In Hofstadter's POV, a person's existence existence is an endless 
loop.
A defining event - some years ago - was the unfortunate death of his 
young daughter. Hofstadter seems to have difficulty grappling with 
her departure.  He states that the "entity" that made up his 
Daughter's persona is a collection of experiences that he can 
currently tune into. Therefore, from his materialist POV, she's still 
present somehow.
 There's no room at all for a Transcendent Reality in his worldview. 
But of course, one can grok the Transcendent without believing in an 
afterlife state; and visa versa. Here's a synopsis.:
[note: by "consciousness" Hofstadter admits that people are 
consciousness, but there's no room for "Being" (per MMY's definition) 
outside of the body/mind and especially the endless loop of thoughts.



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Synopsis:This is Douglas R Hofstadter's long-awaited return to the 
themes of "Godel", "Escher", "Bach" - an original and controversial 
view of the nature of consciousness and identity. Why do we say "I"? 
Can thought arise out of matter? By "thought" we mean not mere 
calculation, the manipulation of algorithms and patterns according to 
fixed rules, but something deeper: experience, self-awareness, 
consciousness. "I Am a Strange Loop" argues that the key to 
understanding the level on which consciousness operates is the 
feedback loop. After introducing the reader to simple feedback 
systems like a flush toilet, the ever-popular thermostat and his own 
experiments with a video camera pointed at its own monitor, he 
Hofstadter turns to the idea of "strange loops" - feedback loops, 
which exist on two levels of meaning, a theory, which Kurt Godel 
employed in the mathematical statements constructed for his 
famous "Incompleteness Theorem". Like Godel's logical statements, the 
brain also exists on at least two levels: a deterministic level of 
atoms and neurons, and a higher level of large mental structures we 
call symbols. One of these symbols, perhaps the central one which 
relates to all others in our minds, is the strange loop we call "I". 
By the time we reach adulthood, Hofstadter writes, "I" is an endless 
hall of mirrors, encompassing everything that has ever happened to 
us, vast numbers of counterfactual replays of important episodes in 
our lives, invented memories and expectations. But is it real? And if 
so, what does it consist of? Douglas Hofstadter's first book-length 
essay on a scientific subject since "Godel", "Escher", "Bach", "I Am 
a Strange Loop" is a journey to the cutting edge of ideas about 
consciousness - a bold and provocative argument that is informed by 
the author's unique verbal whimsy and eye for the telling example. 
Compulsively readable and endlessly thought-provoking, this is the 
book Hofstadter's many readers have been waiting for.



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