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Sat Jun 23, 2012, 03:12 AM

Alan Turing, the father of the computer, is finally getting his due

Source: Washington Post

For Alan Turing’s many admirers, the centenary of his birth on Saturday is an occasion for both celebration and mourning. Here, after all, is the architect of the modern computer, the code-breaker whose ingenuity ensured an Allied victory in World War II and the father of artificial intelligence. Yet Turing was also a victim of a pernicious and paranoid strain of sexual hypocrisy in 20th-century England. Nor, in the 21st, has the victimization wholly ceased.

Turing’s remarkable career was marked by happenstance. In 1936, when he was a student at Cambridge, he attended a lecture in which M.H.A. “Max” Newman characterized an old and thorny logic problem as a matter of finding a “mechanical process” for testing the validity of a mathematical assertion. Turing took the phrase “mechanical process” at face value and wrote a paper in which he laid out the architecture of a hypothetical machine to do the testing — what became known as the “Turing machine.” The paper, intended for specialists, amounted to a blueprint for the modern computer, a “universal machine” that could do the work of an infinity of single-use machines.

The fortuitous breakthroughs continued. During World War II, Turing was among a group of thinkers summoned by the British government to Bletchley Park to help crack the seemingly airtight German Enigma code. Because the code was generated by a machine, Turing decided, only a machine could break it. He went on to design and help build that machine — the “Bombe,” without which the Allies might have lost the war — thereby instigating a huge leap forward in the field of cryptanalysis.

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To avoid a similar fate, Turing agreed to submit to a course of estrogen therapy intended to cure him of his homosexuality; as a result, he grew breasts and became impotent. Yet even after the treatment ended, the police, fearing that he might defect to the Soviet Union, stayed on his trail, interrupting every effort he made to live life as he saw fit. In June 1954, Turing committed suicide by biting into an apple laced with cyanide — a nod to his favorite film, Walt Disney’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.”

Read more: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/alan-turing-father-of-computer-science-not-yet-getting-his-due/2012/06/22/gJQA5eUOvV_story.html



Happy 100th birthday. What a pointed reminder of cruelty humans can commit to each other, and extinguish a genius who gave us so much, and had so much left to give.

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Reply Alan Turing, the father of the computer, is finally getting his due (Original post)
Sgent Jun 2012 OP
Kennah Jun 2012 #1
msongs Jun 2012 #2
CBHagman Jun 2012 #14
DeSwiss Jun 2012 #3
nofurylike Jun 2012 #4
ohgeewhiz Jun 2012 #5
dipsydoodle Jun 2012 #6
ohgeewhiz Jun 2012 #8
aquart Jun 2012 #9
Webster Green Jun 2012 #19
aquart Jun 2012 #22
dipsydoodle Jun 2012 #16
Behind the Aegis Jun 2012 #7
daaron Jun 2012 #13
Vidar Jun 2012 #10
The Jungle 1 Jun 2012 #11
bemildred Jun 2012 #12
Brickbat Jun 2012 #15
dipsydoodle Jun 2012 #17
ohgeewhiz Jun 2012 #18
athenasatanjesus Jun 2012 #20
beac Jun 2012 #21


Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 03:41 AM

2. nice PBS show "breaking the code" starred Derek Jacobi about Turing nt

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Response to msongs (Reply #2)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 09:11 AM

14. I saw that too.

It aired on what was then known as Mobil Masterpiece Theatre and now is simply Masterpiece.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0115749/

&feature=related

You can watch the whole film on YouTube, I believe.

It's harrowing to read that Turing's particular means of suicide was not a liberty taken by the script writer.

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 04:18 AM

3. K&R n/t

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 04:52 AM

4. thank you for that, Sgent. article: Alan Turing: Inquest's suicide verdict 'not supportable'

Alan Turing: Inquest's suicide verdict 'not supportable'By Roland Pease
BBC Radio Science Unit
23 June 2012 Last updated at 03:52 ET
BBC News‎ - 41 minutes ago

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18561092

Alan Turing, the British mathematical genius and codebreaker, may not have committed suicide, as is widely believed, claims an academic.

