How to Become a Genius
Philosophical Questions
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Narrado por:
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Jeffery J Downs
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De:
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Boris Kriger
What if genius is not a gift but a regime — a specific, identifiable state of a system that can be understood, entered, and sustained?
For centuries, the question of exceptional achievement has been carved up among rival disciplines. Geneticists claim it lives in DNA. Psychologists insist it emerges from practice. Neuroscientists locate it in synaptic density. Sociologists point to culture and timing. Each holds a piece of the truth. None holds the whole.
In How to Become a Genius, Boris Kriger does something none of these traditions has attempted: he treats the factors behind extraordinary achievement as a single, interlocking system — one governed by the same structural principles that shape weather patterns, ecosystems, and the evolution of stars. Drawing on dynamical systems theory, neuroscience, psychology, and the formal framework of his peer-reviewed research "Adaptive Genius as a Structural Viability Regime", he reveals a mechanism with five moving parts: practice, environment, self-belief, motivation, and the brain's own capacity for change.
The factors do not add up. They multiply. Talent without environment yields nothing. Practice without belief collapses. But when all five variables cross their thresholds together, the system enters a self-reinforcing growth regime — and once inside, it is remarkably difficult to dislodge.
This is not a motivational book. It is an analytical one. Kriger shows why simultaneous discoveries are structurally inevitable, why artificial intelligence is the most important cognitive partner humans have ever had, why failure is a system state rather than a character flaw, and why the threshold for extraordinary achievement is not fixed by biology but is a function of variables you can change.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger