THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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By SELF on Tuesday, April 28, 1998 - 04:34 am: |
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By Christopher on Tuesday, April 28, 1998 - 03:27 pm: |
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By Markus on Tuesday, April 28, 1998 - 04:28 pm: |
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By Christopher on Tuesday, April 28, 1998 - 05:45 pm: |
I have the first edition of GEB as well, and all of the Scientfic American articles in their respective magazines. I know that MT was published in a single volume, but I'm reluctant to spend the money on the softcover edition, as I've found them in secondhand shops and they are all yellowed already. I'm waiting for the day that I luck out and find the hardbound edition. I was fortunate to catch Hofstadter lecturing on A.I. and self referentiality about 6 years ago. He was very entertaining and shockingly younger than I had expected. |
By Markus on Wednesday, April 29, 1998 - 10:52 am: |
I knew he was one of the Young Turks in AI, and since the publication of GEB (at age 29! as I recall) has emerged as one of the primary speakers for one of the two warring factions in that discipline's civil war. I believe Roger Penrose is in the other camp; he's worth reading, but as he sums his position up so neatly and concisely to begin with, his later volumes tend to be somewhat repetitive. I've had the same experience with MT, and am waiting to stumble across it. I think I'm due to fly up to NYC on a book expedition soon. |
By Christopher on Wednesday, April 29, 1998 - 03:24 pm: |
I have a question for you..Is it possible that there has NEVER been a hardbound edition of MT? I am keeping my fingers crossed, because as I've said, the softbound editions that I find are already yellowed, and won't last another 25 years. I hope when you visit NYC that you are a habitue of The Strand, in Greenwich Village. It's one of my favorites. Their tag line "Miles and miles of books" is accurate. I always feel like a coal miner finding a diamond when I stumble across some unusual text. I found my first edition of William S. Burroughs "Dead Fingers Talk" there, complete with autograph and date of signing. Somehow it was sold to me for $5.50. It's hard to imagine finding real literary treasure anymore, but it does happen, and in my opinion, it's largely a numbers game. When I was younger, I would buy books by the yard at estate auctions. One of these purchases landed me an extremely rare text on entomology. The Strand has always given me that feeling of (ahem) boundless opportunity. |
I have been recently introduced to DRH and i find it really intriguing. Since the messages here are pretty old I was wondering if there is somebody around here still. |
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