SATURDAY: We humans do have our higher pursuits!

SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 2025

Gödel, Escher and Bosh: "What Can I Do For You?"

Once again, it was one of Dylan's questions, during his Christian period. Three albums emerged from that era, including Saved, the 1980 album which included this heartfelt cut.

We're not religious ourselves. Beyond that, we have no cosmological beliefs, beyond the assumption that we humans—at least those of us in the West—don't have the slightest idea who or what or where we are, or how we got wherever we are, or how the realm in which we're found can best be characterized.

Still, "What Can I Do For You?" strikes us as a superb performance of a song which can have strong secular application. A bit of tape we watched yesterday reminded us of the Christian albums, each of which had at least one song we very much liked and admired.

"What Can I Do For You?" was one such song. As our national culture—such as it was—continues to crash and burn. the song is asking a question we ourselves continue to chase.

Then too, there's what Kevin has said.

As we've long noted, we think Kevin Drum's work on lead exposure is the best work we know about in the whole quarter century of online exposition. Plainly, though, he was trying to trigger us when he listed the Hofstadter book among his twenty favorites in this recent street-fighting post.

Why would he want to lash out like that? We have no idea.

He stuck it in at #11, pretending he meant for its inclusion to go unnoticed. To what book do we refer? We refer to this (award-winning) book, a book of close to 800 pages:

Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid. Douglas Hofstadter, 1979.

As if that isn't bad enough, the publisher includes this grabber as a capsule description:

A metaphorical fugue on minds and machines in the spirit of Lewis Carroll.

Ow ow ow ow ow ow ow! You may be getting our point.

At one point, maybe twelve years ago, we actually tried to peruse this famous book. To be fair, the book did win several major awards. The leading authority offers this short account of the world's longest possible book:

Gödel, Escher, Bach

Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid, also known as GEB, is a 1979 book by Douglas Hofstadter.

By exploring common themes in the lives and works of logician Kurt Gödel, artist M. C. Escher, and composer Johann Sebastian Bach, the book expounds concepts fundamental to mathematics, symmetry, and intelligence. Through short stories, illustrations, and analysis, the book discusses how systems can acquire meaningful context despite being made of "meaningless" elements. It also discusses self-reference and formal rules, isomorphism, what it means to communicate, how knowledge can be represented and stored, the methods and limitations of symbolic representation, and even the fundamental notion of "meaning" itself.

In response to confusion over the book's theme, Hofstadter emphasized that Gödel, Escher, Bach is not about the relationships of mathematics, art, and music, but rather about how cognition emerges from hidden neurological mechanisms. One point in the book presents an analogy about how individual neurons in the brain coordinate to create a unified sense of a coherent mind by comparing it to the social organization displayed in a colony of ants.

Gödel, Escher, Bach won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction and the National Book Award for Science Hardcover.

"Confusion over the book's theme?" Where could that have come from?

In fairness, we included the passage about the awards.  That said, here's what the leading authority tells us next about this award-winning book:

Structure

Gödel, Escher, Bach takes the form of interweaving narratives. The main chapters alternate with dialogues between imaginary characters, usually Achilles and the tortoise, first used by Zeno of Elea and later by Lewis Carroll in "What the Tortoise Said to Achilles." These origins are related in the first two dialogues, and later ones introduce new characters such as the Crab. These narratives frequently dip into self-reference and metafiction.

Word play also features prominently in the work. Puns are occasionally used to connect ideas, such as the "Magnificrab, Indeed" with Bach's Magnificat in D; "SHRDLU, Toy of Man's Designing" with Bach's "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring"; and "Typographical Number Theory", or "TNT", which inevitably reacts explosively when it attempts to make statements about itself. One dialogue contains a story about a genie (from the Arabic "Djinn") and various "tonics" (of both the liquid and musical varieties), which is titled "Djinn and Tonic". Sometimes word play has no significant connection, such as the dialogue "A Mu Offering", which has no close affinity to Bach's The Musical Offering.

One dialogue in the book is written in the form of a crab canon, in which every line before the midpoint corresponds to an identical line past the midpoint. The conversation still makes sense due to uses of common phrases that can be used as either greetings or farewells ("Good day") and the positioning of lines that double as an answer to a question in the next line. Another is a sloth canon, where one character repeats the lines of another, but slower and negated.

Ow ow ow ow ow ow ow! By now, you surely must know what we mean. 

For ourselves, we'd be slow to assume that the judges who awarded those prizes actually read all the way through this book. Beyond that, its reasoning largely turns on "Russell's Paradox," a formulation which we regard as the upper-end academic clown show of the last century.

With apologies, this arrives early in the 787-page book, mostly on page 17:

Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid

[...]

In the examples we have seen of Strange Loops by Bach and Escher, there is a conflict between the finite and the infinite, and hence a strong sense of paradox. Intuition senses that there is something mathematical involved here. And indeed in our own century a mathematical counterpart was discovered, with the most enormous repercussions. And, just as the Bach and Escher loops appeal to very simple and ancient intuitions—a musical scale, a staircase—so this discovery, by K. Gôdel, of a Strange Loop in mathematical systems has its origins in simple and ancient intuitions. In its absolutely barest form, Godel's discovery involves the translation of an ancient paradox in philosophy into mathematical terms. That paradox is the so-called Epimenides paradox, or liar paradox. Epimenides was a Cretan who made one immortal statement: "All Cretans are liars." A sharper version of the statement is simply "I am lying;" or, "This statement is false." It is that last version which I will usually mean when I speak of the Epimenides paradox. It is a statement which rudely violates the usually assumed dichotomy of statements into true and false, because if you tentatively think it is true, then it immediately backfires on you and makes you think it is false. But once you've decided it is false, a similar backfiring returns you to the idea that it must be true. Try it!

The Epimenides paradox is a one-step Strange Loop, like Escher's Print Gallery. But how does it have to do with mathematics? That is what Gödel discovered. His idea was to use mathematical reasoning in exploring mathematical reasoning itself. This notion of making mathematics "introspective" proved to be enormously powerful, and perhaps its richest implication was the one Gödel found: Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem. What the Theorem States and how it is proved are two different things. We shall discuss both in quite some detail in this book. The Theorem can be likened to a pearl, and the method of proof to an oyster. The pearl is prized for its luster and simplicity; the oyster is a complex living beast whose innards give rise to this mysteriously simple gem.

Gödel's Theorem appears as Proposition VI in his 1931 paper "On Formally Undecidable Propositions in Principia Mathematica and Related Systems I." It states:

To every w-consistent recursive class K of formulae there correspond recursive class-signs r, such that neither v Gen r nor Neg (v Gen r) belongs to Fig (K) (where v is the free variable of r).

Actually, it was in German, and perhaps you feel that it might as well be in German anyway. So here is a paraphrase in more normal English:

All consistent axiomatic formulations of number theory include undecidable propositions.

This is the pearl.

So much to ridicule, so little time—and we do regard that as a clown car. But in this, the world within which Dylan longed to serve, that's a prime example of the (high academic) business we've chosen.

The sheer folly of "This statement is false" would almost seem to come straight out of the work of the later Wittgenstein. We've run through this folly several times in the past. Today, we won't go there again.

In fairness, this endless book won major awards! On the other hand, we regard it, on its face, as a work of manifest nonsense on an ascending scale.

(This statement is false, the logician once said. But to what statement was he referring? No such statement existed!)

"What can I do for you?" Dylan once asked. We've been chasing the same puzzle too, with no good outcome in sight.

Our national discourse, such as it ever has been, has descended all the way onto the garbage pile. Our journalists continue to refuse to discuss the actual state of play as an apparent madman ascends our ultimate crystal stair.

Our discourse sits on the garbage pile. On the highest end of our academic discourse, big piles of bosh fail to help.

We regard GEB as the world's least coherent, most self-impressed and self-referential book. Admittedly, it won several major awards, and our view could always be wrong, if only in some minor way which has long escaped detection.

For extra credit only: "All consistent axiomatic formulations of number theory include undecidable propositions?"

Is there anything "normal" about that "English?" On what planet? Discuss!

VOTERS: Triumph of the jugglers and clowns!

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2025

Dylan nails it again: What was the gentleman talking about when he spoke of "American carnage?"

You're asking an excellent question! 

The speech in question can be read here. Eight years later, as a new year began, we were lost in American squalor:

DONALD TRUMP JUNIOR (1/1/25): Biden’s parting gift to America—migrant terrorists.

We refer to moral and intellectual squalor. The gentleman included a photo of the New Orleans assailant's white truck. 

Minutes later, a flyweight followed suit:

REP. GREENE (1/1/25): New Orleans terrorist attacker is said to have come across the border in Eagle Pass TWO DAYS AGO!!!

Shut the border down!!!

Who did our government bomb lately that is taking it out on innocent Americans?

For the record, we don't even know what that last question meant. And no—instant shouting about what "is said" to the side, the New Orleans perpetrator didn't come across the border at all!

In fairness, Rep. Greene's one suggestion—"Shut the border down!!!"—isn't the worst idea in the world, taken on its own. (Though that of course would depend on what is meant by the familiar suggestion.)

How did it [ever] get this far? You're asking an excellent question! This morning, watching Fox & Friends, we thought about a few of the Fox News Channel's collection of broken toys:

Fox News Channel journalists:
Emily Campagno: Former head cheerleader, Oakland Raiders
Tyrus: Former professional "wrestler"
Kennedy: Former VJ, MTV
Greg Gutfeld: Fellow who asked, on (at least) three prime time programs this summer, if Hunter Biden has started "banging" or "[BLEEP]ing" Jill Biden yet

He asked and he asked, then he asked again. As he did, the people who went to the finest schools agreed to avert their gaze.

At the age of 60, Gutfeld serves as monarch of a stream of flyweight D-list comedians on our most-watched "cable news" channel. 

Gutfeld handles the broken toys. Bob Dylan, who's back in the news again, once referred to such an assembly in the following manner:

Like A Rolling Stone

[...]

Ah, you never turned around to see the frowns
On the jugglers and the clowns 
When they all did tricks for you.
You never understood that it ain't no good
To let other people get your kicks for you.

"Jugglers and clowns," the younger man said. Today, such types are ascendant.

The sheer stupidity on the Fox News Channel this morning was matched by the sheer stupidity on the Fox News Channel last night. Then again, have there occasionally been jugglers and clowns supplying kicks for us over here in our own Blue America? 

Briefly, let's be clear! There's no reason why a former "wrestler" couldn't be an insightful news analyst. There's no reason why a D-list comedian couldn't be able to offer insightful analysis.

There's no reason why commentators of the Fox News Channel kind couldn't offer insightful analysis. That said:

As a general matter, the Fox News Channel has established one basic fact. As a general matter, selection of people like these to serve as a nation's major tribunes will quite likely turn out to be an extremely bad idea.

For the record, the jugglers and clowns will be keeping it up as the new year proceeds. 

Fish gotta swim and birds gotta fly and jugglers and clowns gotta juggle. That, of course, is especially true when the jugglers and the clowns are being paid large sums to perform that service.

That said, though our major news orgs have agreed not to try, it has always been relatively easy to spot the juggling being conducted by the other tribe.

How about our own Blue tribe? Have we had our own jugglers and clowns in recent years? 

The latest column by Clarence Page raised that question for us once again. Page writes for Tribune Content Agency—for the Chicago Tribune. He's a good and smart and decent person. We once sat next to him, all evening long, during a charity dinner event.

