AMMDI is an open-notebook hypertext writing experiment, authored by Mike Travers aka mtraven. It's a work in progress and some parts are more polished than others. Comments welcome! More.
A Klein bottle might be an icon of nonduality – a strangely twisted surface that has only one side, and thus fails to carve space into an inside and outside while seeming like it should. I can't be the first to make that connection, it sounds like something out of Gödel, Escher, Bach.
SSOTBME Revised - an essay on magic, book by Ramsey Dukes, recommended by PF of WS. The full title is "Sex Secrets of the Black Magicians Explained", which is mostly a joke. The guy is very RAW-ish in that he is constantly playing around with his degree of seriousness, and talking about the fact that he is doing so...something inherently metacircular about this whole space, although I'd be hard-pressed to define it. As I mentioned in High Weirdness review, it's sort Hofstadter-ish self-reference games but coupled with a fairly aggressive Trickster energy, this stuff inherently is fucking with you.
However, Hofstadter’s clever meta-games in his book’s structure and style are made explicit, a pedagogical magician who explains each step of the trick as she performs it. Deleuze doesn’t explain his method, but rather assumes that you will be affected by his magic trick.
That is interestingly similar to what I wrote about High Weirdness
The philosophically interesting thing about these mechanisms is that they illustrate ways in which physical systems can implement semantics. A triplet of DNA codons means a particular amino acid, but only by virtue of the structure of its interpreter (the ribosome) [cite Hofstadter piece]. "ADD A to B" means a particular process of electrical activity as well as its result.
But where Hofstadter՚s metacircular loops tend to be orderly quasi-mathematical formal patterns, the loops of High Weirdness are subtler, stranger, and harder to pin down. They are viral and agent-like; they are darker, more personal, more like narratives than beautiful patterns. They begin as texts and but then leap off the page to enfold their authors. They take on aspects of a Landian hyperstition, a myth that has independent agency and can somehow act to call itself into being. They pose a challenge to mainstream metaphysics in a way that Hofstadter՚s more purely cognitive loops do not.
If High Weirdness is a viral construct that has a tendency to infect authors and readers, and can transmit itself by way of texts, then High Weirdness itself is a carrier. Davis is quite explicit about this, at one point comparing his text to bubble gum on the shoe, something sticky that just won՚t go away and is passed on from one carrier to the next (of course making this review another potential carrier of the infection – sorry about that! But you can blame the weirdly irresistible agency of the idea).
book by Douglas Hofstadter
title: Hofstadter’s Gödel, Escher, Bach
This is a book that seems like it should have had more impact than it actually did. When it came out, it was rightly hailed as a tour de force, integrating philosophy, mathematics, and the imagination to illustrate a profound concept that was not taken as seriously as it should (self-reference).
Hofstadter spent the rest of his career trying to do AI based on his core idea of fluid analogies, but aside from a few of his students I don't think that had much influence on the field.
A section (p662) that discussess message-passing languages, citing Alan Kay and Hewitt.
Dialog on Zen (p234) is actually pretty delightful, if very nerdy. The elaborate analogy be constructs between the process of understanding a koan and ribosomal interpretation of DNA...eh, not so sure about that one.
To me, Zen is intellectual quicksand–anarchy, darkness, meaninglessness, chaos. It is tantalizing and infuriating. And yet it is humorous, refreshing, enticing. (p246)
I'm kind of glad he said that. I'm dipping into Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind and something about it scares me, it is so clear, such a dissolving acid bath. There is something terrifying there. I can't ungrasp to the degree it asks me to. It might be a mind-destroying ideas and I kind of like my mind, I don't want to let it go.
I Am A Strange Loop
A followup book which restates the central themes more explicitly