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Machiavellian Logic for Structural Resilience

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Machiavellian Logic for Structural Resilience

Von: Boris Kriger
Gesprochen von: Richard Bryce Wallis
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Five centuries ago, Niccolò Machiavelli wrote a book that still disturbs us. The Prince offered rulers a cold calculus of power: how to acquire it, how to maintain it, how to eliminate threats not by hope or goodwill but by making one’s overthrow structurally impossible.

In this profound meditation on security, systems, and the nature of protection, Boris Kriger confronts his own ambivalence toward Machiavelli’s legacy. He is horrified by the cruelty the Florentine counseled—and captivated by the logic beneath it. For Machiavelli grasped something essential: that probability is not protection, that paths left open will eventually be walked, that only structural impossibility truly guarantees safety.

Kriger argues that Machiavelli’s deepest insight—the primacy of topological disconnection over behavioral deterrence—can be transmuted from a tool of tyranny into a framework for protection. The same logic that tells the prince how to secure his throne can tell the architect how to design systems where catastrophe is not merely unlikely but unreachable.This is a book about power and protection, about the topology of possibility, about what we must sacrifice to secure what we value. It is a book for anyone who builds systems—technical or institutional, digital or social—and who wonders how to build them safely.

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
Philosophie Politik & Regierungen
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