Gödel, Escher, Bach: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.GodelEscherBach 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.GodelEscherBach, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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* [[Cultural Translation]]: Several have been approved by the author.
* [[Cultural Translation]]: Several have been approved by the author.
* [[Distracted By the Shiny]]: The dialogues seem to get much more attention than the actual essay section of the book.
* [[Distracted By the Shiny]]: The dialogues seem to get much more attention than the actual essay section of the book.
* [[Door Stopper]]
* [[Doorstopper]]
* [[False Ending]]: A unique version which takes place ''after'' the actual ending.
* [[False Ending]]: A unique version which takes place ''after'' the actual ending.
* [[Useful Notes/Fermats Last Theorem|Fermats Last Theorem]]
* [[Useful Notes/Fermats Last Theorem|Fermats Last Theorem]]

Revision as of 02:35, 26 November 2013

Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas Hofstadter is an intricate and complex study of Strange Loops, Meta Concepts in general and their connection to self-awareness and intelligence. Each chapter is separated from the next by a short fictional piece in the style of Lewis Carroll, which exemplifies the theme of the following chapter.


The Dialogues contain examples of:

 Achilles: Say, don't you play the guitar?

Tortoise: Fiddle. It makes a big difference, you know.

Achilles: Oh, well, it's all the same to me.

  • Recursive Acronym: "GOD" in "Little Harmonic Labyrinth" (short for "GOD Over Djinn").
  • Recursive Reality. In so many ways.
  • Schrodingers Butterfly
  • She's a Man In Japan: The Tortoise is referred to as male in the original, but the French word for tortoise is the feminine tortue. Hofstadter, who is interested in the phenomenon of unconscious sexism in language, was delighted when this was pointed out, and gave the French translators the go-ahead to make the Tortoise a female character.
  • Self Deprecation: A book about "metal-logic", called Copper, Silver, Gold: an Indestructible Metallic Alloy is mentioned in the dialogues. The Crab says that it's "filled with strange Dialogues about many subjects, including molecular biology, fugues, Zen Buddhism, and heaven knows what else." Achilles responds that "probably some crackpot wrote it". The book is also listed in the bibliography, where it's called "a formidable hodge-podge, turgid and confused". Indeed very little praise is given to its author, Egbert B. Gebstadter.
  • Self Fulfilling Prophecy: Commented on if a psychic who could determine the minds of other people was allowed to choose his or her jury if accused.
  • Spoiled By the Format: The Tortoise and Achilles discuss using Filler to counteract this problem.
  • Stealth Pun
  • Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion: In one of the dialogues, the Crab puts on a record of himself singing "A Song Without Time or Season." Here's how it goes:

 A turner of phrases quite pleasin',

Had a penchant for trick'ry and teasin'.

In his songs, the last line

Might seem sans design;

What I mean is, without why or wherefore.

  • Textbook Humor: Well, the text wasn't all that serious to begin with, but you have to wonder when Hofstadter describes the DNA of a feline as CATCATCATCATCAT...
  • Title Drop: In the form of Book Ends.
  • To Be Continued: The two Dialogues Prelude... and ... Ant Fugue are, well, two sections of a separated story. The end of the former ends with TTortoise {{[[[You Make Me Sic]] Sic}}], while the latter begins with Achilles and CCrab {{[[[You Make Me Sic]] Sic}}], using "ATTACCA" as a guide.
  • The Treachery of Images: Subverted--one character takes the pipe out of the painting and smokes it.
  • Variant Chess