January 01, 1954
Conviction of Alan Turing
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alan Turing | person | 134 | View Entity |
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015903.jpg
This document is page 213 of a manuscript or book titled 'Turing's Machine', found within House Oversight Committee files (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015903). The text details the historical impact of Alan Turing's codebreaking work on WWII, specifically regarding the D-Day invasion and the Enigma code. It covers the post-war secrecy maintained by Winston Churchill, Turing's 1954 conviction for homosexuality, his suicide, and his eventual posthumous pardon in 2013.
Events with shared participants
Turing's discovery of a solution to the Decision Problem (Entscheidungsproblem).
1935-01-01 • Historical context
Publication of 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence' by Alan Turing.
1950-01-01 • British journal Mind
Publication of Alan Turing's paper 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence' in the journal Mind.
1950-01-01 • United Kingdom (implied by British journal)
Turing contemplating the decidability of mathematics and envisioning the Turing machine.
1935-01-01 • Cambridge/Grantchester
Turing made a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge.
1935-01-01 • Cambridge
Outbreak of war made Turing's work practically important for code breaking.
Date unknown
Alan Turing presented a paper describing the modern computer.
1936-01-01 • London Mathematical Society
Alan Turing wrote, revised, and published 'On Computable Numbers...'.
1936-01-01 • N/A
Alan Turing submitted a paper effectively inventing the modern computer.
Date unknown • London Mathematical Society
Publication of 'On Computable Numbers and their Application to the Entscheidungsproblem'
1936-01-01 • Cambridge
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