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.