
The cycle that began with [YOU] on AI traces the adoption curve of AI tools—seventy-five years for the telephone to reach fifty million users, two months for ChatGPT—as a measure of technological improvement. Tarde’s framework reveals it as a measure of imitative velocity: the speed at which a successful practice radiates outward from its point of origin through the channels of communication, admiration, and desire that constitute the connective tissue of any professional community. The channels have grown denser. The propagation has accelerated. The process has not changed.
What Tarde’s framework dissolves—and this is its most powerful contribution to the conversation about AI and creativity—is the binary that paralyzes the current discourse. The binary insists that either human creation is original and machine output is derivative, or machine output is creative and human specialness is a myth. Both positions assume that originality and derivation are categorical opposites. Tarde denied this assumption at its root. There is only a continuum of modification. At one end, the modifications are so minimal the output is effectively a copy. At the other, the modifications are so thoroughgoing that the output is experienced as unprecedented. The question that determines where any particular work falls on this continuum is the question Segal poses: Are the modifications you introduce to the imitative flow significant enough to constitute genuine contribution?
The Durkheimian orientation that dominates AI governance—identifying AI as a disruptive agent, classifying it by risk level, imposing constraints designed to protect existing institutional arrangements—is, from Tarde’s perspective, the wrong model entirely. Society is a flow, not a structure, and flows cannot be contained. They can only be directed. The beaver does not pretend the river can be halted. The beaver studies the current and builds where building will redirect the greatest volume of water toward the most productive end.
The duel logique—Tarde’s term for the encounter between incompatible imitative patterns—is the mechanism by which AI collaboration produces anything worth producing. The builder who accepts the model’s polished output without opposition, who lets the model’s fluency substitute for the labor of evaluation, is engaged in mere replication. The builder who insists on her own understanding, who opposes the model’s smooth synthesis with the rough truth of domain knowledge, is performing the adaptation that Tarde identified as the source of all genuine novelty.
Born in 1843 in Sarlat-la-Canéda, Tarde spent years as a magistrate observing criminals, witnesses, and the social dynamics of provincial courtrooms before building his theoretical framework from the ground up. He arrived at sociology through criminology—specifically through the observation that criminal techniques propagate through networks of association exactly as fashions and innovations propagate through networks of admiration. The mechanism was the same. The substance differed. This empirical foundation gave Tarde’s framework its distinctive character: when he writes about imitation, he is describing something he watched happen, not something he deduced.
His central antagonist was Émile Durkheim, who dominated French sociology at the turn of the twentieth century and whose program—treating society as a reality sui generis, a thing-in-itself that stands above its individual members and exercises constraint upon them—Tarde rejected systematically and at professional cost. For Tarde, society was not a structure that stood above its members. It was a flow—a continuous movement of beliefs, desires, behaviors, and cultural forms from one mind to another through imitation. The structure Durkheim described was an abstraction from the flow, a snapshot that froze a moment of continuous movement into the appearance of permanence.
Tarde lost the institutional battle. Durkheim commanded the Parisian academy, controlled the Année sociologique, and placed his students in the chairs that mattered. Tarde was largely marginalized for most of the twentieth century. The recovery was initiated by Bruno Latour, who recognized in the provincial magistrate’s work an anticipation of actor-network theory, and confirmed by digital networks, which made Tarde’s flow-ontology empirically navigable—the individual and the aggregate not two separate levels of reality but two descriptions of the same flow, distinguishable only by the resolution of observation.
The Three Laws of Imitation. Tarde organized all social life around three processes: imitation (the reception and reproduction of a pattern from another mind), opposition (the encounter between two incompatible imitative patterns—the duel logique), and adaptation (the synthesis that resolves the opposition, producing a new form that enters the flow and is imitated in turn). The cycle never terminates. What distinguishes this triad from dialectical frameworks it superficially resembles is that Tarde’s processes are empirical descriptions of what happens between actual minds in actual encounters, not abstract logical categories.
The Invention-Imitation Cycle. Invention, in Tarde’s account, is not creation from nothing. It is the crossing of two or more imitative streams—flowing independently through the social body—in a single mind, producing a form that resolves the tension between them. The crossing is where all originality lives. Dylan imitating Guthrie, Robert Johnson, and the Beats was not diminished by those imitations. He was located at their confluence, and the specific modifications his biographical geography introduced to the crossing—his timing, his location, his nervous system—produced a form that could not have emerged from any other position in the network.
The Builder as Imitator of Imitators. The builder who collaborates with an AI model is a third-order imitator: an imitator of the model’s imitations of the training corpus’s imitations of prior texts. The number of imitative links does not determine the quality of the output. The quality of the modifications at the final link does. Shakespeare imitated Holinshed, who imitated earlier historians. The chain did not degrade the product. The modifications Shakespeare introduced—compression, invention, dramatic poetry—were so thoroughgoing that the output is recognized as a supreme achievement. The builder’s modifications play the same role.
Second-Order Imitation and the Tendency Toward the Mean. The model’s imitation is structurally different from the human imitator’s. The human imitates a specific source through the lens of a biographical life; the modifications are personal and irreproducible. The model imitates the statistical regularities of the entire corpus; the modifications are architectural—systematic rather than personal. This second-order imitation produces a characteristic limitation: it tends toward the mean of the corpus, smoothing out the distinctive qualities of individual sources. The smoothness that Byung-Chul Han diagnoses is, in Tardean terms, the predictable result of imitating a statistical distribution rather than a specific source.
Society as Flow, Not Structure. The practical consequence of Tarde’s ontology is that attempts to manage AI by protecting existing structures will fail for the same reason that attempts to stop a river by building a wall across it will fail. What works is not a wall but a dam—a structure that accepts the reality of the flow and redirects it. The dam metaphor [YOU] on AI develops is instinctively Tardean: not a wall that stops the flow but a structure that accepts the flow’s inevitability and shapes its course.