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Fractal Blindness

Why Systems Repeat Themselves

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Fractal Blindness

De : Boris Kriger
Lu par : Jack Watson
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You chose breakfast this morning the same way you choose everything else.

The same pattern you use to pick what to eat is the one you use to evaluate a career, assess a relationship, respond to a crisis, or judge an argument. You have one way of navigating trade-offs, and you apply it everywhere because inventing a new approach for every new situation would require resources no human mind possesses. This is not a flaw. It is the most efficient strategy available to any system operating with limited means in an unlimited world. It is also the source of a specific, diagnosable, and sometimes devastating form of blindness.

In Fractal Blindness, Boris Kriger reveals the structural mechanism behind one of the deepest puzzles of human behaviour: why intelligent people, sophisticated organizations, and entire scientific disciplines keep making the same mistakes at every scale. Drawing on astrophysics, neuroscience, evolutionary psychology, epistemology, and organizational theory, Kriger shows that the pattern is not a metaphor it is a formally demonstrable property of any finite system that reuses its solutions across levels.

The same gravitational rule that gathers dust into pebbles ignites stars and collapses them into black holes. The same cognitive heuristic that helps you evaluate breakfast produces confirmation bias, anchoring, and belief perseverance. The same management instinct that builds a startup destroys the corporation it becomes. In each case, the system scales a pattern that works at one level to levels where it does not and the system’s own feedback confirms that everything is fine.

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
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