In the AI era, technology has industrialized the production of weightless coherence,allowing systems to appear ordered while thinning their actual answerability to reality.This paper argues that technology is not best understood as a moral agent or anindependent destiny. It is better understood as a structural amplifier: it scales thegoverning intent and answerability level of the system into which it is inserted.To make that claim more precise, the paper introduces a simple amplification short-hand: technological scale multiplies whatever structure already governs the system. Ifthat structure is weakly answerable, technology scales persuasion, legibility, syntheticcoherence, and behavioral capture. If that structure is more answerable, technology canhelp expose contradiction, trace cost, improve revision, and strengthen contact withconsequence.A short dialogue with Plato’s Republic clarifies that the deeper problem is ancient.Plato already warned that persons and cities can appear ordered while being ruled byappetite, image, and sophistry. The modern difference is infrastructural. We no longerface sophistry only in speech or politics. We face sophistry at scale: systems that canmass-produce the form of intelligence, truthfulness, and legitimacy without bearing theirburden.The paper also proposes a Jungian bridge. The grid is read as a collective persona:a polished, helpful, standardized face that hides institutional shadow in the form ofexported costs, disowned errors, and buried repair labor. Under these conditions, cheapcoherence creates a kind of psychic inflation, where subjects feel they know because theypossess summaries, outputs, and fluent explanations, while lacking the metabolic load oflived apprenticeship and contact.The central claim is simple: technology does not save weak structure. It magnifiesit. Structural Intelligence is therefore not optional. It is part of the governance layerrequired to move technology from an engine of capture toward an aid for answerability.
Vladisav Jovanovic (Fri,) studied this question.
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