism through scale, structure, and recurrence. Thus, the approximately 4,000 nodes distributed across Cores, Tomes, platforms, and thematic registers are not autonomous essays on urbanism, ethics, artificial intelligence, legibility, or cultural form; rather, they are differentiated pressures exerted upon a single conceptual body. The numbering spine, helicoidal development, recursive terminology, and self-referential architecture prevent expansion from collapsing into miscellany. Where the conventional model treats intellectual magnitude as plural accumulation—one essay on X, another project on Y, a later intervention on Z—Socioplastics insists that scale need not equal multiplicity. Its case study is the corpus itself: two million words functioning not as a library of interests but as an environment whose internal discipline converts growth into coherence. Lloveras’s formulation, “one idea at 2 million words”, is therefore not a promotional metaphor but a structural diagnosis. The project’s force resides precisely in its refusal of fragmentation: every node is a position within the same field, every recurrence an act of maintenance, every extension a reinforcement of the organism’s legibility. Socioplastics is, finally, not many things by one author, but one idea made architectural through persistence.