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The End of the Cognitive Era explores a simple but unsettling idea:for the first time in history, intelligence itself may no longer be scarce. For centuries, societies have rewarded what was rare: physical strength, specialized skill, and, in the modern era, cognitive ability. Artificial intelligence changes this equation.When symbolic reasoning becomes abundant and expertise can be compressed into machines, cognitive labor loses its historical privilege. This does not mean humans become less intelligent—it means intelligence no longer guarantees status, security, or dignity. The article traces this shift through seven historical periods, from hunter-gatherer societies to the AI transition, and argues that we are entering a new phase where large numbers of capable, educated people may no longer be economically necessary. The central question is therefore not technological, but civilizational: If work is no longer the main source of dignity, what replaces it? Drawing on historical patterns, the text proposes three alternative anchors: responsibility instead of productivity, membership instead of merit, contribution without competition. Rather than offering optimism or pessimism, the piece aims to clarify the structural transition now underway—and the social questions it will force us to confront.