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Chapter XVI: Self-Ref and Self-Rep 495
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The Magn fierab, Indeed 549
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Chapter XVII: Church, Turing, Tarski, and Others 559
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SHRDFU, Toy of Man's Designing 586
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Chapter XVIII: Artificial Intelligence: Retrospects 594
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Contraf actus 633
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Chapter XIX: Artificial Intelligence: Prospects 641
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Sloth Canon 681
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Chapter XX: Strange Foops, Or Tangled Hierarchies 684
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Six-Part Ricercar 720
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Notes 743
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Bibliography 746
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Credits 757
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Index 759
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Contents
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VII
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Overview
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Part I: GEB
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Introduction: A Musico-Logical Offering. The book opens with the story of Bach's Musical
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Offering. Bach made an impromptu visit to King Frederick the Great of Prussia, and was
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requested to improvise upon a theme presented by the King. His improvisations formed the basis
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of that great work. The Musical Offering and its story form a theme upon which I "improvise"
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throughout the book, thus making a sort of "Metamusical Offering". Self-reference and the
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interplay between different levels in Bach are discussed: this leads to a discussion of parallel
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ideas in Escher's drawings and then Godel’s Theorem. A brief presentation of the history of logic
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and paradoxes is given as background for Godel’s Theorem. This leads to mechanical reasoning
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and computers, and the debate about whether Artificial Intelligence is possible. I close with an
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explanation of the origins of the book-particularly the why and wherefore of the Dialogues.
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Three-Part Invention. Bach wrote fifteen three-part inventions. In this three-part Dialogue, the
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Tortoise and Achilles-the main fictional protagonists in the Dialogues-are "invented" by Zeno (as
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in fact they were, to illustrate Zeno's paradoxes of motion). Very short, it simply gives the flavor
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of the Dialogues to come.
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Chapter I: The MU-puzzle. A simple formal system (the MIL'-system) is presented, and the reader
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is urged to work out a puzzle to gain familiarity with formal systems in general. A number of
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fundamental notions are introduced: string, theorem, axiom, rule of inference, derivation, formal
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system, decision procedure, working inside/outside the system.
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Two-Part Invention. Bach also wrote fifteen two-part inventions. This two-part Dialogue was written
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not by me, but by Lewis Carroll in 1895. Carroll borrowed Achilles and the Tortoise from Zeno,
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and I in turn borrowed them from Carroll. The topic is the relation between reasoning, reasoning
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about reasoning, reasoning about reasoning about reasoning, and so on. It parallels, in a way,
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Zeno's paradoxes about the impossibility of motion, seeming to show, by using infinite regress,
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that reasoning is impossible. It is a beautiful paradox, and is referred to several times later in the
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book.
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Chapter II: Meaning and Form in Mathematics. A new formal system (the pq-system) is
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presented, even simpler than the MlU-system of Chapter I. Apparently meaningless at first, its
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symbols are suddenly revealed to possess meaning by virtue of the form of the theorems they
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appear in. This revelation is the first important insight into meaning: its deep connection to
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isomorphism. Various issues related to meaning are then discussed, such as truth, proof, symbol
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manipulation, and the elusive concept, "form".
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Sonata for Unaccompanied Achilles. A Dialogue which imitates the Bach Sonatas for
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unaccompanied violin. In particular, Achilles is the only speaker, since it is a transcript of one
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end of a telephone call, at the far end of which is the Tortoise. Their conversation concerns the
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concepts of "figure" and "ground" in various
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Overview
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VIII
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contexts- e.g., Escher's art. The Dialogue itself forms an example of the distinction, since
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Achilles' lines form a "figure", and the Tortoise's lines-implicit in Achilles' lines-form a "ground".
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Chapter III: Figure and Ground. The distinction between figure and ground in art is compared to
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the distinction between theorems and nontheorems in formal systems. The question "Does a
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figure necessarily contain the same information as its ground%" leads to the distinction between
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recursively enumerable sets and recursive sets.
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Contracrostipunctus. This Dialogue is central to the book, for it contains a set of paraphrases of
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Godel’s self-referential construction and of his Incompleteness Theorem. One of the paraphrases
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of the Theorem says, "For each record player there is a record which it cannot play." The
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