Philosopher Boris Kriger presents the argument that human cooperation is a fundamental law of nature rather than a fragile moral achievement enforced by authorities.
Drawing on his nine-year experience running a rule-free shelter Kriger suggests that mutual aid is the dynamical default of human systems when external interference and institutional stressors are removed.
He integrates Peter Kropotkins evolutionary biology with modern neurochemistry and network theory to demonstrate that helping others is a self-reinforcing biological habit.
The text reframes political governance as an engineering problem suggesting that artificial scarcity and hierarchical control are perturbations that actually break natural cooperative cycles.
Ultimately the work explores how decentralized systems and digital technologies can foster self-organization by connecting individuals rather than controlling them.
Kriger concludes that the path to a better society involves uncovering our inherent cooperative instincts by dismantling the structures that disrupt them.
Источник: rutube.ru