Francis Bacon and the Architecture of Inquiry
Philosophical Questions
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Narrado por:
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Alan Walker
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De:
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Boris Kriger
What if the greatest obstacle to knowledge lies not in the world but in ourselves?
Four centuries ago, Francis Bacon revolutionized human thought by identifying the “idols of the mind”—systematic biases that distort our understanding. Today, modern science has confirmed his insights with mathematical precision: the structure of our assumptions determines what we can know, often more fundamentally than the evidence we gather or the intelligence we apply.
In this groundbreaking synthesis, Boris Kriger traces a golden thread connecting ancient wisdom traditions, Bacon’s revolutionary methodology, and cutting-edge developments in epistemology and cognitive science. He reveals how four timeless principles—that prejudice blinds us, that questions matter more than answers, that premature conclusions destroy understanding, and that examining our assumptions yields greater wisdom than refining our reasoning—are not merely folk proverbs but formally demonstrable constraints on any rational inquiry.
At the edge of knowledge, Kriger suggests, lies not despair but wonder—the recognition that our limitations are also openings onto a reality that always exceeds our grasp. The architecture of inquiry is never complete; it is a practice to be sustained, a conversation across centuries, an ongoing human project of understanding.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger