Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Discussion — “Has Democracy Been Distorted?”

The same common room. The teapot is now accompanied by a small plate of biscuits. Mr Blottisham is in full prosecutorial mode.


Mr Blottisham:
Well, this time it’s quite clear.

Miss Elowen Stray:
Is it?

Mr Blottisham:
Yes. The system has been distorted. Interfered with. Bent out of shape by forces that were never meant to have this kind of influence.

Professor Quillibrace:
A troubling development.

Mr Blottisham:
Quite. Media manipulation, algorithmic amplification, these so-called “platforms”—they’ve completely unbalanced the process. What we’re seeing now isn’t democracy at all, but a kind of engineered outcome.

Professor Quillibrace:
Engineered by whom?

Mr Blottisham:
Well—by those who control the channels of communication. Or exploit them most effectively. The result is disproportionate influence. Voices that shouldn’t dominate suddenly do.

Professor Quillibrace:
Voices that shouldn’t dominate?

Mr Blottisham:
In a fair system, influence would be proportional. Broadly speaking, at least.

Professor Quillibrace:
Proportional to what?

Mr Blottisham:
To participation. To the number of people who support a position.

Professor Quillibrace:
Ah. So influence should scale with the size of its base.

Mr Blottisham:
Exactly.

Professor Quillibrace:
And this was once the case?

Mr Blottisham:
More or less, yes. Before all this interference.


Miss Stray glances at him, curious.


Miss Elowen Stray:
Before which part, exactly?

Mr Blottisham:
Before the media environment became so… distorted.

Professor Quillibrace:
You are proposing a prior condition of proportionality.

Mr Blottisham:
Well, not perfect proportionality, but something closer to it.

Professor Quillibrace:
Closer than what we observe now.

Mr Blottisham:
Yes.


Professor Quillibrace considers this with mild interest.


Professor Quillibrace:
Let us suppose, for a moment, that such a condition existed.

In this proportional system:

  • influence scales with participation
  • signals propagate in relation to their base
  • outcomes reflect aggregated input

Is that roughly the picture?

Mr Blottisham:
Precisely.

Professor Quillibrace:
And what mechanisms ensure this proportionality?

Mr Blottisham:
Well—fair access to communication, balanced coverage, equal opportunity to be heard…

Professor Quillibrace:
Equal opportunity to be heard does not guarantee equal propagation.

Mr Blottisham:
No, but it’s a start.

Professor Quillibrace:
Indeed. And once heard, do all signals travel equally?

Mr Blottisham:
Not exactly, but—

Professor Quillibrace:
Do they accumulate attention at the same rate?

Mr Blottisham:
No, but—

Professor Quillibrace:
Do they generate equivalent responses?

Mr Blottisham:
No, but that’s because some are more persuasive.

Professor Quillibrace:
Ah. So we have already introduced differential propagation.


Mr Blottisham shifts slightly.


Mr Blottisham:
Yes, but within reasonable limits.

Professor Quillibrace:
Who sets these limits?

Mr Blottisham:
Well—no one sets them exactly. They emerge naturally.

Professor Quillibrace:
So the system is already:

  • uneven in propagation
  • variable in response
  • and selective in amplification

Even before the distortions you object to.

Mr Blottisham:
Yes, but it wasn’t this bad.


Miss Stray leans in again, sensing the turn.


Miss Elowen Stray:
Is the issue that influence is uneven… or that it’s become more uneven?

Mr Blottisham:
Both! It’s always been somewhat uneven, but now it’s completely out of proportion.

Professor Quillibrace:
So disproportion is not new.

Mr Blottisham:
No, but it’s been dramatically intensified.

Professor Quillibrace:
That is a rather different claim.


Mr Blottisham pauses, recalibrating.


Mr Blottisham:
Fine. It’s been intensified. But that still means the system is being distorted.

Professor Quillibrace:
Distorted relative to what baseline?

Mr Blottisham:
Relative to a fair distribution of influence.

Professor Quillibrace:
Which we have just established did not exist in a strict sense.

Mr Blottisham:
In a rough sense, then.

Professor Quillibrace:
A nostalgic proportionality.

Mr Blottisham:
If you like.


Professor Quillibrace takes a biscuit, as though preparing for something mildly tedious.


Professor Quillibrace:
Let us consider an alternative.

What if the system has always operated through uneven propagation, selective amplification, and variable accumulation of influence—

but the mechanisms through which this occurs have changed?

Mr Blottisham:
Changed how?

Professor Quillibrace:
In their capacity to amplify, accelerate, and recursively reinforce signals.

Mr Blottisham:
Which is precisely the problem.

Professor Quillibrace:
Or precisely the development.


Miss Stray watches closely now.


Miss Elowen Stray:
So it’s not that something external has broken the system…

Professor Quillibrace:
But that the system’s own mechanisms of propagation have evolved.

Miss Elowen Stray:
Becoming more powerful.

Professor Quillibrace:
And less proportional.


Mr Blottisham objects immediately.


Mr Blottisham:
But if the result is disproportionate influence, surely that’s a distortion.

Professor Quillibrace:
Only if proportionality was ever a stable baseline.

Mr Blottisham:
It was closer to one.

Professor Quillibrace:
Or appeared to be, under conditions where amplification was more constrained.


Mr Blottisham hesitates. This is not his preferred terrain.


Mr Blottisham:
So you’re saying nothing is wrong?

Professor Quillibrace:
On the contrary. A great deal is wrong—if one expects proportionality.

Mr Blottisham:
And we should expect that!

Professor Quillibrace:
Should we?


Miss Stray intervenes, gently.


Miss Elowen Stray:
If amplification changes how value moves… then even a small signal could become very large.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

Miss Elowen Stray:
And a large base might not matter if it doesn’t get amplified.

Professor Quillibrace:
Quite.

Miss Elowen Stray:
So participation and influence come apart.

Professor Quillibrace:
They decouple.


Mr Blottisham looks faintly alarmed.


Mr Blottisham:
But then how can the system possibly reflect what people want?

Professor Quillibrace:
That would depend on how one understands “reflection.”

Mr Blottisham:
In the obvious sense!

Professor Quillibrace:
The obvious sense may no longer be structurally available.


Silence, briefly.


Mr Blottisham:
So what are we left with?

Professor Quillibrace:
A system in which:

  • influence is non-proportional
  • amplification is recursive
  • and outcomes emerge from the interaction of these dynamics

Mr Blottisham:
That sounds deeply unsatisfactory.

Professor Quillibrace:
It is certainly less reassuring.


Miss Stray speaks softly, but with growing clarity.


Miss Elowen Stray:
So when we say democracy has been “distorted”…

we might really be noticing that the field itself has become unstable.

Professor Quillibrace:
Yes.

Miss Elowen Stray:
Not just uneven—but dynamically reweighted as it operates.

Professor Quillibrace:
Precisely.


Mr Blottisham looks at both of them, as though they have jointly abandoned something important.


Mr Blottisham:
I still think it was better before.

Professor Quillibrace:
Before what?

Mr Blottisham:
Before everything became so… amplified.


Professor Quillibrace smiles faintly.


Professor Quillibrace:
Ah. A longing for a quieter asymmetry.


Miss Stray laughs—this time more openly.


Miss Elowen Stray:
So not the absence of disproportion…

Professor Quillibrace:
…but a version of it that remained within narratable bounds.


Mr Blottisham, reassured by the word “bounds,” nods firmly.


Mr Blottisham:
Exactly.


Professor Quillibrace sips his tea.


Professor Quillibrace:
Those bounds, I suspect, are no longer reliably available.


Mr Blottisham stares at the biscuits as though they, too, may have been amplified beyond proportion.


Curtain.

The Uneven Weight of Influence — Part VI: What Is Being Preserved: Beyond representation and breakdown

If we follow the trajectory so far, a discomforting clarity begins to emerge.

Democracy under amplification is not primarily a system that successfully expresses collective will. Nor is it a system that cleanly translates participation into proportional outcomes.

It is something more minimal—and more resilient.

It is a system that preserves the continuity of coordination under conditions where its own descriptions of coordination no longer hold.


This distinction matters.

Because once amplification, recursion, and disproportion become structurally embedded in the field, two things happen simultaneously:

  • the operational system continues to coordinate action at scale
  • the interpretive system struggles to maintain coherence about how that coordination occurs

What persists, therefore, is not harmony between meaning and value.

It is the ongoing capacity to produce stabilised collective action despite their divergence.