At a conference in Oxford on Saturday, Turing expert Prof Jack Copeland will question the evidence that was presented at the 1954 inquest.

-snip-

Indeed, he argues, Turing's death may equally probably have been an accident.

-snip-

The problem, he complains, is that the investigation was conducted so poorly that even murder cannot be ruled out. An "open verdict", recognising this degree of ignorance, would be his preferred position.

-snip-

###

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:04 AM

5. Today only! use this link:

 

Last edited Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:04 AM USA/ET - Edit history (1)

https://www.google.com/

Alan Turing's 100th birthday: Google doodles a Turing Machine

Just go there and see what comes up.

Today only, if you are reading this tomorrow, you won't see it.

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Response to ohgeewhiz (Reply #5)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:35 AM

6. Catch up too with this DU SciEnce Forum link from last week

Last edited Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:30 AM USA/ET - Edit history (1)

http://www.democraticunderground.com/12287442

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Response to dipsydoodle (Reply #6)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:57 AM

8. Thanks for this link! I'll bookmark it n/t

 

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Response to ohgeewhiz (Reply #5)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:10 AM

9. Sadly, I won't see the doodle at that link.

I made the mistake of putting a background on my basic Google page and Google has never forgiven me. I've tried to dump the background but I just get ...limbo.

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Response to aquart (Reply #9)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 03:18 PM

19. They have an option for "Classic Google".

Click on the little gear looking icon on the upper right, and choose "Classic Home" from the drop-down menu.

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Response to Webster Green (Reply #19)

Mon Jun 25, 2012, 01:52 AM

22. No icon. What does "gear-looking" mean?

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Response to ohgeewhiz (Reply #5)


Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 05:42 AM

7. Thank you!

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Response to Behind the Aegis (Reply #7)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:57 AM

13. Thank you for this! ^^^

 

I wanted to write something along those lines. How he's a hero to so many for so many different reasons - including saving the fucking world!

It always makes me sad to think about Turing. He was the ultimate "freak" of his times - a gay ultra-nerd in the middle of WWII. I like to think if he was alive, today, he'd be adored.

Here's to you, Alan M. Turing! You changed the world. I just wish you'd been able to know it before you left it.

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 07:41 AM

10. One of Britain's greatest and most betrayed heroes.

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:02 AM

11. I don't get it

Why does it take so long to fix the injustice that still plagues us. Everybody know it is wrong yet we still continue down this path of stupidity.

We would have lost that war if that code hadn't been broken. Just imagine the injustice we would live under then.

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:45 AM

12. A great loss, when we lost Mr Turing.

Such men as he don't come along very often.

And a stirring indictment of homophobia, the way he was treated after the contributions he made.

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 09:48 AM

15. Apparently many had their doubts about his suicide, with some believing it was more an accident that

resulted from his carelessness with dangerous chemicals. Still others believe it was a suicide, but staged in such a way that his loved ones could plausibly deny it as a suicide. In any case, a tragic and fascinating figure.

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 10:08 AM

17. Alan Turing: Inquest's suicide verdict 'not supportable'

Alan Turing, the British mathematical genius and codebreaker born 100 years ago on 23 June, may not have committed suicide, as is widely believed.

At a conference in Oxford on Saturday, Turing expert Prof Jack Copeland will question the evidence that was presented at the 1954 inquest.

He believes the evidence would not today be accepted as sufficient to establish a suicide verdict.

Indeed, he argues, Turing's death may equally probably have been an accident.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18561092

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Response to dipsydoodle (Reply #17)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 12:14 PM

18. Very fascinating research n/t

 

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sat Jun 23, 2012, 08:14 PM

20. Maybe we can convince right wingers that the computer was the first step in the gay agenda.

Thereby getting their trolls off of the internet,and we can start winning the information war.

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Response to Sgent (Original post)

Sun Jun 24, 2012, 12:15 AM

21. I weep every time I think of what humanity lost by his untimely death.

Can you imagine how he might have advanced our culture and understanding had he lived a full lifetime?

What a horrible, horrible waste.

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