If the previous movement describes how coordination becomes mediated and networked, the next step is more destabilising.
Because once value can circulate through amplification systems, a new condition emerges:
effects are no longer proportional to inputs.
This is not merely a change in scale. It is a change in structure.
In a proportional system, the relation between action and outcome is relatively stable:
- more input produces more output
- wider participation produces broader effect
- influence accumulates in recognisable relation to contribution
This is the intuitive model behind most democratic reasoning. It assumes that, even if imperfectly, the field preserves a correspondence between participation and impact.
Amplification disrupts this correspondence.
Amplification is not simply “more distribution.”
It is a transformation in how signals propagate through a field of coordination.
When a signal is amplified, it does not just reach more nodes. It can:
- trigger cascading responses
- become self-reinforcing through repetition
- reorganise attention structures around itself
- attract further amplification by virtue of prior amplification
In other words, amplification is often recursive.
And recursion breaks proportionality.
Once recursion enters the system, small differences in initial conditions can produce large differences in outcome.
A marginal signal may:
- remain locally insignificant
- or become a dominant trajectory of coordination
The difference is not primarily in content or meaning.
It is in the pathway conditions through which value propagates.
This produces a characteristic feature of amplified systems:
non-linearity.
In a non-linear field:
- effects are not directly traceable to causes
- small inputs can produce large systemic shifts
- large inputs can dissipate without systemic impact
- timing, positioning, and network structure matter more than magnitude alone
Influence becomes a function not of what is expressed, but of how expression moves through the field.
At this point, the notion of “proportion” begins to lose its grounding.
If participation no longer guarantees proportional impact, then the relation between democratic input and collective outcome becomes structurally unstable.
But this instability is not random.
It is patterned.
Amplification systems tend to produce concentration effects.
Signals that successfully enter amplification loops tend to:
- accumulate visibility
- attract further engagement
- stabilise as reference points for subsequent coordination
Meanwhile, other signals—potentially numerous and widely distributed—fail to cross the threshold of amplification and remain comparatively inert.
This produces a field that is:
- formally open to participation
- but functionally selective in propagation
The result is not equality of voice.
It is uneven propagation of effect.
This is where the concept of disproportion sharpens.
Disproportion is not simply the presence of powerful actors within a field.
It is the condition in which the mechanisms of amplification themselves generate unequal scaling of influence independent of initial participation levels.
We can now distinguish three levels:
1. Participation
The generation of signals within the field.
2. Amplification
The selective propagation and intensification of certain signals.
3. Outcome formation
The stabilisation of amplified signals into coordinated trajectories.
In a proportional system, these levels are loosely aligned.
In an amplified system, they become increasingly decoupled.
This decoupling produces a key structural effect:
visibility is no longer equivalent to significance.
Some signals become highly visible without being structurally decisive. Others may be highly decisive without sustained visibility in public perception.
This divergence destabilises the assumption that what is most seen is what most matters.
It also produces feedback effects that further intensify disproportion.
Once a signal is amplified:
- it becomes more likely to be amplified again
- it attracts attention precisely because it has already attracted attention
- it becomes a node around which further coordination is organised
This is not persuasion in the classical sense.
It is reinforcement through recursive exposure within a structured field of attention.
At this point, amplification ceases to be merely a feature of communication systems.
It becomes a mechanism that actively reconfigures the distribution of coordination value itself.
Signals do not just move through the field.
They reshape the field as they move.
This has a direct consequence for democratic systems.
If participation is broadly distributed but amplification is structurally uneven, then democratic input cannot be assumed to translate into proportional influence over outcomes.
The system may remain formally inclusive while becoming functionally asymmetric in propagation dynamics.
We can now restate the core claim:
Amplification produces a condition in which the scale of effect is no longer governed by the scale of input, but by the structural pathways through which signals are amplified, reinforced, and stabilised.
And once this condition is established, democracy faces a deeper complication.
Because it no longer only has to manage disagreement, or inequality, or institutional constraint.
It must now operate within a field where the production of significance itself is unevenly distributed across the mechanisms of amplification.
This brings us to the next question:
If amplification is recursive, non-linear, and structurally uneven, then how does a system maintain coherence when the field of coordination is continuously being reweighted in real time?
That is where the analysis turns next.