i read this book as a senior in college in preparation for my thesis, which was basically about issues of selfhood and agency in a deterministic universe. it was, at the time, one of the most difficult books i'd ever read and, correspondingly, one of the most satisfying. the language can be difficult-- it's a literary critic analyzing systems analysis, for goodness sake-- if you don't have a pretty firm grasp of academese, it will not be easy going. but having mined it, i not only learned just a ton about the movement of scientific thought in the 20th century (particularly the VERY difficult and VERY important move from a deterministic world-view to a probabalistic one), but found these little gems, which i added to my intellectual tool kit and have been thinking with and about ever since: the platonic backhand and the the platonic forehand.
"The platonic backhand works by inferring from the world's noisy multiplicity a simplified abstraction. so far so good: this is what theorizing should do. the problem comes when the move circles around to constitute the abstraction as the originary form from which the world's multiplicity derives. then complexity appears as a 'fuzzing up' of an essential reality..." (Hayles, 1999, pp. 12-13).
anyway, this is a somewhat esoteric and challenging book, but if you're interested in thinking about consciousness, whether as a philosopher, biologists, computer scientist, psychologist- whatever- i highly recommend this one. and if you have dreams of uploading yourself onto a harddrive, existing bodyless in cyberspace, or living forever in a silicone body, it is absolutely required reading.