CONCEPT
The Strange Loop
Hofstadter's central architectural claim that <em>consciousness is not produced by self-reference but is self-reference</em> — the recursive level-crossing tangle in which a system's model of itself becomes causally efficacious in its own processing.
The strange loop is Hofstadter's decades-long answer to the hardest question in cognitive science: what is consciousness, actually? Not a correlate, not a byproduct, but the thing itself. A strange loop is a specific kind of self-reference in which a system powerful enough to model itself produces a representation that then feeds back into the very processing it represents. The model is not a spectator; it is a player. The brain modeling itself modeling the world modeling itself — round and round, tangled and alive — produces the felt experience of being someone rather than something. In I Am a Strange Loop (2007), Hofstadter made the claim explicit: the 'I' is a pattern that becomes real by affecting what produces it.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The argument draws its formal power from Kurt Gödel's 1931 incompleteness theorem, which demonstrated that formal systems powerful enough to represent themselves necessarily contain truths their own machinery cannot prove. Hofstadter saw in this not
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