His column was published on December 30. Headline included, his column started like this:

Behind the “Lie of the Year,” some bitter truths

As it has been doing yearly since 2009, the fact-checking organization PolitiFact has chosen the Lie of the Year. There was an abundance of nominees.

And, it turns out, they chose the same whopper I identified as a top contender months ago: President-elect Donald Trump’s unfounded claim that Haitian migrants were eating the household pets of Springfield, Ohio.

“In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs,” said the former and now future Republican president during his Sept. 10 debate with his Democratic rival, Vice President Kamala Harris.

“The people that came in,” he continued to a TV audience of an estimated 67 million viewers. “They’re eating the cats. They’re eating, they’re eating the pets of the people that live there. And this is what’s happening in our country. And it’s a shame.”

Make no mistake! That repeated claim, by Trump and by incoming second banana Vance, was an unmistakable example of modern American squalor. But given the profusion of bogus claims within our failed American discourse—given the "abundance of nominees"—certain questions may seem to arise: 

Should a major fact-checking site be picking one single "Lie of the Year?" Also, should a major fact-checking site be trafficking in the difficult term "lie" at all?

To be honest, it seems a bit flyweight to us when PolitiFact adopts such practices. That said, a nation has essentially ceased to exist when a high-profile pair of jugglers and clowns can traffic in statements about the eating of pets in the way Trump and Vance repeatedly did. 

There and elsewhere, Trump and Vance did engage in the ultimate act of squalor. But Page goes on in his piece to roll his eyes about a different view—about an alternate view advanced from within the ranks of the other tribe.

Let's be clear! The complaint in question is largely dumb—but that may not be all it is. In our view, Page makes it a bit too easy when he brushes that pushback aside.

Have we Blues had our own jugglers and clowns? Have we allowed ourselves to be misled by ridiculous statements and by absurd, unexplained behaviors by major figures within our own flailing tribe?

Like the citizens of the fictional Oran, have we failed to see the unmistakable signs of the plague all around us? "Like everybody else," have we been "wrapped up in [our]selves?" Did we "forget to be modest?"

The younger Dylan may perhaps have seen our cadre coming. Again and again, our tribunes "went to the finest schools," but do we now sometimes resemble this group?

You used to laugh about
Everybody that was hanging out
Now you don't talk so loud
Now you don't seem so proud
About having to be scrounging your next meal.

We didn't lose by much this year. But we did manage to lose, and the results could turn out to be catastrophic.

Many of us still can't imagine why any decent person wouldn't have voted the same way we did. The answer starts with the complaint Page brushes aside, but it dates back much farther than that.

The car ride starts with President Biden. But then again, it also starts in the autumn of 65.

American squalor is now in the saddle. How should we Blues react?

Next week: Your question answered at last

VOTERS: Incoming president does it again!

THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2024

This is the discourse we've chosen: "Th[is] darkest evening of the year?"

These "darkest evenings" are rather common at this point in time. Yesterday morning, in the second half of the 10 o'clock hour, the broadcast team at the Fox News Channel got over its skis just a bit.

There's certainly nothing new about that! But as you can see by clicking this link, here's what was said by correspondent Alexis McAdams, starting at 10:39 a.m. Eastern:

MCADAMS (1/1/25): According to federal sources, the suspect drove a truck with that Texas license plate. This is just coming into our newsroom. This is from Griff Jenkins and David Spunt, working their federal sources on this.

The suspect drives that truck, with a Texas license plate, right through Bourbon Street. According to their sources to Spunt and Jenkins, this person came through Eagle Pass, Texas, two days ago, OK?

So said McAdams, by now at 10:40 a.m. By now, it seems that one part of what she said was simply wrong. But it's perfectly clear that McAdams had ventured out over her skis.

As every Fox News viewer would know, Eagle Pass is a south Texas border community. Especially at Fox, Eagle Pass has played a leading role in the general immigration story in the course of the past year. 

McAdams had now said that the perpetrator of the murders in New Orleans had "come through Eagle Pass" just two days before, according to federal sources.

