Alan Turing

Person
Mentions
134
Relationships
22
Events
17
Documents
58

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22 total relationships
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person I.J. Good
Business associate
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person Max Newman
Student lecturer
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1
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person John von Neumann
Academic peers
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person British cryptanalysts
Leadership
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person Emil Post
Professional academic
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person Humanity
Philosophical predictive
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person 1950 paper
Author
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person King's College
Professional academic
5
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person Churchill (Winston Churchill)
Professional war effort
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person Charles Babbage
Historical comparison
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location Cambridge University
Academic legacy
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person King's College, Cambridge
Academic
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organization The Allies
Allegiance
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person David Hilbert
Intellectual academic
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person I. J. Good
Business associate
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person Mind (Journal)
Author publisher
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person George Dyson
Author subject
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person Winston Churchill
Professional historical
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person Church
Academic
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person Davis
Academic historical
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person Charles Babbage
Intellectual predecessor
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person Churchill (Winston Churchill)
Historical connection
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Date Event Type Description Location Actions
N/A N/A Referenced in relation to Alan Turing on page 213 N/A View
N/A N/A Outbreak of war made Turing's work practically important for code breaking. N/A View
N/A N/A Alan Turing submitted a paper effectively inventing the modern computer. London Mathematical Society View
N/A N/A Turing ordered to report to Bletchley Park. Bletchley Park, England View
2013-01-01 N/A Royal Pardon granted to Alan Turing UK View
1954-01-01 N/A Conviction of Alan Turing UK View
1950-01-01 N/A Publication of Alan Turing's paper 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence'. N/A View
1950-01-01 N/A Publication of 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence' by Alan Turing. British journal Mind View
1950-01-01 N/A Publication of Alan Turing's paper 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence' in the journal Mind. United Kingdom (implied by ... View
1937-01-01 N/A Turing travelled to America and completed his doctoral thesis at Princeton. Princeton, USA View
1936-01-01 N/A Alan Turing proved there is no general-purpose mechanical way to tell whether a program is going ... N/A View
1936-01-01 N/A Alan Turing presented a paper describing the modern computer. London Mathematical Society View
1936-01-01 N/A Alan Turing wrote, revised, and published 'On Computable Numbers...'. N/A View
1936-01-01 N/A Publication of 'On Computable Numbers and their Application to the Entscheidungsproblem' Cambridge View
1935-01-01 N/A Turing contemplating the decidability of mathematics and envisioning the Turing machine. Cambridge/Grantchester View
1935-01-01 N/A Turing's discovery of a solution to the Decision Problem (Entscheidungsproblem). Historical context View
1935-01-01 N/A Turing made a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. Cambridge View

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015992.jpg

This document appears to be page 302 from a book or manuscript titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?'. It features a woodcut illustration captioned 'Eureka' and text discussing the psychology of creativity, referencing Wallas's theorem and quoting Alan Turing on decision making. The document bears a Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015992', indicating it is part of a document production for the House Oversight Committee, likely related to investigations into Epstein's connections with the scientific community.

Book excerpt / evidence document
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be a historical overview of United States signals intelligence, tracing its origins from the 'Black Chamber' and Western Union cooperation in the 1920s through World War II codebreaking (Enigma and Purple ciphers) to the formation of the NSA in 1952. It details the NSA's mandate to protect US communications and intercept foreign signals, noting its expansion during the Cold War with a 'black budget' and advanced technology. While part of a larger House Oversight production (likely related to intelligence abuses or history), this specific page contains no direct references to Jeffrey Epstein.

Historical narrative / report excerpt (likely from a book or congressional report)
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be page 202 of a manuscript or memoir, stamped as evidence by the House Oversight Committee. The text is a philosophical essay reflecting on the tension between Western logic/philosophy (Socrates, Plato) and poetry/mysticism. It contrasts this with the narrator's experience moving to China, where they observed that historical political figures (like Su Dongpo and Emperors) were often also accomplished artists and poets, attributing this to the cultivation of 'inner energy' rather than just being 'Renaissance Men'. There is no mention of Jeffrey Epstein or criminal activity in the text of this specific page.

Manuscript page / memoir draft (house oversight evidence)
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be page 198 of a book or manuscript included in a House Oversight investigation file (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018430). The text is a philosophical and historical narrative focusing on Plato's life, specifically his invitation to Syracuse at age 60 to teach Dionysus II, and his earlier traumatic political experiences in Athens following the Peloponnesian War in 404 BC. It discusses the nature of power, governance, and the intersection of philosophy and politics.

Book excerpt / evidence attachment
2025-11-19

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This document is a page (193) from a narrative work included in a House Oversight investigation file. It details a 1993 NASA conference in Westlake, Ohio, focusing on Vernor Vinge's presentation of 'The Coming Technological Singularity.' The text discusses the theoretical development of Artificial Intelligence, citing I.J. Good and the concept of an 'intelligence explosion' where machines design superior machines, potentially ending the human era.

Book excerpt / congressional oversight exhibit
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be page 189 of a manuscript, essay, or book regarding Artificial Intelligence and Transhumanism found within the House Oversight Epstein files. The text discusses the philosophical and technical implications of AI surpassing human intelligence (the Singularity), referencing Alan Turing, deep neural networks, and a 'New Caste' of engineers. It explicitly mentions 'Maes' AI' (likely referring to MIT professor Pattie Maes) and concludes with a reference to Joseph Weizenbaum.

Manuscript / book draft page
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018420.jpg

This document appears to be page 188 of a non-fiction book investigating the history and philosophy of Artificial Intelligence. The text discusses the 'Disappearing AI Problem,' Alan Turing's 1950 paper 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence,' and the mechanics of the Turing Test. While stamped 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018420,' suggesting it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation (potentially related to Epstein associations with tech figures or scientists), the specific content of this page is purely historical and theoretical regarding computer science.

Book page / manuscript excerpt (history of artificial intelligence)
2025-11-19

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The text discusses the evolution and modern relevance of the Turing Test, contrasting historical text-based interactions with modern visual interfaces like those used by Siri and Wolfram|Alpha. The speaker argues that visual displays offer higher communication bandwidth than pure language and suggests that a more practical modern Turing Test would be an AI capable of automating personal email responses based on long-term user data.

Transcript or book page (likely testimony/interview)
2025-11-19
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Theoretical basis of computing

From: Alan Turing
To: London Mathematical So...

Described the theoretical basis of computing and the design of a general-purpose computing machine.

Scientific paper
N/A

Machine Thinking

From: Alan Turing
To: Public/Academic Audience

Lecture warning that machines might eventually take control.

Lecture
1951-01-01

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