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When Words Fail

Language and the Limits of Thought

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When Words Fail

By: Boris Kriger
Narrated by: Warren A. Watkins
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About this listen

This book examines language as both a tool for communication and a means of understanding, while never forgetting its built-in limitations. Language shapes our thinking, yes—but in doing so, it erects barriers that keep us from grasping the raw, unfiltered essence of reality. Words, with their multiple meanings and dependence on context, have a bad habit of distorting the message, turning conversation into an elaborate and bewildering game of charades.

The author points to the paradoxes hiding within language itself, invoking Gödel’s famous incompleteness theorems as a reminder that no matter how precise language tries to be, it can never capture the whole of reality. Cultural and cognitive differences only make matters worse, widening the gap between perception and understanding.

The book also peers into the future, considering how language might evolve in the technological age—how artificial intelligence and new modes of communication may reshape not just how we speak, but how we think.

©2025 Boris Kriger (P)2025 Boris Kriger
Linguistics Logic & Language Philosophy Social Sciences Computer Science
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