b08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

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Alan Turing Prof. Jonathan P. Bowen Emeritus Professor of Computing London South Bank University (LSBU) Currently Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Advanced Studies (IIAS) Hebrew University of Jerusalem Chairman, Museophile Limited www.jpbowen.com Virtuoso Visionary

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Page 1: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Alan Turing

Prof. Jonathan P. Bowen Emeritus Professor of Computing

London South Bank University (LSBU)

Currently Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Advanced Studies (IIAS)

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Chairman, Museophile Limited

www.jpbowen.com

Virtuoso Visionary

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Introduction

• Subjects: Mathematics, engineering, art,

computer science, software engineering,

museum informatics, history of computing

• Collaboration: Archivists, historians, library scientists,

mathematicians, museologists, philosophers, sociologists

• Academia: Imperial College (London), Oxford, Reading,

Birmingham City, London South Bank University

• Visitor: UNU-IIST (Macau), King’s College London, Brunel,

Westminster, Waikato (New Zealand), Pratt Institute (New

York, USA), Institute for Advanced Studies (Jerusalem)

• Industry: Marconi, Logica, Silicon Graphics, Altran Praxis

• EVA London Conference on

Electronic Visualisation & the Arts

(co-chair) www.eva-london.org

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Overview

• Alan Mathison Turing, OBE, FRS

(23 June 1912 – 7 June 1954)

• Mathematician, philosopher, codebreaker

• “Founder/father of computer science”

• Increasingly in the public consciousness

• Centenary meetings at Bletchley Park,

Cambridge, Manchester, Oxford,

etc., in 2012

• Mathematics can be visualised

• Digital archives of Turing material

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Contributions to knowledge

• The Universal Machine (1936)

• Code-breaking (WW II)

• Computers and computing (1946)

• Artificial Intelligence (1950)

• Morphogenesis (1952)

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Alan Turing:

The Enigma

Definitive biography

by Andrew Hodges,

Wadham College,

Oxford.

1st edition, 1983.

Centenary edition,

2012.

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The Scientists: An epic of discovery

• Andrew Robinson (ed.),

Thames & Hudson, 2012

• 43 scientists through history

• Includes Alan Turing

• And Einstein of course!

• How do they compare?

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Einstein (a diversion!)

Institute for Advanced Studies,

Hebrew University

Einstein Archive

Albert Einstein Square

Garden of the Israel Academy of

Sciences and Humanities

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Einstein

New 2015 sculpture on Givat Ram campus

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Einstein’s Blackboard, Oxford

“If we knew what it was we

were doing, it would not be

called research, would it?”

– Albert Einstein (1879–1955)

Bust in

Birmingham

Museum and

Art Gallery

Blackboard in the

Museum of the History

of Science, Oxford (lecture in Oxford on

16 May 1931)

Turing is not known to

have visited Oxford!

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Turing’s Worlds (23–24 June 2012)

Dept. of Continuing Education, Oxford University

Authors in The Turing Guide

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• Cake at Oxford centenary meeting.

Happy Birthday Alan Turing! (2012)

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The Turing Guide

A collected set of 42 chapters on

Alan Turing. Co-editors:

• Jonathan Bowen (London South Bank University,

England) – computer scientist (at IIAS)

• Jack Copeland (University of Canterbury,

New Zealand) – philosopher (at IIAS)

• Mark Sprevak (University of Edinburgh, Scotland)

– philosopher

• Robin Wilson (Open University /

Oxford University, England) – mathematician

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Table of Contents

• Foreword by Andrew Hodges

• Preface by the editors

• Eight parts

• Notes and references

• Notes on contributors

• Index

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Table of Contents – parts

I. Biography

II. The Universal Machine and Beyond

III. Codebreaker

IV. Computers after the War

V. Artificial Intelligence and the Mind

VI. Biological Growth

VII. Mathematics

VIII. Finale

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1. Life and work

• Jonathan P. Bowen, Jack Copeland,

Mark Sprevak, and Robin J. Wilson

• Biography

Born at Colonnade Hotel

Maida Vale, London, 1912

Died at home in Wilmslow,

Cheshire, 1954

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Southampton to Sherborne

Arrival at new school: Bicycle ride during

the General Strike, 1926 (aged 14)

Stayed at the Crown Hotel, Blandford Forum

Inspired by school

friend Christopher

Morcom (died

February 1930)

when Turing was 17

Turing read and

understood

Einstein aged 16

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Turing at Princeton

• Enrolled

29 September 1936

• Dissertation accepted

18 May 1938

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Turing at Princeton Turing’s

record

of study

Studied the

Theory of

Relativity

under

Howard P.

