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Leibniz and the Principle of Optimal Coherence

Science and Cosmos

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Leibniz and the Principle of Optimal Coherence

By: Boris Kriger
Narrated by: Bryan L. Bernard
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About this listen

Three hundred years ago, Leibniz proposed that our world is the "best of all possible worlds." Voltaire turned this idea into a joke. Philosophy moved on. The insight was lost. Until now.

In his new work, Boris Kriger reveals that Leibniz was not a naive optimist but a structural thinker who glimpsed something profound: coherent systems exist in states determined by constraints, and what appears strange or suboptimal is often the very thing holding the system together. Voltaire attacked a caricature; the real insight lay buried for centuries.Drawing on contemporary philosophy of science, constraint-based physics, and his own research on scale-specific principles and cyclical hierarchies, Kriger formulates the Principle of Optimal Coherence—a powerful methodological tool for scientific investigation. When you encounter something strange in a system, don't dismiss it as noise or accident. Ask what constraint it satisfies. Ask what would collapse if it were absent. Seek the load-bearing columns.

This audiobook bridges Leibniz's 18th-century metaphysics and 21st-century science, showing how teleological reasoning can be rehabilitated as methodology, why universal laws are not enough, and what the ethics of creating worlds—virtual or otherwise—demands of us.

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
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