Through the Crooked Mirror
Perception, Attention, and the Path to Clarity (Philosophical Questions)
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Narrated by:
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Lance V. Sanchez
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By:
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Boris Kriger
About this listen
We believe we see the world as it is. We are wrong.
Every act of perception is simultaneously an act of exclusion. The human mind, operating under finite resources, must select from an environment far richer than it can process and what it excludes always vastly exceeds what it includes. This is not a flaw to be corrected. It is the structural condition of any adaptive cognitive system that has ever existed, biological or artificial.
In Through the Crooked Mirror, Boris Kriger reveals how perception, attention, culture, morality, and willpower form a closed, self-reinforcing loop that quietly constructs and maintains the world each of us inhabits a world that feels complete but is, by necessity, a compressed and patterned fragment of reality. Drawing on cognitive science, evolutionary theory, phenomenology, and information theory, Kriger introduces the Structural Distortion Principle: a framework demonstrating that the very mechanisms designed to help us act efficiently are the same mechanisms that systematically distort our picture of the world.
But the book does not stop at diagnosis. Its central claim is both paradoxical and liberating: the path to greater perceptual clarity runs not through the accumulation of more information but through the discipline of attention the deliberate, sustained redirection of awareness toward what our minds are structured to exclude. Only by recognizing the curvature of the mirror can we hope to see a clearer reflection.
Rigorous yet accessible, Through the Crooked Mirror transforms decades of research in cognitive science, cultural psychology, and philosophy of mind into a unified vision of how we construct reality and how, with effort and awareness, we can reconstruct it.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger