cybergaloot, you might begin by asking yourself why full-range dynamic loudspeakers have multiple drivers at all. Mainly it's because each driver has to have a small diameter relative to the wavelength of the sounds it's generating, or its dispersion will suck. So a midrange driver has to be medium-sized, and a tweeter has to be small. But small drivers can't move large volumes of air, so for that reason among others, it's fortunate that the high frequencies in music and speech aren't generally equal in intensity to the midrange and lower frequency energy.
Similarly, the diaphragm of a microphone has to be smaller than the wavelengths it's picking up, or else its polar pattern (the complement of a loudspeaker's dispersion) will suck. But as digifish_music points out, the way microphones operate doesn't involve a lot of air motion. Even at very high sound pressure levels the membrane excursion and the acoustic power involved in moving that membrane are vanishingly small.
So a microphone is just not analogous to a loudspeaker in those respects. For pressure transducers, even a 1/8" diameter microphone can have flat response down to as low a frequency as you like--certainly well below the range of human hearing.
--best regards