Como cliente Amazon Prime obtén 3 meses de Audible gratis
Intelligence in the Universe: Bug or Feature?
No se ha podido añadir a la cesta
Error al eliminar la lista de deseos.
Se ha producido un error al añadirlo a la biblioteca
Se ha producido un error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Activa tu suscripción a Audible por 0,99 €/mes durante 3 meses y disfruta de este título a un precio exclusivo para suscriptores.
Compra ahora por 17,99 €
-
Narrado por:
-
Bill Rogers
-
De:
-
Boris Kriger
Acerca de este título
A universe that builds galaxies out of dust and minds out of chemistry cannot help but provoke the deepest question of all: was intelligence meant to arise, or did it slip into existence as a brilliant accident? This audiobook follows that question across the full architecture of reality—from particles assembling into structure, to organisms navigating uncertainty, to civilizations listening for echoes in the cosmic dark.
Intelligence in the Universe: Bug or Feature? moves far beyond familiar debates about consciousness or extraterrestrial life. It traces a hidden logic connecting the birth of stars, the evolution of complexity, and the emergence of self-awareness. Intelligence appears not as a miraculous exception, nor as a trivial byproduct, but as a threshold phenomenon born out of universal processes of self-organization, information flow, and structural inevitability. The universe, left to its own laws, generates patterns that grow deeper, more interconnected, and eventually capable of reflection.
Boris Kriger weaves together cosmology, thermodynamics, systems theory, evolutionary biology, and the philosophy of mind to examine whether thought is a natural continuation of cosmic order or a fleeting anomaly destined to vanish. Along the way, the listener encounters the strange symmetry between neural networks and the Cosmic Web, the decisive transitions that allow matter to begin modeling itself, the razor-thin improbability of life’s emergence, and the haunting silence of a universe that should be full of minds yet remains unreadable.
©2025 Boris Kriger (P)2025 Boris Kriger