Alan Turing: The EnigmaA gripping story of mathematics, science, computing, war history, cryptography, and homosexual persecution and liberation. Hodges tells how Turing's revolutionary idea of 1936-- the concept of a universal machine-- laid the foundation for the modern computer. Turing brought the idea to practical realization in 1945 with his electronic design. This work was directly related to Turing's leading role in breaking the German Enigma ciphers during World War II, a scientific triumph that was critical to Allied victory in the Atlantic. Despite his wartime service, Turing was eventually arrested, stripped of his security clearance, and forced to undergo a humiliating treatment program-- all for trying to live honestly in a society that defined homosexuality as a crime. This New York Times bestselling biography of the founder of computer science and artificial intelligence is the definitive account of an extraordinary mind and life. --Excerpted from 2014 version, published by Princeton University Press. |
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Page 266
... thought . Indeed in 1933 he had seen it on the stage , for in Back to Methuselah Shaw had a future scientist produce an artificial ' automaton ' which could show , or at least imitate , the thought and emotions of twentieth century ...
... thought . Indeed in 1933 he had seen it on the stage , for in Back to Methuselah Shaw had a future scientist produce an artificial ' automaton ' which could show , or at least imitate , the thought and emotions of twentieth century ...
Page 379
... thought this should be done . But his dominant interest now lay in the ' states of mind ' approach to ' building a brain ' . His guiding idea was that ' the brain must do it somehow ' , and that it had not become capable of thought by ...
... thought this should be done . But his dominant interest now lay in the ' states of mind ' approach to ' building a brain ' . His guiding idea was that ' the brain must do it somehow ' , and that it had not become capable of thought by ...
Page 405
... thought , no more than anyone would say that the nerve - cells thought . Here lay the confusion . It was the system as a whole that ' thought ' , in Alan's view , and it was its logical structure , not its particular physical embodiment ...
... thought , no more than anyone would say that the nerve - cells thought . Here lay the confusion . It was the system as a whole that ' thought ' , in Alan's view , and it was its logical structure , not its particular physical embodiment ...
Contents
The Spirit of Truth | 46 |
New Men | 111 |
The Relay Race 160 | 160 |
Copyright | |
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Alan Turing Alan Turing's Alan wrote Alan's American AMT's arithmetic Bletchley Bletchley Park Bombe boys brain Britain British calculation called Cambridge cathode ray tube chess Christopher cipher Computable Numbers cryptanalytic Darwin delay line Delilah differential analyser digits discussion Don Bayley Donald Michie EDVAC electronic enciphered engineering ENIAC Enigma machine fact G.H. Hardy German Hanslope Hilbert homosexual human idea instructions intelligence interest kind King's knew letter logical Manchester mathematician mathematics Max Newman mechanical messages method mind Morcom naval Enigma Neumann never Newman operations organisation paper perhaps Peter Hilton physical play plugboard position possible Princeton problem question Robin Gandy rotor scientific secret sexual Shaun Wylie Sherborne signals symbols talk tape teleprinter theorem theory thing thought took Turing machine U-boat universal machine Womersley word writing