Socioplastics-750-Gravitational-Corpus_v1.0.0_2026
Description
Socioplastics Corpus * 500 Operators in Contemporary Critical Thought establishes a calibrated cartographic instrument for mapping conceptual gravity within transdisciplinary intellectual production. Grounded in empirically documented power-law distributions of citation concentration, the corpus identifies 500 operators whose accumulated reference mass generates measurable transversal curvature across a stabilized grid of 100 macrofields. The model translates bibliometric asymmetry into topological structure through eight-ring stratification, dispersion analysis, and mass extrapolation, rendering visible the gravitational architecture of contemporary critical discourse. Inclusion follows detectable systemic influence rather than qualitative evaluation; numerical sequencing registers density gradients rather than merit. The corpus functions as an orientation device within asymmetrical attention economies, replacing canon formation with calibrated detection. Version 1.0.0 constitutes a fixed measurement instance with declared methodological limits, database dependencies, and taxonomic closure.
Files
Socioplastics-750-Gravitational-Corpus_v1.0.0_2026.pdf
Files
(205.8 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:8a36ddaabc00544b406824d64a9df230
|
169.4 kB | Preview Download |
|
md5:80de42d5c1fbb30ec5e9a9256736c7bc
|
36.4 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Identifiers
Dates
- Created
-
2026-02-26
References
- Lotka, A. J. (1926). The frequency distribution of scientific productivity.
- Pareto, V. (1896). Cours d'économie politique.
- Price, D. J. de S. (1963). Little Science, Big Science.
- Seglen, P. O. (1992). The skewness of science.
- Barabási, A.-L. (2002). Linked.
- Clauset, A., Shalizi, C., & Newman, M. (2009). Power-law distributions in empirical data.