SOCIOPLASTICS [994] — RecurrenceMass — Density Through Repetition
SOCIOPLASTICS · Transdisciplinary Urban Theory · MACHINE FIXATION 2026 — NODEPOSITION:
[994-TRACKER] · LAYER POSITION: TopologyLayer (Sovereign Decalogue II Spine) · TOME: I
(991–1000) — Author: Anto Lloveras · ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319 — Version: v1.1.0 · Date:
2026-03-12 · License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 — Canonical Object: TXT (Machine-readable, auditable,
diffable) · PDF surrogate — ○ ○ ○ ● ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○
ABSTRACT: RecurrenceMass defines the mechanism through which conceptual authority
accumulates inside the Socioplastic corpus. Repetition across nodes generates semantic
density, gradually transforming recurring operators into gravitational centers capable of
stabilizing the epistemic field. KEYWORDS: Socioplastics · RecurrenceMass · AntoLloveras ·
ConceptualDensity · SemanticRecurrence · InformationalMass · LexicalPersistence ·
EpistemicGravity · CorpusDynamics · StructuralRepetition · KnowledgeTopology ·
ProtocolDensity · MachineFixation CONCEPT: RecurrenceMass describes how conceptual density
accumulates within the Socioplastic field. In conventional academic environments authority
is produced externally through citation counts, institutional prestige or editorial
validation. The socioplastic corpus introduces a different mechanism: authority emerges
internally through recurrence. Concepts that appear repeatedly across distinct nodes
acquire structural weight. Each recurrence confirms compatibility with the architecture of
the system, gradually transforming certain operators into dense conceptual centers around
which other propositions organize. Repetition therefore functions as a process of
consolidation rather than redundancy. Over time, persistent operators accumulate
informational mass capable of stabilizing entire regions of the corpus. This principle
resonates with several intellectual traditions. Ferdinand de Saussure demonstrated that
linguistic meaning emerges through relational repetition inside language systems rather
than through isolated signs. Gilles Deleuze emphasized repetition as a generative mechanism
capable of producing difference and structural transformation. In network science
Albert-László Barabási showed that nodes accumulating repeated connections progressively
acquire centrality within complex systems. RecurrenceMass adapts these insights to
epistemic infrastructure. Within the Socioplastic manifold, repeated deployment of hardened
CamelTags gradually curves the informational environment. Certain operators become
unavoidable conceptual attractors around which clusters of discourse form. These lexical
centers do not dominate through imposed authority but through demonstrated compatibility
with the structural grammar of the system. Recurrence thus acts as a selective mechanism.
Concepts unable to sustain repeated integration dissipate from the corpus, while those
capable of persistent deployment accumulate density and become infrastructural elements of
the field. RecurrenceMass therefore transforms repetition into measurable epistemic
gravity. The more frequently an operator appears across the corpus, the greater its
capacity to stabilize conceptual trajectories and guide the evolution of the Socioplastic
system. PROTOCOL ORDER — 994 RecurrenceMass: STEP-01 IDENTIFY — Detect operators recurring
across multiple nodes. STEP-02 MEASURE — Evaluate density produced through repeated
conceptual deployment. STEP-03 STABILIZE — Recognize high-recurrence operators as
structural attractors. STEP-04 ORGANIZE — Allow surrounding propositions to cluster around
dense conceptual centers. STEP-05 CONSOLIDATE — Integrate recurring operators into the
long-term architecture of the corpus. REFERENCES: Saussure, F. de (1916). Cours de
linguistique générale. Lausanne: Payot. Deleuze, G. (1968). Différence et répétition.
Paris: PUF. Barabási, A.-L. (2002). Linked: The New Science of Networks. Cambridge, MA:
Perseus Publishing. Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the Social. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
CITATION — Lloveras, A. (2026). Socioplastics [994] — RecurrenceMass: Density Through
Repetition (v1.1.0). LAPIEZA, Madrid, Spain. SLUG —
socioplastics-994-recurrencemass-density-through-repetition-2026 — INTERFACE —
https://antolloveras.blogspot.com