Couverture de The Case Against Perfection

The Case Against Perfection

Science and Cosmos

Aperçu
Offre à durée limitée

3 mois d'Audible Standard gratuits

3 mois pour 0,00 €/mois, puis 5,99 €/mois. Possibilité de résilier chaque mois.
Essayez pour 0,00 €/mois
L'offre prend fin le 15 Juillet 2026 à 23 h 59.
Plus d'options d'achat

The Case Against Perfection

De : Boris Kriger
Lu par : Hollie Dayton
Essayez pour 0,00 €/mois

3 mois pour 0,99 €/mois, puis 5,99 €/mois. Possibilité de résilier chaque mois. Offre valable jusqu'au 15 juillet 2026 à 23 h 59.

Acheter pour 9,99 €

Acheter pour 9,99 €

Why do utopian projects produce catastrophe? Why do optimized systems collapse? Why does the pursuit of perfection destroy what it seeks to perfect?

In THE CASE AGAINST PERFECTION, Boris Kriger presents a revolutionary synthesis of two groundbreaking theoretical frameworks: the Law of Imperative Uncertainty and the Asymmetry of Totalizing Ideals. Drawing on information theory, complexity science, evolutionary biology, and the lessons of history, Kriger proves mathematically what philosophers have long intuited: the pursuit of terminal perfection is structurally self-defeating.complex adaptive systems—which include economies, ecosystems, societies, organizations, and minds—depend on the very imperfections that totalizing optimization seeks to eliminate. Variance is not noise but signal. Inefficiency is not waste but buffer. Deviation is not error but exploration. When these features are suppressed in the name of coherence, systems lose their capacity to learn, adapt, and survive.

With rigorous argument and vivid examples, Kriger shows why nature chose imperfection over perfection, why high-modernist schemes from Soviet planning to algorithmic governance produce predictable disasters, and how we can design systems—political, economic, technological, and personal—that preserve the adaptive variance on which viability depends.

The world persists because it does not complete itself. This book explains why—and what it means for how we should live.

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
Philosophie Politique et gouvernement Sciences politiques
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
Aucun commentaire pour le moment