The insinuation was fairly obvious. At that point, Fox News Channel anchor Molly Line let the insinuation pass. 

Elsewhere, down in the Sunshine State, someone else may have leaped at the bait. Eight minutes after McAdams' report, an incoming president offered this post on the inaptly named Truth Social site: 

INCOMING PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP (1/1/25): When I said that the criminals coming in are far worse than the criminals we have in our country, that statement was constantly refuted by Democrats and the Fake News Media, but it turned out to be true. The crime rate in our country is at a level that nobody has ever seen before. Our hearts are with all of the innocent victims and their loved ones, including the brave officers of the New Orleans Police Department. The Trump Administration will fully support the City of New Orleans as they investigate and recover from this act of pure evil!

So posted the incoming president. His post drove the notion that the perpetrator, whose identity was still unknown, must have been a terrorist—an illegal immigrant?—who had recently entered the country across the southern border.

Needless to say, it could have turned out to be true! But as the matter has turned out, it seems that it actually wasn't.

As it seems to have turned out, the perpetrator was an American citizen, born and raised in Beaumont. But in this way, an incoming president spread an insinuation far and wide. 

As the new year dawned over our flailing nation, this was again a major part of the national discourse we've chosen. 

By 10:48 a.m., the Fox News Channel's David Spunt was clarifying the matter. By clicking here, you can see what Spunt now said:

SPUNT: So we're hearing that the vehicle was traced to coming across from Mexico into the United States from Eagle Pass, Texas two days ago. To be clear, we don't one hundred percent know that this man, and we do know that the suspect was a man, was the person driving that across the border. That is unclear at this point.

They didn't know it "one hundred percent?" In fact, they didn't know it at all! But by now, the insinuation had gone forth to the nation. An incoming president seemed to have taken the insinuation and run.

Rather plainly, the insinuation lurking in McAdams' report advanced preferred Storyline. The incoming president seemed to run with the insinuation as millions of people looked on.

This is part of the discourse we've chosen as we begin the year in this, our flailing nation. In his instant post, the incoming president seemed to be driving the latest clown car. For many voters in Red America, this is one of the clown cars they've chosen over the past dozen years.

(We're dating back to the start of the clown car claims, broadcast on Fox by Donald J. Trump, about President Obama's imagined place of birth. Greta van Susteren—for the record, she and her husband were Rachel's drinking pals—served as the "caddy" for Trump's endless inane birther claims.)

Many voters in Red America have chosen to ride in that car. But what about the various cars those of us in Blue America have possibly chosen to ride in?

Have we, the voters of Bue America, chosen to rise in some clown cars too? Has some such lack of discernment been a part of the discourse we've chosen?

Those of us in Blue America have been slow to spot the fact that we've engaged in errors of discernment too.  In Tuesday's report, we offered a glimpse of the darkness which can even lurk in Blue American hearts. 

According to experts, such occasional hearts of darkness are part of our species' basic wiring. The clown cars which have carried us to this place are simply part of the deal.

In our view, we Blues have also been riding in clown cars over the past many years. Next week, as the new year unfolds, we plan to suggest some possibilities for you.

The incoming president has been this way for years. He's one of the clown cars we've chosen.

That said, what about us over here? Isit possible that there have been ways in which we Blues have chosen to ride in such cars? Have there been ways in which our own imperfect discernment has probably driven voters away, may have quite probably cost us votes in this past year's narrow election?

Lori Mosura's a skid mark, some voters have said. She needs to get it good and hard! She needs to be culled from the herd!

Tomorrow: Whatever seems to come next

WEDNESDAY: Man is shoved onto subway tracks!

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1, 2025

Trump won by millions and millions: Absent this morning's event in New Orleans, it might have been the leading topic on this morning's Fox & Friends. It could have been a contender!

