CONCEPT
The Attentional Commons
The shared resource of collective human focus—<em>not</em> a commodity inside skulls but the ecological substrate from which meaning, culture, and democratic life grow.
The attentional commons is Yves Citton's foundational reframing of collective attention as a shared resource requiring active maintenance. Unlike attention conceived as private property—an individual resource to maximize or spend—the attentional commons is the relational capacity through which societies think together, create culture, conduct democratic deliberation, and build shared meaning. It comprises the modes, practices, and environmental conditions that enable collective focus: the shared objects (news events, cultural phenomena, civic crises) around which joint attention crystallizes, the temporal durations (sustained enough for deliberation) during which communities can attend collectively, and the social practices (conversation, public ritual, common reading) that coordinate distributed individual attention into coherent collective awareness. The commons is not natural but constructed—through media institutions, design choices, and governance structures. And like any commons, it faces a tragedy: each individual's rational optimization of personal attention contributes to the degradation of the collective resource.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The attentional commons existed, in various forms, throughout human history. The town square was an attentional commons—a physical architecture that created shared