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The Right to Be Wrong

Navigating an Impossible World (Philosophical Questions)

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The Right to Be Wrong

By: Boris Kriger
Narrated by: Richard Bryce Wallis
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Summary

You are inside the universe you are trying to understand. This single fact — so obvious it barely seems worth stating — has consequences that reach from quantum physics to the structure of your own mind.
In this audiobook, Boris Kriger shows that being inside changes everything. Drawing on a monograph that proves its claims with mathematical rigour, but written entirely in words and metaphors for the non-specialist listener, The Right to Be Wrong establishes three results that overturn common assumptions about knowledge, science, and consciousness.

First: any observer that is part of the system it observes necessarily has blind spots — aspects of reality that no measurement, no technology, and no theory can access. Second: any sufficiently complex system necessarily admits descriptions that are individually valid but mutually contradictory. Third: any agent that must act in such a world, under time pressure and with limited resources, must possess a specific five-property structure — the navigator — or it will not survive.
Those five properties turn out to be the very properties that scientists attribute to consciousness.

The Right to Be Wrong is not a theory of everything. It is something more useful: a theory of why there cannot be a theory of everything, and why that limitation is not a defeat but a design specification. Your imperfect models, your contradictory truths, your constant switching between incompatible ways of seeing — these are not failures of cognition. They are the engine of it. The cracks in reality are not bugs. They are what make survival, diversity, and consciousness possible.
If you have ever wondered why the world resists a single explanation, why your own mind contradicts itself, or why being wrong might be the most important thing you do — this audiobook is for you.

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
History & Philosophy Philosophy Science
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