Science and Cosmos
49 books in seriesSuper Materials of the Future Summary
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Newton Revisited
- Universal Newtonian Dynamics (Science and Cosmos)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 3 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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Why do economists, engineers, epidemiologists, and AI researchers all discover that they need to track momentum in their models? Why do first-order predictions consistently fail at turning points? Why does the same corrective technique keep being reinvented across unrelated fields? The answer lies in a structural principle hidden in plain sight for three centuries. Newton's laws of motion are not merely descriptions of physical matter. They are the necessary mathematical form for any system where multiple influences combine and act on trends rather than levels directly.
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Newton Revisited
- Universal Newtonian Dynamics (Science and Cosmos)
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 3 hrs and 59 mins
- Release date: 17-02-26
- Language: English
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£10.62 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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Homo Credens
- The Believing Species (Science and Cosmos)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Peter Harpley
- Length: 2 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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Why do we believe more than we can prove? Why does memory deceive us? Why do the most sophisticated artificial intelligence systems "hallucinate" false information? In Homo Credens, Boris Kriger reveals a profound truth about the nature of complex minds: any sufficiently complex system—whether human brain, animal cognition, or artificial intelligence—must believe far more than it can verify. This is not a limitation to be overcome but an architecture to be understood.
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Homo Credens
- The Believing Species (Science and Cosmos)
- Narrated by: Peter Harpley
- Length: 2 hrs and 36 mins
- Release date: 09-03-26
- Language: English
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£9.57 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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The Tree-Top Meta-Method
- Science and Cosmos
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Anuradha Bali
- Length: 3 hrs and 28 mins
- Unabridged
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What if your immune system, your cognitive biases, your society’s institutions, and the orbital mechanics of binary stars all obey the same structural rules—not by analogy, but by necessity? Most scientists climb partway up the tree of abstraction and come back with a result. Most philosophers climb to the top and never come down. This book describes what happens when someone completes the full journey: all the way up to the limit of formal generalisation, a clear look at the structural landscape, and all the way back down with a map.
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The Tree-Top Meta-Method
- Science and Cosmos
- Narrated by: Anuradha Bali
- Length: 3 hrs and 28 mins
- Release date: 03-04-26
- Language: English
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£13.79 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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The Case Against Perfection
- Science and Cosmos
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Hollie Dayton
- Length: 2 hrs and 40 mins
- Unabridged
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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.
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The Case Against Perfection
- Science and Cosmos
- Narrated by: Hollie Dayton
- Length: 2 hrs and 40 mins
- Release date: 11-03-26
- Language: English
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£6.39 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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Why Mathematics Works
- Science and Cosmos
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 3 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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Why does mathematics—a creation of the human mind—describe the physical world with such extraordinary precision? Why do equations invented for one purpose turn out, decades or centuries later, to be the perfect language for a completely different realm of nature? In 1960, the Nobel laureate Eugene Wigner called this correspondence a 'gift we neither understand nor deserve.' The question has haunted science ever since. In this book, Boris Kriger proposes an answer that is at once simple and profound: mathematics describes the world because only the mathematically structured survives.
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Why Mathematics Works
- Science and Cosmos
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 3 hrs and 17 mins
- Release date: 18-03-26
- Language: English
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£10.22 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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The Philosophy of Mathematics
- Exploring the Limits of Mathematical Thought (Science and Cosmos)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Michael Costantino
- Length: 16 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
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Mathematics has long been regarded as the purest expression of truth — a language through which the universe reveals itself. Yet behind every equation stands the human mind that created it. In this book, Boris Krieger follows the path of mathematics from its simplest intuitions to its highest abstractions, asking what it truly reveals — about reality, and about ourselves. Through lucid reflection and critical insight, he shows that geometry, algebra, topology, and probability are not independent worlds but translations of human perception into structure.
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The Philosophy of Mathematics
- Exploring the Limits of Mathematical Thought (Science and Cosmos)
- Narrated by: Michael Costantino
- Length: 16 hrs and 27 mins
- Release date: 19-03-26
- Language: English
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£16.76 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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Light from the Abyss
- How Quasars Became the Universe's Greatest Storytellers (Science and Cosmos)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 4 hrs and 15 mins
- Unabridged
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Quasars are the brightest sustained phenomena in the known universe—engines of light powered by supermassive black holes devouring matter at the centers of distant galaxies. But they are more than cosmic spectacles. Every beam of quasar light that crosses the universe accumulates an extraordinarily detailed record of the gas, matter, and structure it passes through. The intergalactic medium writes its autobiography in the spectra of quasars, using absorption lines as words and sightlines as sentences.
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Light from the Abyss
- How Quasars Became the Universe's Greatest Storytellers (Science and Cosmos)
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 4 hrs and 15 mins
- Release date: 26-03-26
- Language: English
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£13.79 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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Science and Taboo
- Why Rational Minds Need Myths, Metaphors, and Rituals
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Brian Wright
- Length: 4 hrs and 6 mins
- Unabridged
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Science is the most powerful method of understanding the world that human beings have ever devised. It splits atoms, sequences genomes, and photographs black holes. But it is also performed by brains—brains that think in metaphors, organize experience into stories, and coordinate collective action through ritual. What happens when we take that fact seriously? In Science and Taboo, Boris Kriger draws on the predictive processing revolution in cognitive science to reveal the hidden architecture of scientific thought.
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Science and Taboo
- Why Rational Minds Need Myths, Metaphors, and Rituals
- Narrated by: Brian Wright
- Length: 4 hrs and 6 mins
- Release date: 17-04-26
- Language: English
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£13.79 or free with trial. Auto-renews at £5.99/month after trial. See eligibility.
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Fractal Blindness
- Why Systems Repeat Themselves
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Jack Watson
- Length: 3 hrs and 48 mins
- Unabridged
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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.
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Fractal Blindness
- Why Systems Repeat Themselves
- Narrated by: Jack Watson
- Length: 3 hrs and 48 mins
- Release date: 17-04-26
- Language: English
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