Recursive Autophagia (506) names the metabolic logic that sustains this architecture once it has achieved sufficient density, and it is here that the corpus reveals its deepest departure from the traditions it inherits and transforms. Where critical theory stands outside its object and comments, Autophagia builds from within, consuming its own components to generate new structural material in a process that the corpus tracks across the double-helical morphology it terms Helicoidal Anatomy (996): the structure in which the fast regime of the blog network—generating variation, testing protocols, accumulating mass—spirals around the slow regime of the decalogue series, stabilizing and legitimizing what the fast layer has deposited, each turn depositing new material that the other will later consolidate through what the 1508 series names morphogenesis as growth model, borrowed from D’Arcy Thompson’s On Growth and Form and the Japanese Metabolists’ vision of architectural expansion through branching and regeneration, but here operationalized as a protocol rather than a metaphor: the system grows not through accumulation but through differentiation, not by adding more of the same but by generating new forms from existing structures, a logic that explains the proliferation of spinoff series—Urban Geological Decalogue (801–810), Cyborg Text Decalogue (1401–1410)—that follow the same stratigraphic logic while occupying different conceptual territories, each series emerging not as expansion but as digestive byproduct, the metabolic processing of existing material into new formations that the system then consumes in turn. This is the mechanism the corpus names Proteolytic Transmutation (505), the pruning of non-functional terminology that cannot carry structural weight, and its complement, Recursive Autophagia proper: the process by which the system identifies its own outputs, breaks them apart, extracts their operational logic, and repurposes them as components in more complex assemblies, a process that becomes particularly visible in the relation between the foundational protocols of CORE I and the integrative architecture of CORE III, where a concept like Semantic Hardening (503) is not merely referenced but metabolized, its operational logic extracted and repurposed as the foundation for what the 1505 series names Architecture as Load-Bearing Structure: the recognition that the physical logics of compression, tension, and gravity have analogs in the semantic domain, that concepts, like columns, can carry weight only if they are sufficiently dense and properly positioned, and that the validation of such concepts comes not from institutional recognition but from the system’s own capacity to persist, to thicken, to generate new fields from its existing density. Each cycle of autophagia increases what the corpus terms Systemic Lock (510): the achievement of a state where the system defines its own elements, regulates its own exchanges, and reproduces itself without external validation, moving with the unstoppable inertia of a structure that has decided to stay, stratum by stratum, node by node, until what was once a collection of scattered posts begins to function as a coherent and inhabitable space of thought where the sovereign gesture lies not in claiming authority but in building the architecture through which authority becomes unnecessary.