CONCEPT
The Amplifier's Frequency Response
No amplifier is neutral — every amplifier boosts certain frequencies and attenuates others, and AI's response curve favors the interesting, cute, zany, and smooth over the surprising, difficult, and resistant.
Segal's amplifier metaphor assumes neutrality: AI increases volume without altering signal. But every physical amplifier has a frequency response — a curve describing which frequencies pass cleanly, which are boosted, which are attenuated. A Marshall guitar amp does not make the guitar louder; it makes the guitar into something else through harmonic distortion, compression, cabinet resonance. The distortion is not noise — it is the amplifier's voice. AI amplifies selectively. Its frequency response is shaped by training data, architecture, optimization targets, interface design. The frequencies it boosts: the interesting (probable-but-novel), the cute (compliant helpfulness), the zany (expanded scope), the smooth (frictionless interaction). The frequencies it attenuates: the surprising (what the model didn't predict), the difficult (what requires sustained uncertainty), the genuinely other (perspectives challenging user assumptions).
In The You On AI Field Guide
The technical metaphor is precise, not decorative. In audio engineering, frequency response is the transfer function mapping input spectrum to output spectrum. A flat response reproduces the source signal faithfully. A colored