This paper argues that the cognitive decline observed in Generation Z is not a generational failure but the predictable output of a structural shift in the developmental environment. Cognitive capacity emerges from the curvature of the manifold in which development occurs, not from intrinsic traits of individuals or cohorts. Beginning around 2010, the coherence‑producing conditions that historically shaped attention, memory, reasoning, and agency—continuity, friction, constraint, and apprenticeship—were displaced by fragmented, algorithmically steered information ecologies. This transition flattened the developmental manifold, removing the gradients required for depth and long‑form integration. Gen Z is the first generation fully shaped by this low‑curvature environment, and therefore the first to make the dissolution of coherence visible at scale. The global synchrony of the decline eliminates cultural or educational explanations and identifies the information ecology as the primary causal variable. The paper develops a structural account of this dissolution, explains its geometric consequences, and argues that recovery depends on the deliberate reintroduction of coherence as a developmental condition. When coherence returns, curvature returns, and depth becomes possible again.
Denis Bailey (Wed,) studied this question.