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Why Mathematics Works

Science and Cosmos

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Why Mathematics Works

De: Boris Kriger
Narrado por: Floyd Dameron
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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. The universe is a torrent of change, but within that torrent, some things endure—atoms, stars, organisms, laws. To endure is to possess conserved quantities and invariant relations. These invariants, by the deep logic of algebra, necessarily form mathematical structures. The correspondence between mathematics and the physical world is therefore not a miracle but a theorem: the inevitable signature of persistence.

Building a single continuous argument across twenty-four chapters, Kriger traces the consequences of this insight from fundamental physics to biology, from the curvature of spacetime to the fragility of social institutions. He explains why calculus works, why quantum mechanics requires complex numbers, why the laws of physics take the form of variational principles, and why mathematical precision fades as we move from physics through biology to the social sciences. He confronts the radical Kantian alternative—that mathematics is a grid projected by the mind rather than a mirror of the world—and shows that while the mind does contribute to the mathematical character of physics, the world contributes more.

Written without a single mathematical symbol, this book makes a rigorous scientific argument accessible to any listener willing to think carefully about the deepest questions: Why is there order? Why is the world comprehensible?

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
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