PhusisAnd I agree with you. The larger the radiating surface, the smaller the excursion required to achieve the same SPL. A 5" midrange has about 19.5 sq. in. of radiating surface; The Magnepan 1.7 has 456, or 23 times as much. The Magnepan's microscopic excursion has a profound effect on inertial artifacts--the mechanics of acceleration, stopping, ringing, and reversing. It results in a relaxed, natural presentation.
My impressions is that it's not without audible importance how a given amount of air is moved; either "gently" via a larger area, or "forcibly" through a smaller ditto. My preference - if it is indeed explained fundamentally through this aspect - is for the former, and this goes for the whole frequency spectrum.
Note the expensive and herculean efforts to reduce this in a pistonic driver: the TAD coincident drivers are made of vapor deposited beryllium--brittle, fragile, but incredibly light to minimize inertial effects.
I agree here, too The miraculous thing about the Maggie 1.7 is that it speaks in such a single, coherent voice for just $2K/pair. The TADs also do it with a 6.5" coincident driver that covers 8 octaves. Its point source would have an imaging advantage over the Maggies' line source, and the upper models have more bass reach, but at a significant price difference.
Moreover, the number of point sources (convering the same frequency span) is also a factor. With regards to bass (and the rest of the sprectrum), generally, I'd rather have one unit covering what two or more units equaling the same radiation are can muster.