We can name this more precisely:

What democracy preserves is not representation.
Not equality.
Not even participation in any direct sense.

What it preserves is systemic continuity of coordinated decision under conditions of distributed instability.


This is a deliberately austere formulation, but it clarifies what has been implicit throughout the series.

Democracy is not a device for aligning:

  • belief with outcome
  • voice with power
  • or preference with decision

It is a system for ensuring that, even when these alignments fail, the field does not cease to produce decisions that can bind action across a population.


This is where institutions, amplification, and narrative converge.

Each plays a distinct role in maintaining continuity:

  • Institutions stabilise the pathways of decision under fluctuating value
  • Amplification systems accelerate and redistribute signals across the field
  • Narrative structures translate outcomes into intelligible forms of legitimacy

None of these guarantees proportionality.

Together, they guarantee operability.


This shifts the question of “democratic success” into a different register.

Success is no longer measured by:

  • fidelity of representation
  • equality of influence
  • or transparency of causation

It is measured by whether the system can continue to:

  • absorb shocks
  • produce decisions
  • coordinate large-scale action
  • and maintain sufficient legitimacy for those decisions to be binding

But this reframing introduces a further implication.

If what is preserved is coordination under strain, then democracy is not defined by equilibrium.

It is defined by managed instability.


Amplification ensures that instability is not an exception.

It is a baseline condition of the field:

  • signals propagate unevenly
  • feedback loops reshape structure in real time
  • influence is non-proportional and often non-intuitive

Democracy does not remove this instability.

It builds a system that can still function within it.


This is why breakdown and continuity coexist.

From one perspective:

  • the system appears increasingly incoherent
  • narratives strain, fragment, and compete
  • legitimacy becomes contested and uneven

From another:

  • decisions are still made
  • institutions still operate
  • coordination still occurs at scale

The same system is simultaneously fragile in meaning and robust in operation.


We can now refine the core claim of the entire sequence.

Democracy under amplification is not a system that guarantees correct representation of a collective subject.

It is a system that guarantees the continued production of collective decision in the absence of any stable or unified representational ground.


This is the deepest inversion so far.

Because it implies that:

  • unity is not a prerequisite for democracy
  • proportionality is not a stable baseline
  • and coherence is not guaranteed at the level of meaning

Yet coordination persists.

Not because these conditions are met.

But because the system has evolved mechanisms to operate despite their absence.


This returns us to disproportion.

If influence is structurally uneven, recursively amplified, and dynamically reconfigured, then no stable mapping exists between:

  • participation
  • influence
  • and outcome

And yet outcomes still stabilise.

This is the key paradox.

Democracy does not solve the distortion.

It routes around it.


We can now state the final formulation of this series:

Democracy under amplification is a system that preserves the capacity for large-scale coordinated decision-making by continuously absorbing the instability produced by non-proportional, recursive, and dynamically reweighted fields of influence.


What remains, then, is not a question of whether the system is fair, transparent, or expressive in any final sense.

The remaining question is more precise:

How long can a system maintain coordination when the conditions that make its coordination intelligible are no longer stable?


That question marks the edge of this sequence.

Beyond it lies not a resolution, but a different kind of inquiry—one that would ask what replaces intelligibility when coordination persists without it.

The Uneven Weight of Influence — Part V: Democracy Under Amplification: When coordination outruns its own story

If amplification introduces non-linearity, and recursion introduces instability, then democracy is no longer operating in a field that resembles its original assumptions.

It is operating in a field that is:

  • dynamically reweighted
  • feedback-driven
  • structurally uneven in propagation
  • and continuously reshaped by its own outputs

And yet, democracy continues.

This persistence is not trivial.

It suggests that democracy is not dependent on stability in the field of coordination. Rather, it is dependent on something more specific:

the ability to maintain a workable relation between amplification dynamics and legitimating narratives of expression.


Classical democratic theory assumes a relatively slow-moving field:

  • preferences form
  • preferences are expressed
  • preferences are aggregated
  • outcomes follow

Even when this model is idealised, it presumes a certain temporal and structural alignment between participation and outcome.

Amplification disrupts this alignment.

Now:

  • preferences are shaped within amplification environments
  • expression is already conditioned by prior visibility and feedback loops
  • aggregation is influenced by uneven propagation pathways
  • and outcomes feed back into the conditions of future attention and alignment

The sequence remains, but it is no longer cleanly sequential.