We're not even saying that would have been wrong! Even as we sit here typing, this is the start of the news report at the New York Times:

Man Is Arrested in Subway Shoving in Manhattan

A 23-year-old man was arrested and charged with attempted murder on Tuesday night, hours after a man waiting on a Manhattan subway platform was violently shoved into the path of an oncoming train.

The victim, whose name had not been released, was in critical but stable condition at Bellevue Hospital, the police said.

The man who was arrested in the shoving, Kamel Hawkins, was also charged with second-degree assault. He has a string of past arrests on charges of assault, harassment and weapons possession, according to police and court records.

That might have been the featured news event on today's Fox & Friends. As has been decreed by Caesar, everyone would have agreed with everything everyone said.

As everyone knows, the Fox News Channel presents certain established Storylines concerning events of this general type. By the way, can anyone say that the Fox News Channel's established framework is obviously "wrong?" 

At this point, we offer a question:

Is it possible that those of us in Blue America have perhaps been dumbnified a tiny bit by the established approach to such events of our own tribal orgs? (We refer to an established approach in which we agree to glance away from the themes which are driving the discourse at Fox.) Is it possible that Red America is actually being exposed to the more intelligent approach to events of this type?

(Quickly, also this: Under established rules of the game, it's journalistically normal to discuss behaviors of this type in terms of mental illness and mental health. Such concepts are not allowed to appear within our failing nation's political reporting or discussions.)

This morning, also this:

Last evening, as the old year ended, the incoming president was asked about President Biden's reported belief that he would have won the election had he stayed iin the race.

The incoming president doesn't seem to agree. As he gave his response, he cleared up a lingering question about the November election:

TRUMP (12/31/24): Well, he was way behind. He would’ve really, I assume, not had a chance. He was way behind her, and we won in record numbers, as you know. in every swing state

We won the popular vote by millions and millions of people, so—

Hey look, I wish him well. He had a chance to do it in the debate and that didn't work out too well for him. That was, I guess, the reason that really led to his downfall.

Interesting! The selling of message never stops on various sides of various aisles. That has perhaps never been more true than with the endless selling of message performed by the incoming president, pretty much all through his life.

According to the incoming president, he won the nationwide popular vote "by millions and millions of people." Also, he seems to have said that he won by "record numbers" in every swing state—even in Michigan, where he won by less than one point!

The messaging never stops, and not just from Donald J. Trump. Just last night, we saw the latest Stepford on the Fox News Channel describe November's election as "a landslide." 

Needless to say, no numbers were cited. According to the Cook Political Report, here's where the numbers stand:

Nationwide popular vote, 2024
Donald J. Trump (R): 77,301,997 (49.80%)
Kamala Harris (D): 75,017,626 (48.33%)

Our question: Is fewer than 2.3 million votes actually "millions and millions?" Before you answer, remember what we showed you yesterday: 

In certain precincts, 2.1 percentage points is less, while 1.47 percentage points is known to be much, much more.

Did Candidate Donald J. Trump actually win "by millions and millions of people?"  At the New York Post, Douglas McEntyre has reported what the incoming president said. McEntyre was careful to avoid citing any actual numbers. 

Within the world of modern journalism, statistics can be very hard. Storyline is understood to be easy and pleasing.

Numbers can be annoying and hard. Tribal dogma is easy. That said, riddle us this:

Is it possible that, on balance, the Fox News Channel has been more right than MSNBC about that event in New York? Is it possible that cable viewers in Red America have been dumbed down less, in this particular content area, than those of us who are Blue?

We're asking you if that is possible. Over here in Blue America, how's our mental and intellectual health as another year starts?

Also this: As we noted in Monday's report, Woody Guthrie has said this:
Well now I just ramble 'round to see what I can see.
It's a wide, wicked world, sure a funny place to be.
Is it possible that the messaging is general within our flailing nation, over some topics more than others? Also, is it possible that, on the rare occasion, our messaging here in Blue America may have tended to dumb us down?

A final bit of information:

At this point, the man who was shoved onto the tracks is apparently still alive.