Gödel, Escher, Bach - 20th Anniversary Edition / Douglas R. Hofstadter | ||||||
Reviewed by Tal Cohen | Friday, 30 April 1999 | |||||
In an interview to Wired magazine a few years back, Douglas R. Hofstadter, author of Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid (GEB for short) complained that most people, even those who actually read the book, couldn’t tell what it’s really about. Yes, it talks about music and art, mathematics and zen, biochemistry and computer languages; but none of these is what the book is really about. This seems to be a real problem, because in the new “20th Anniversary Edition” of the book, Hofstadter says that the question “so what is this book about?” haunted him since he was scribbling the first drafts, back in 1973. Now, twenty years after its first publication (in 1979), the author decided to clarify the matter once and for all, and added a new 23-page preface that, among other things, clarifies the issue. So — what is this book about? The New York Times bestsellers list originally summarized it as “A scientist argues that reality is a system of interconnected brains”. Hogwash. The Hacker’s Dictionary (also known as The Jargon File) says it’s “a brilliant tapestry themed on the concept of encoded self-reference”. Brilliant, yes; but otherwise not very accurate. Another common definition is “a book that shows how math, art, and music are really all the same thing at their core”. Hofstadter says he heard this one over and over again, even by people who read the book, and it is (in his own words) “a million miles off”. My own review of the book, the single most popular page on my web site, says that the book is about “the question of consciousness and the possibility of artificial intelligence. It is a book that attempts to discover what ’self’ really means”. Much closer (but then, I had the advantage of reading that Wired interview). “In a word,” writes Hofstadter in the new preface, “GEB is a very personal attempt to say how it is that animate beings can come out of inanimate matter. What is a self, and how can a self come out of stuff that is as selfless as a stone or a puddle?”. His explanation goes on, and clarifies at least one thing: despite its beautiful playfulness, GEB is a serious book presenting a serious theory about consciousness. Despite its popularity, it is not a “popular science” book. If you already read GEB, you’re probably wondering what else is new in the 20th Anniversary Edition — other than the new preface. Certainly, there were many possibilities. Most ideas were about additional chapters — about progress made in the last twenty years in the field of artificial intelligence, or about machine translation, and more. There was also the idea of including a new dialogue, that was previously published elsewhere. Wilder suggestions went as far as releasing GEB with a CD-ROM including Escher’s art, Bach’s works and recordings of all of GEB’s dialogues by professional narrators. None of that. Not a word was changed; not a figure added; not even, the author admits, the few typos fixed. The book is a facsimile of the original release, with even page numbering left intact (the preface pages use a separate numbering scheme, from P-1 to P-23). The CD-ROM suggestion was turned down because Hofstadter “intended GEB as a book, not as a multimedia circus, and a book it shall remain”. The other suggestions were turned down for more delicate reasons. But while the preface is the only change, it is a very important one. For first-time readers, it clears several aspects of the book before they commence reading. This is important, especially because GEB is anything but an easy read (some compared reading it to giving birth). For returning readers, the introduction clarifies many things, and sheds a new light on several aspects. In addition to establishing, once and for all, a formal definition to what the book is about, the introduction also describes the history of the book, and the history of its author for the last twenty years. You probably heard about the books he wrote later — Metamagical Themas, Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies, The Mind’s I (as a co-editor), and Le Ton beau de Marot: in Praise of the Music of Language (reviewed here). These books cover much of the suggested additions to GEB: Fluid Concepts, for example, covers Hofstadter’s research work, while Le Ton beau de Marot includes a lengthy discussion (or rather, a lengthy attack) on machine translation — among many other things. The preface also talks about GEB’s translations, a suggested sex-change operation for the Tortoise, a brief account of Hofstadter’s recent literary efforts, and more. Since you probably owe yourself a re-read of the book (you did read it before, right?), the new edition is as good an excuse as any to start now.
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Sam Scoville
writes: So, what is the new Preface saying? I've just started rereading my original edition, maybe for the 3rd time. Planning a group independent study initiated by a student. You review gives me no clue as to what Hofstadter says in his new preface. Is it on-line (the preface) or do I have to buy the new edition? I get the sense I'm asymptotically approaching an answer to the answer to the riddle of the Sphinx when I read this book. I don't know anything like it. Gregory Bateson's works are LIKE-minded, for me. Sam Scoville | ||
[114] Posted on Sunday, 29 April 2007 at 14:09 GMT [Reply to this] [Permalink] |
Tal Cohen
writes in reply to Sam Scoville: So, what is the new Preface saying? Hello Sam, I don't think the new preface is available online. Perhaps you can read it, or parts of it, with Amazon's preview service (''search inside'') or with similar online services; not sure. I think, however, that my review does give a rather bold clue to what Hofstadter says in the new preface; re-read the paragraph that begins with the words ''In a word''. In particular, the new preface clarifies what the book is about, and (as I say in the review above), ''GEB is a serious book presenting a serious theory about consciousness''. | ||
[115] Posted on Tuesday, 01 May 2007 at 19:37 GMT [Reply to this] [Permalink] |
Sam Scoville
writes: I found a bit of it Google-ing Hofstadter himself, included in ''Presidential Lectures.'' It makes sense that he didn't change a jot, tiddle, or iota in the text itself. It would have upset the balance, an excrescence. The work is ''perfect'' as is: complete | ||
[116] Posted on Tuesday, 01 May 2007 at 19:51 GMT [Reply to this] [Permalink] |
John Cowan
writes in reply to Sam Scoville: It's absurd to say that GEB is perfect Of course GEB is not perfect. Indeed, it contains many factual errors that have not been corrected because Hofstadter is (increasingly) obsessed with subordinating truth to typography. In the name of perfectly justified lines, he randomly alters the form of people's names in _Strange Loop_. It's getting to be a real tic. | ||
[364] Posted on Thursday, 12 February 2009 at 21:35 GMT [Reply to this] [Permalink] |
David Moed
writes: G?del Escher Bach Any idea where I might geta hardback version? | ||
[346] Posted on Sunday, 09 November 2008 at 13:12 GMT [Reply to this] [Permalink] |
Tal Cohen
writes in reply to David Moed: G?del Escher Bach Second-hand books, naturally. Alibris (http://www.alibris.com) have 40 copies available at the moment, at varying conditions and prices. | ||
[347] Posted on Sunday, 09 November 2008 at 18:32 GMT [Reply to this] [Permalink] |
Frank123
writes: Godel, Escher, Bach Inspired Song There is a song by a band called Saint Elmo based on a little harmonic labyrinth story which is featured in the book. Its called Majotours Labyrinth check it out. | ||
[840] Posted on Friday, 22 November 2013 at 0:09 GMT [Reply to this] [Permalink] |