Overprotection
How Control Destroys What It Tries to Protect (Philosophical Questions)
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Narrated by:
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Bryan L Bernard
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By:
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Boris Kriger
Every parent, teacher, manager, and policymaker faces the same hidden trap: the instinct to protect can quietly destroy the very strength it hopes to build.
In this wide-ranging and deeply personal book, Boris Kriger reveals a universal pattern that connects the anxious parent hovering over a child’s homework to the safety engineer constraining an autonomous vehicle, the micromanager stifling a team’s creativity, and even the laws of physics that govern our universe. Drawing on evolutionary biology, artificial intelligence, organisational theory, and his own formal research in systems science, Kriger shows that overprotection is not a failure of judgment but a structural feature of any system in which one agent assumes responsibility for another.
The insight at the heart of this book is deceptively simple: there exists a critical threshold beyond which shielding someone from difficulty makes them more fragile, not less. Below that threshold, protection is wise. Beyond it, every additional layer of control erodes competence, narrows experience, and breeds the very helplessness it was meant to prevent.
But Kriger does not stop at diagnosis. He offers an alternative architecture—one borrowed from the safest systems humanity has designed—in which boundaries replace commands, and freedom to fail within safe limits becomes the engine of growth. From the biology of parental instinct to the mathematics of intelligent machines, from the fragility of monocultures to the emergence of complexity in quantum mechanics, this book weaves a single compelling argument: the deepest form of care is the courage to let go.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger