Como cliente Amazon Prime obtén 3 meses de Audible gratis
The Divorce Paradox: Does Love Fade?
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 13,99 €
-
Narrado por:
-
Carrie Robinson
-
De:
-
Boris Kriger
Acerca de este título
Why does love fade? Not because you chose the wrong person, and not because you failed to try hard enough. The fading of romantic passion is a structurally predictable consequence of human biology operating inside cultural institutions that demand permanence from a system designed for impermanence.
In The Divorce Paradox, Boris Kriger draws on neuroscience, evolutionary biology, economics, and dynamical systems theory to reveal the ten mechanisms that conspire against long-term romantic partnerships—from the brain’s built-in reward adaptation and a provocative extension of the Westermarck incest-avoidance effect to the contagious spread of divorce through social networks, the distorting influence of social media, and the quiet narcissistic dynamics present in every relationship.
Based on the author’s peer-reviewed research, including the formal paper “Structural Viability of Dyadic Systems: A Dynamical Account of Romantic Dissolution”, this audiobook translates rigorous academic analysis into accessible, witty, and unflinching prose. It does not moralize. It does not prescribe. It illuminates the forces at work—biological, psychological, social, economic, legal, and technological—and identifies the control variables through which couples can, in principle, resist the default trajectory toward dissolution.
Neither a self-help manual nor a counsel of despair, The Divorce Paradox is a map of the territory every intimate partnership must navigate—drawn with scientific precision, delivered with sardonic honesty, and offered with the conviction that understanding the problem is the first step toward addressing it.