Skip to content
Legacy Of Alan Turing - Episode Two

Legacy Of Alan Turing - Episode Two

Discovery
25. Juni 2012 18 min
In Clue öffnen

Über diese Folge

<p>Alan Turing, born 23 June 1912, is famous for his key role in breaking German codes in World War II. But for mathematicians, his greatest work was on the invention of the computer. </p><p>Alan Turing's brilliance at maths was spectacular. Aged 22, just a year after his graduation, he was elected a fellow of King's College Cambridge. And it was just a year after that, that he turned his attention to problems in the foundations of mathematics and ended up showing that a simple machine, set up to read and write numbers and to run a few basic functions, could in principle do all the things that are do-able in mathematics. His 'universal' machine was just a concept - a paper tape that could be read, interpreted and acted on robotically. But the concept was profound. </p><p>World War II shortly afterwards took Turing's talents into other directions, but even while designing machines at Bletchley Park to break the German Enigma codes, he was wondering how much more a computing machine might do - play chess for example.</p><p>And although the war work might have delayed Turing's academic work, it greatly accelerated progress in electronics, so that in 1945 he returned to his first love, creating a complete design for what he expected to be the world's first fully programmable computer, the National Physical Laboratory's ACE - the Automatic Computing Engine. In the end, beset by hesitation and bureaucratic delays, the ACE was overtaken by a rival team in Manchester, whose Small Scale Experimental Machine first ran on 21 June 1948. But the Manchester Baby as it became known, fulfilled the requirements laid down in Turing's seminal 1936 paper, and in a handful of instructions had the power to do any kind of maths or data processing, like a computer of today does. </p><p>Turing soon joined the Manchester team, and again with remarkable prescience started work on artificial intelligence, wondering whether electronic machines could be programmed not just to do maths, but to think in the way human minds do - a hot topic of debate even now. </p><p>Those explorations were cut short by his death in 1954, two years after he’d been prosecuted for his homosexuality. His death at a time when official secrecy still hid his code-breaking work, and when the history of computing was already being written meant that few appreciated his central role in today's dominant industry. But some enthusiasts hope they can write him back in where he belongs.</p><p>In this second of two episodes devoted to Turing, the BBC's Roland Pease follows the events following Turing's design for the ACE machine at NPL, and the race against the Baby Computer in Manchester.</p><p>(Image: Alan Turing. Credit: Bill Sanderson/Science Photo Library)</p>

Hör diese Folge auf Englisch, um Englisch zu lernen

Podcast-Folgen sind eine der dichtesten Möglichkeiten, Englisch im nativen Tempo aufzunehmen. Legacy Of Alan Turing - Episode Two von Discovery bietet dir natürliche Dialoge, unvorbereitete Sprache und Vokabular, das wirklich in echten Gesprächen auftaucht.

In der Clue-App ist jedes Wort im Transkript antippbar. Tippe auf ein unbekanntes Wort, sieh die Übersetzung in deiner Sprache sofort und höre weiter, ohne aus dem Fluss zu kommen.

Folgen zum Englischlernen

Mehr englische Podcasts