faiblissions
Faiblissions is a term used in theoretical discussions of complex systems to describe the cumulative effect of many small, low-intensity events on larger-scale dynamics. The word combines faibl(e) (from the French for weak) with mission, to emphasize distributed, task-like actions that occur without central coordination. In this view, a faiblission is a micro-action or local adjustment—such as a single sensor reading, a minor policy change, or a casual interaction—that alone has little impact, but collectively can steer a system toward a new equilibrium through nonlinear interactions and feedback.
Mechanism and modeling: Faiblissions operate through amplification via network effects, threshold phenomena, and feedback loops. When
Applications: The concept has been used in analyses of online communities, organizational change, and ecological regimes
Criticism and status: Some scholars caution that faiblissions overlap with existing concepts such as cumulative advantage,
Origin: The term is attributed to theoretical researchers publishing in the 2020s, with no single canonical