CONCEPT
The Cognitive Minimum Standard
The extension of Beatrice Webb’s Common Rule to the conditions of mind: a floor below which AI-augmented work should not be permitted to fall, encompassing creative autonomy, meaningful engagement, and protection against the attentional exploitation that unregulated deployment produces.
When
Beatrice Webb and Sidney Webb formulated the
Common Rule in the 1890s, they observed that without a floor on the conditions of work, market competition would drive those conditions to the level the most desperate worker would accept. The Trade Boards Act of 1909 established minimum wages and maximum hours in the sweated trades. The Cognitive Minimum Standard is the analogous floor for the AI age: a set of conditions below which AI deployment in the workplace should not be permitted to fall, regardless of the efficiency gains above the floor. It encompasses three dimensions that the industrial minimum standard was not designed to address. The first is
creative autonomy—the degree to which a worker retains genuine agency over the substance of their work, not merely its pace. The second is
meaningful engagement—the availability of work that develops rather than degrades the worker's capabilities over time. The third is
attentional sufficiency—protection