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Loading... I Am a Strange Loopby Douglas R. Hofstadter
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Hofstadter definitely needs professional help. ( )A very engaging, cleverly written book. It is rare that a book in Science is written in such a way as to pull you in. Can't say I thoroughly enjoyed it, but that's more my loop than anyone else's! I started this, and then library school happened. I intend to finish it. I want to be best friends with Douglas Hofstadter--he is a super nice person, in addition to being very intelligent and witty. It didn't have the flare that GEB did but it was still interesting reading. I really dig the idea of a strange loop and how it leads to "I". I'm not so sure about his idea of dispersed copies of self though. I'll go back and read some chapters in a couple of years and see what's what. A deeply frustrating book with many hidden gems. Hofstadter is clearly very very smart, and at its best this book is very very good. His key argument is that one can reject dualism and accept that there is nothing here but us atoms, and at the same time reject reductionism. So higher-level structures (loops) emerge from lower-level elements and yet are not "less fundamental". His argument of this point, based on Godel's Theorem, is entrancing apart from the endless divergences. It takes the first two-thirds of the book. The final third, more personal, is less interesting and betrays something of an agenda - a wish to deny the finality of death. 0.139 seconds to build listing no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0465030785, Hardcover)What do we mean when we say "I"? Can thought arise out of matter? Can a self, a soul, a consciousness, an "I" arise out of mere matter? If it cannot, then how can you or I be here? I Am a Strange Loop argues that the key to understanding selves and consciousness is the "strange loop"--a special kind of abstract feedback loop inhabiting our brains. Deep down, a human brain is a chaotic seething soup of particles, on a higher level it is a jungle of neurons, and on a yet higher level it is a network of abstractions that we call "symbols." The most central and complex symbol in your brain or mine is the one we both call "I." The "I" is the nexus in our brain where the levels feed back into each other and flip causality upside down, with symbols seeming to have free will and to have gained the paradoxical ability to push particles around, rather than the reverse. For each human being, this "I" seems to be the realest thing in the world. But how can such a mysterious abstraction be real--or is our "I" merely a convenient fiction? Does an "I" exert genuine power over the particles in our brain, or is it helplessly pushed around by the all-powerful laws of physics? These are the mysteries tackled in I Am a Strange Loop, Douglas R. Hofstadter's first book-length journey into philosophy since Godel, Escher, Bach. Compulsively readable and endlessly thought-provoking, this is the book Hofstadter's many readers have long been waiting for. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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