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Subj: Post-Turing Machine
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Alan Turing Publishes "On Computable Numbers," Describing What Came to be 
Called the "Turing Machine" 

In issues dated November 30 and December 23, 1936 of the Proceedings of the 
London Mathematical Society English mathematician Alan Turing published "On 
Computable Numbers", a mathematical description of what he called a universal 
machine — an astraction that could, in principle, solve any mathematical 
problem that could be presented to it in symbolic form. Turing modeled the 
universal machine processes after the functional processes of a human carrying 
out mathematical computation. In the following issue of the same journal 
Turing published a two page correction to his paper.

Undoubtedly the most famous theoretical paper in the history of computing, 
"On Computable Numbers" is a mathematical description an imaginary computing 
device designed to replicate the mathematical "states of mind" and 
symbol-manipulating abilities of a human computer. Turing conceived of the 
universal machine as a means of answering the last of the three questions 
about mathematics posed by David Hilbert in 1928: (1) is mathematics 
complete; (2) is mathematics consistent; and (3) is mathematics decidable.

Hilbert's final question, known as the Entscheidungsproblem, concerns whether 
there exists a defiinite method—or, in the suggestive words of Turing's 
teacher Max Newman, a "mechanical process"—that can be applied to any 
mathematical assertion, and which is guaranteed to produce a correct decision 
as to whether that assertion is true. The Czech logician Kurt Gödel had 
already shown that arithmetic (and by extension mathematics) was both 
inconsistent and incomplete. Turing showed, by means of his universal machine, 
that mathematics was also undecidable.

To demonstrate this, Turing came up with the concept of "computable numbers," 
which are numbers defined by some definite rule, and thus calculable on the 
universal machine. These computable numbers, "would include every number that 
could be arrived at through arithmetical operations, finding roots of 
equations, and using mathematical functions like sines and logarithms—every 
number that could possibly arise in computational mathematics" (Hodges, Alan 
Turing: The Enigma [1983] 100). Turing then showed that these computable 
numbers could give rise to uncomputable ones—ones that could not be calculated 
using a definite rule—and that therefore there could be no "mechanical 
process" for solving all mathematical questions, since an uncomputable number 
was an example of an unsolvable problem.

From 1936 to 1938 Mathematician Alan Turing spent more than a year at 
Princeton University studying mathematical logic with Alonzo Church, who was 
pursuing research in recursion theory. In August 1936 Church gave Turing's 
idea of a "universal machine" the name "Turing machine." Church coined the 
term in his relatively brief review of "On Computable Numbers." With regard 
to Turing's proof of the unsolvability of Hilbert's Entscheidungsproblem, 
Church acknowledged that "computability by a Turing machine. . . has the 
advantage of making the identification with effectiveness in the ordinary 
(not explicitly defined) sense evident immediately—i.e. without the necessity 
of proving elementary theorems." Church working independently of Turing, had 
arrived at his own answer to the Entscheidungsproblem a few months earlier.   

Independently of Alan Turing, mathematician and logician Emil Post of the City 
College of New York developed, and published in October 1936, a mathematical 
model of computation that was essentially equivalent to the Turing machine. 
Intending this as the first of a series of models of equivalent power but 
increasing complexity, he titled his paper Formulation 1. This model is 
sometime's called "Post's machine" or a Post-Turing machine.

In 1937 Turing and John von Neumann had their first discussions about 
computing and what would later be called “artificial intelligenceö (AI). 
Always interested in practical applications of computing as well as theory, 
also while at Princeton, in 1937, believing that war with Germany was 
inevitable, Turing built in an experimental electromechanical cryptanalysis 
machine capable of binary multiplication in a university machine shop. After 
returning to England, on September 4, 1939, the day after Britain and France 
declared war on Germany, Turing reported to the Government Code and Cypher 
School, Bletchley Park, in the town of Bletchley, England.



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