It becomes circular, recursive, and unevenly weighted at every stage.


The key issue is not that democracy stops functioning.

It is that it begins to function under conditions where its representational story no longer matches its coordination dynamics.


This mismatch produces a structural tension.

On one side:

  • democratic legitimacy still relies on the idea of proportional participation
  • that outcomes are, in some meaningful sense, derived from the aggregation of expressed preferences

On the other side:

  • amplification systems systematically distort the relation between expression and effect
  • certain signals are structurally advantaged in propagation
  • and feedback loops reshape the field before aggregation stabilises

The system therefore operates with two incompatible descriptions of itself:

  • one expressive
  • one dynamical

Both are active. Neither fully contains the other.


This is where disproportion becomes politically decisive.

Because in an amplified system, small differences in:

  • visibility
  • timing
  • network positioning
  • or recursive reinforcement

can produce outsized effects on coordination outcomes.

These effects are not easily interpretable within the language of preference or representation.

They belong instead to the structural dynamics of amplification.


At this point, democracy faces a particular kind of strain.

It must continue to present outcomes as:

  • the result of participation
  • the expression of collective will
  • and the product of aggregated judgment

while simultaneously operating in a field where:

  • participation is unevenly amplified
  • will is formed within feedback loops
  • and aggregation is structurally biased by propagation dynamics

This is not hypocrisy in the simple sense.

It is systemic dual accounting: one account in meaning, another in value.


We can now describe democracy under amplification more precisely.

It becomes a system that must:

  • stabilise coordination outcomes in a recursive, high-velocity field
  • while maintaining a narrative of proportional expression in a non-proportional system

This requires continuous translation between:

  • value dynamics (amplification, recursion, disproportion)
  • and meaning structures (representation, preference, legitimacy)

This translation is not transparent.

It is performed by a dense set of mediating mechanisms:

  • media systems
  • institutional procedures
  • electoral structures
  • public discourse
  • interpretive narratives

These do not eliminate the mismatch.

They manage its visibility.


From this perspective, democratic legitimacy does not depend on eliminating amplification effects.

It depends on whether those effects can be:

  • sufficiently distributed
  • sufficiently slowed
  • sufficiently narratively integrated

so that the system remains interpretable as expression rather than modulation.


But amplification introduces a pressure that works against this stabilisation.

Because as amplification intensifies:

  • outcomes diverge more sharply from intuitive proportionality
  • feedback loops accelerate perception of distortion
  • and narrative explanations require increasing effort to maintain coherence

The system becomes harder to interpret as expressive.

Not because it ceases to be democratic.

But because it ceases to be cleanly representational.


This is where instability becomes epistemic as well as structural.

Citizens, institutions, and analysts alike begin to disagree not only about outcomes, but about:

  • what counts as influence
  • what counts as representation
  • and what counts as a fair relation between participation and result

The field of meaning itself becomes contested terrain.


We can now restate the central condition:

Democracy under amplification is a system in which coordination dynamics increasingly operate through non-proportional, recursive value processes, while legitimacy continues to depend on proportional, linear narratives of expression.


This tension does not resolve itself.

It can only be:

  • managed
  • reinterpreted
  • or periodically disrupted and re-stabilised

And this leads directly to the final question in this sequence.

If democracy persists under conditions where its expressive narrative is under continuous strain, then what exactly is being maintained?

Is it representation?

Is it coordination?

Or is it something more minimal—and more fundamental—than either?

That is where the next step leads.

The Uneven Weight of Influence — Part IV: Feedback, Recursion, and Instability: When the field begins to talk back

Once amplification becomes structurally embedded in coordination systems, a further transformation follows almost inevitably.

The field stops being merely acted upon.

It becomes self-modifying.

This is the point at which feedback enters not as a secondary mechanism, but as a primary driver of coordination dynamics.


In a simple (non-amplified) system, the flow is broadly linear:

input → transmission → outcome

But in an amplified system, the outcome of a process does not simply complete the cycle. It feeds back into the conditions under which the next cycle occurs.

Thus:

input → amplification → outcome → re-entry into input conditions

This is feedback.

But once amplification is involved, feedback does not merely stabilise the system. It can intensify and distort it simultaneously.