Robertson

(1903–1961)

Robertson met

Einstein, Hilbert,

etc., in Göttingen,

Germany

Page 19: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

2. The man with the terrible trousers

• Sir John Dermot Turing

– nephew of Alan Turing

• A person view

• Author of Prof: Alan Turing Decoded

(September 2015) At an exhibition on Alan Turing

at Bletchley Park, 2012

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5. A century of Turing

• Stephen Wolfram

• Wolfram Research

• Mathematica

– “birthday” (23 June 1988)

• Based on a blog

• Personal view

Turing Machine

visualisation

Mathematica program:

ArrayPlot [Function

[u, MapAt [Red &,

u[[2]], u[[1, 2]]]] /

@TuringMachine

[2506,{1, {{}, 0}, 50]]

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6. Turing’s great invention:

The computing machine

• Jack Copeland – the “Turing machine”

An implementation of a Turing machine

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9. At

Bletchley Park

• Jack Copeland

• Enigma, etc.

Cottages in the

stable yard where

Turing did early

work on Enigma

Hut 8

used

by

Turing

Page 23: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

10. The Enigma machine

• Joel Greenberg

• Guide at Bletchey Park

• Author of Gordon Welchman:

Bletchley Park's Architect of

Ultra Intelligence biography

(2014)

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12. Bombes • Jack Copeland, with Jean Valentine and

Catherine Caughey

• Electromechanical deciphering device

• Design by Turing et al. (1939)

• Bombe reconstruction at Bletchley Park

Jean Valentine, Bombe operator, latterly a guide at Bletchley Park

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Banburismus and Turingery

• Banburismus: a cryptographic method

developed by Turing for Enigma (Bombe

pre-processing)

• Turingery (aka Turing's Method and

Turingismus) for breaking the Lorenz

cipher

Cf.

BlackBerry

today

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20. Saving Bletchley Park

• Simon Greenish and Jonathan Bowen

• Former Director

• Recent history of Bletchley Park

• Now safe (National Lottery funding)

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21. Turing, Lovelace, and

Babbage: congruent worlds

• Doron Swade, formerly computing

curator at the Science Museum, London

• Comparing Turing’s achievement with

Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace

• Analytical Engine

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Ada Lovelace (1815–1852)

• First “programmer” – 200th anniversary of

Ada Lovelace’s birth, 10 December 2015

• Died aged 36 (cf. Turing at 41)

• Symposium in Oxford, 10–11 December 2015

• Exhibitions at Weston Library, Oxford

& Science Museum, London

• Letters in Bodleian Library, Oxford

Digitisation project

in progress at the

Bodleian

Page 29: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

The ACE computer

• Turing at National Physical Laboratory, 1945–47

• Automatic Computing Engine (ACE),

originally designed by Turing, 1946

• Smaller Pilot ACE finally implemented, 1950

• Now in the Science

Museum, London

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23. The Manchester Baby

• Jack Copeland

• Manchester Mark I

computer, June 1948

• Turing appointed Reader – worked on software

Alan Turing on

the right standing

at the console of

the Manchester

Ferranti

computer.

Page 31: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

24. Computer music

• Jack Copeland and Jason Long

• Foreseen by Ada Lovelace

• First recorded computer music

(God Save the King, Baa Baa Black Sheep, &

In the Mood, 1951!)

• Ferranti Mark 1 computer at Manchester

Programmed by Christopher Strachey (1916–1975),

later first head of the Programming Research Group,

Oxford, and colleague of Turing

Alan Turing (right) at the

console of the Ferranti Mark 1

Page 32: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

31. Child machines

• Diane Proudfoot (at IIAS)

• The Turing Test

• Educable machines

• Social intelligence

“On the Internet, nobody knows

you’re a dog.” – New Yorker

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Thought

“... at the end of the [20th] century,

... one will be able to speak of

machines thinking without

expecting to be contradicted.”

– Alan Turing

Awarded Fellowship of the Royal Society

(FRS), 1951.

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Morphogenesis

• The "beginning of the shape” –

biological process, patterns

• Turing not completely correct,

but close enough

• Cf. chaos theory

Turing, A.M. (1952). “The Chemical

Basis of Morphogenesis”. Philosophical

Transactions of the Royal Society B:

Biological Sciences, 237(641):37–64.

doi:10.1098/rstb.1952.0012

A diagram from

Turing's notes on

morphogenesis

Page 35: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

35. Turing’s theory of

morphogenisis

• Thomas E. Woolley, Ruth

Baker, and Philip Maini

Centre for Mathematical Biology

Mathematical Institute

University of Oxford

• Earlier title: “All models are

wrong, but some are useful”

• Turing was not completely

correct, but close enough

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36. Radiolaria: Validating

the Turing theory

• Bernard Richards, University of Manchester

• Last masters student under Turing in 1953

• Protozoa with complex mineral skeletons

On Alan Turing: “The

day he died felt like

driving through a

tunnel and the lights

being switched off.”

