Decision Fatigue and Criterion Collapse

Decision fatigue causes criterion collapse when depletion makes the system stop evaluating by its fuller standard and instead evaluate by what brings fastest closure, least friction, or least immediate discomfort.

Introduction

Decision fatigue is often described as reduced willpower or depleted capacity. That is true but incomplete.

In discernment terms, one of its clearest effects is criterion collapse.

What fatigue actually changes

When people are depleted, they do not only become slower or weaker. They often begin evaluating differently.

Standards that were active earlier in the day or earlier in the season lose force. Faster, narrower, lower-friction standards quietly take their place.

How the standard narrows

The question becomes less what is true, right, wise, or durable and more what ends this fastest, causes the least conflict, or lets me stop carrying the burden.

That is why decision fatigue can produce choices that later feel unrecognizable.

Why this belongs on this site

This site can say something more exact than generic decision advice. Fatigue is not only a state. It is a structural risk to criterion.

That distinction makes the page useful beyond lifestyle framing.

Practical signs

The person begins approving what they would have rejected earlier.

They stop checking assumptions.

They accept shallow tradeoffs.

They treat closure itself as success.

These are not random errors. They reveal a change in governing standard.

Correction

The key question is not only am I tired. The key question is by what standard am I deciding now, and is this still the standard I would endorse under fuller capacity?

That makes criterion visible again.

FAQ

Why connect fatigue to criterion? Because fatigue often changes what counts as good enough.

Is decision fatigue only about low energy? No. It often includes a shift in evaluative standard.

What helps? Delay where possible, externalize standards, and refuse to let exhaustion silently rewrite the measure.

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Frequently asked questions

Why connect fatigue to criterion?

Because fatigue often changes what counts as good enough.

Is decision fatigue only about low energy?

No. It often includes a shift in evaluative standard.

What helps?

Delay where possible, externalize standards, and refuse to let exhaustion silently rewrite the measure.

Why connect fatigue to criterion?

Because fatigue often changes what counts as good enough.

Is decision fatigue only about low energy?

No. It often includes a shift in evaluative standard.

What helps?

Delay where possible, externalize standards, and refuse to let exhaustion silently rewrite the measure.