To understand why, we need to distinguish two kinds of feedback.

1. Stabilising feedback

This is the classical regulatory form:

  • deviations are dampened
  • extremes are corrected
  • the system returns to equilibrium

In coordination terms, this produces continuity. It prevents collapse.

2. Amplifying feedback

Here, the output of a process increases the probability of its own repetition or intensification:

  • visibility increases future visibility
  • attention attracts more attention
  • alignment strengthens further alignment

This produces escalation rather than equilibrium.


Modern mediated systems contain both types simultaneously.

But the balance between them is no longer stable.

Because amplification systems—especially networked and algorithmic ones—tend to privilege reinforcing feedback over stabilising feedback.

This shifts the overall behaviour of the field.


Once reinforcing feedback dominates, a new structural condition emerges:

recursion becomes the primary mode of coordination.


Recursion means that outputs are not merely consequences of the system.

They become inputs into the system’s own conditions of operation.

This has a profound implication:

the field is no longer simply distributing value.

It is continuously rewriting the conditions under which value is distributed.


At this point, coordination begins to exhibit a characteristic instability.

Small perturbations can:

  • trigger cascading amplification cycles
  • reorganise attention structures rapidly
  • collapse previously stable alignments
  • generate new centres of coordination without gradual development

The system becomes sensitive not just to inputs, but to the timing and sequencing of amplification loops.


This is why recursive systems are often experienced as volatile.

Not because they are random, but because:

  • feedback loops compress time
  • amplification accelerates propagation
  • and small shifts can reconfigure large portions of the field before stabilisation occurs

The result is a system in which change is both continuous and unevenly distributed.


At the level of coordination, this produces a key tension:

  • stabilising structures (institutions, norms, procedural constraints) attempt to slow and regulate flow
  • amplification systems accelerate and intensify flow

These are not merely competing forces.

They operate on different temporal logics.

One seeks duration.
The other produces acceleration.


This mismatch generates instability.

Not collapse, necessarily—but persistent misalignment between the rate at which the field changes and the rate at which stabilising mechanisms can respond.


In such a system, coordination no longer unfolds smoothly.

It oscillates:

  • periods of apparent stability
  • followed by rapid reconfiguration
  • followed by attempts to restabilise narrative coherence
  • followed by further amplification-driven disruption

The field does not settle.

It cycles through metastability.


This is where recursion becomes politically significant.

Because recursive amplification does not merely affect communication.

It affects:

  • which issues become salient
  • which actors become central nodes of coordination
  • which trajectories become viable for stabilisation
  • and how quickly these conditions can change

In other words, recursion operates directly on the structure of possibility itself.


At this stage, it becomes difficult to maintain the assumption that democratic outcomes are the result of slowly aggregated preferences.

What we observe instead is a field in which:

  • preferences are shaped within feedback environments
  • amplification determines salience
  • salience determines coordination
  • and coordination feeds back into future amplification

This is a closed loop of value modulation.


We can now state the structural effect precisely:

Feedback and recursion transform coordination systems into self-referential fields in which outputs continuously reconfigure the conditions of their own production, generating instability through accelerated and uneven feedback cycles.


And once this is established, a final implication follows.

If the field is recursively self-modifying, then no single moment of “input” can be cleanly separated from the system that processes it.

Participation, amplification, and outcome are no longer sequential stages.

They are entangled phases of a single dynamic process.


This brings us to the threshold of the next question:

If amplification is recursive, and recursion is structurally unstable, then how does coordination persist at all under these conditions—especially in systems that still claim democratic legitimacy?

That is where we turn next.

The Uneven Weight of Influence — Part III: Amplification Without Proportion: When scale breaks correspondence

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.

The Uneven Weight of Influence — Part II: From Local Interaction to Mediated Fields: How coordination escaped its bounds

Disproportion does not appear suddenly.

It emerges from a long transformation in how coordination itself is structured—specifically, in how value moves from one part of the field to another.

To understand how some agents come to bend the field, we need to begin with a condition in which such bending was far more constrained.


At the most basic level, coordination begins as local interaction.

Alignment forms within relatively bounded networks:

  • kith and kin
  • small communities
  • face-to-face relations
  • limited chains of communication

In such environments, value propagates through direct relational contact. Its movement is constrained by proximity, repetition, and the finite capacity of individuals to sustain coordination across distance.

