CONCEPT
The Laws of Imitation
Tarde's 1890 thesis that all social life consists of patterns received from other minds and reproduced with modifications — the foundational framework that
AI has made visible at machine speed.
Gabriel Tarde's central claim, advanced in
Les Lois de l'imitation (1890), is that imitation is not one social process among many but
the social process from which all others derive. Every behavior, belief, innovation, and cultural form consists of patterns received from prior
minds and reproduced with modifications that accumulate into cultural change. Language, law, religion, fashion, technology, art, and morality are constituted not by structures imposed from above but by flows of imitation
between individuals. The framework dissolves the Romantic myth of origination by demonstrating that no creator works from a private reservoir — every mind is shaped by reception. In the AI age, the framework becomes newly diagnostic: the machine's recombination of training data exposes the imitative infrastructure that human creativity has always depended upon and always denied.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Tarde developed the framework during his years as a provincial magistrate in Sarlat, where daily observation of criminal behavior, rumor propagation, and fashion