
The Uncertainty Principle
An Exhaustive Inquiry Into Things That Cannot Be Proven nor Understood
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Narrateur(s):
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Lenard A Liebe
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Auteur(s):
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George Kevers
À propos de cet audio
What if the only thing you can ever truly know…is that you know nothing at all?
This is not your average philosophical treatise. It’s not even your average existential crisis. This is the book your inner skeptic, your overactive imagination, and your uncomfortably self-aware houseplant have been waiting for.
Crafted by satirical philosopher and literary trickster George Kevers, The Uncertainty Principle is a thought experiment dressed in academic robes and running shoes. It spirals through epistemology, solipsism, metaphysics, and the mess of modern meaning—equal parts intellectual farce and spiritual séance.
And it dares to ask: If reality depends on the observer… who’s actually watching?
Inside, you’ll find:
- A descent into philosophical madness—beginning with a single, innocent question: What is knowledge?
- Solipsistic dread, recounted with biting humor and a whisper of cosmic conspiracy.
- Reflections on perception, consciousness, and the sneaky lies we call "facts."
- A scientist trapped in a one-person experiment (spoiler: it’s you).
- A divine identity crisis—are you God, or just really bad at delegating?
Form Meets Farce: This audiobook flows like a lucid dream inside a philosophy class that accidentally took a wrong turn through an art museum.
It’s witty. It’s weird. It’s worryingly relatable. Whether you’re a seasoned metaphysician, an armchair mystic, or someone who just wants to feel smarter than their coffee table, there’s something in here for you Ideal
For listeners who enjoy:
- Douglas Hofstadter’s Gödel, Escher, Bach (but wish it had more jokes)
- Alan Watts meets Monty Python
- Philosophical musings with a generous dash of existential side-eye
- Beautiful books with stunning design and high-concept satire