This does not eliminate asymmetry.

Some individuals still carry more weight. Some positions stabilise more effectively. But the range and speed of propagation are limited, and therefore the degree of disproportion any single agent can achieve is correspondingly constrained.

Influence remains, in a strong sense, situated.


The first major shift occurs when coordination becomes mediated.

With the emergence of the press, value is no longer bound to immediate interaction. It can travel across distance, persist through time, and reach actors who are not directly connected.

This introduces a new condition:

value can now circulate independently of the local relations that produced it.

But this circulation is still relatively structured:

  • production is limited
  • dissemination is slower
  • feedback is delayed

The field expands, but it does not yet accelerate dramatically. Disproportion becomes possible, but remains partially constrained by the mechanics of production and distribution.


The next transformation intensifies this shift.

With broadcast media—radio and television—coordination enters a phase of centralised amplification.

Value can now be propagated simultaneously to large populations. Signals are no longer merely transmitted; they are broadcast.

This produces a new topology:

  • a small number of nodes acquire enormous reach
  • alignment can be generated at scale in compressed time
  • the field begins to organise around central channels of distribution

Here, disproportion becomes more visible.

Not because asymmetry is new, but because the capacity to amplify alignment across the field becomes concentrated.

However, this concentration also imposes a form of stability.

The number of amplifying nodes is limited. Their operation is relatively predictable. The pathways through which value flows are structured and, to some extent, legible.

The field is uneven, but not yet fully volatile.


The next shift disrupts this configuration.

With the emergence of the internet, coordination becomes decentralised and high-velocity.

Barriers to production collapse. Dissemination becomes near-instantaneous. Feedback loops tighten dramatically.

Value no longer flows primarily through centralised channels. It moves across networks of distributed nodes, each capable of generating and propagating signals.

At first glance, this appears to reduce disproportion.

If everyone can participate, influence should become more evenly distributed.

But this intuition relies on a proportional model that no longer holds.


Because what the internet introduces is not simply decentralisation.

It introduces networked amplification.

Value now propagates through:

  • algorithmically mediated pathways
  • patterns of attention and engagement
  • recursive feedback loops in which amplification generates further amplification

Under these conditions, the relation between input and effect becomes increasingly non-linear.

Some signals:

  • spread rapidly across the field
  • accumulate value through repeated circulation
  • stabilise into dominant trajectories

Others:

  • fail to propagate
  • dissipate quickly
  • remain locally confined despite widespread participation

The field does not become flat.

It becomes dynamically uneven.


The addition of social media intensifies this further.

Platforms do not merely transmit value; they actively organise its propagation:

  • selecting which signals are amplified
  • structuring visibility
  • shaping the pathways through which alignment forms

Amplification becomes continuous, adaptive, and responsive to the behaviour of the field itself.

Disproportion is no longer tied only to fixed positions.

It becomes emergent within the system’s own dynamics.


With the introduction of increasingly sophisticated computational systems, including AI-driven processes, a further layer is added.

Amplification can now be:

  • automated
  • optimised
  • strategically directed at scale

This does not create disproportion from nothing.

But it enhances the capacity to modulate the field deliberately, adjusting the flow of value with a precision and speed that were previously unavailable.


We can now see the trajectory clearly.

Coordination has moved:

  • from bounded interaction, where influence is locally constrained
  • to mediated circulation, where value travels beyond its origin
  • to centralised amplification, where a few nodes dominate propagation
  • to networked amplification, where propagation becomes dynamic and recursive
  • to adaptive modulation, where amplification itself can be engineered

At each stage, the capacity for disproportion increases.

Not because actors become more persuasive.

But because the infrastructure of coordination becomes more capable of amplifying, accelerating, and redirecting value.


This brings us back to the central distinction.

Disproportion is not simply a matter of some actors having more influence than others.

It is the result of a transformation in the conditions under which influence operates.

When value can be amplified beyond the scale of its origin, when propagation can outpace participation, when feedback loops can recursively intensify alignment, the field becomes susceptible to structural bending.


And once that susceptibility exists, a further question becomes unavoidable:

If the pathways of coordination can be amplified, accelerated, and modulated, then under what conditions does influence cease to be proportional altogether?

That is where the analysis must turn next.