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Bernard Richards – Masters thesis

• Figures

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Bernard Richards – Masters thesis

• Figures

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Bernard Richards – Masters thesis

• Figures

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Bernard Richards – Masters thesis

• Figures

Page 41: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Visualized

morphogenesis

2009

Visualization

Challenge

Science journal cover

(19 February 2010)

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41. Is the whole universe

computable?

• Jack Copeland, Oron Shagrir (at IIAS),

Mark Sprevak

Chapter still being written!

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42. Turing’s legacy

• Jonathan Bowen

• Scientific legacy

• Turing and modern society

• Turing papers – auction

• Government pardon

• Public consciousness

• Google donation to

Bletchly Park

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Epitaph

“A sort of scientific Shelley.”

– Sir Geoffrey Jefferson FRS (1886–1961)

Professor of Neurosurgery at Manchester

Shelley Memorial,

University College,

Oxford

Page 45: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Epilogue

• ACM Turing Award, first

awarded 1966

• Increasing public consciousness

• Government apology/pardon

• Turing papers: auctions

• Google donation to

Bletchley Park

Page 46: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Bletchley Park – now

• Heritage site

• Bombe and Colossus reconstructions

• National Museum of Computing

• Now safe, although needs further funding

Page 47: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Memorials

• E.g., slate statue

at Bletchley Park

by Stephen Kettle

• Also statue in

Manchester

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Alan Turing

exhibition at the

Science Museum

(2012)

Even Alan Turing Monopoly!

(2012 special edition)

Page 49: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Alan Turing – online archives • Centenary year in 2012

– www.turingcentenary.eu

• Andrew Hodges (Turing biographer)

– www.turing.org.uk

• Jack Copeland’s Turing Archive (facsimiles)

– www.alanturing.net

• The Turing Digital Archive (3,000 images)

– King’s College, Cambridge

– www.turingarchive.org

• Wikimedia Commons (freely available)

– commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing

Page 50: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

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Page 51: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

AlanTuring.net Collected set of facsimiles by two academics (currently at IIAS)

Page 52: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

TuringArchive.org

Archive at King’s College, Cambridge (Turing’s College)

Page 53: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Pet Shop Boys – Proms

• Royal Albert Hall, London, 23 July 2014

• World premiere of “A Man from the Future”

• Tribute to Alan Turing

Page 54: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

The Imitation Game

(2014 film)

Historical drama film on the life of Alan

Turing, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and

Keira Knightley (based on the biography Alan

Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges).

Filming at

King’s Cross

Station, London

October 2013

Page 55: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Stephen Fry

“Turing was a genius who helped

shorten the war though his extraordinary

solutions to the Enigma and Tunny code

machines that the Germans were using

... We owe him a huge debt.”

Page 56: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Alan Turing (1912–1954)

• “Father of computer science”

• Universal Turing machine

• Cryptography (decryption at Bletchley Park)

• Artificial intelligence and morphogenesis

Page 57: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Alan Turing and Albert Einstein

• Southwest University, Chongqing, China

• Are Turing and Einstein on a par?

Arguably yes,

but Einstein has

a head start!

Chongqing means

“double celebration”

(aptly) in Chinese

Both generally

accepted as

geniuses

Page 58: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Einstein in Oxford – again!

Free talk at Christ Church,

3 December 2015

Einstein book published by

Princeton University Press

Honorary degree, 1930s

Page 59: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

The Turing Guide • Book due in 2016

• To be published by Oxford University Press

• Hard cover, paperback, and e-book

• Edited by Jack Copeland, Jonathan Bowen, Mark

Sprevak, and Robin Wilson

• 42 chapters by contributors largely from Oxford,

Cambridge, Bletchley Park meetings

• Sabbatical at the Institute for Advanced Studies in

Jerusalem to complete the book!

• See also Gresham College, London, talk: www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/alan-turing-the-founder-of-computer-science

Page 60: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

The Turing

Guide

Likely front cover

picture – new

portrait of Turing

Note the terrible trousers!

Page 61: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

Thank you

Alan Turing founder/father of

computer science

Prof. Jonathan Bowen FBCS, FRSA

[email protected]

www.jpbowen.com

The Turing Guide (OUP, 2016)

Page 63: B08 jonathan bowen_alan_turing

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