Gödel, Escher, Bach

23 Nov 2024 - 23 Nov 2024
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    • 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.