Alan Turing: Centenary Lectures - podcast cover

Alan Turing: Centenary Lectures

Oxford Universitywww.conted.ox.ac.uk
Alan Mathison Turing was born on 23 June, 1912 - exactly one hundred years before this weekend meeting which celebrates his life and achievements. Although most well-known for his work at Bletchley Park in the pioneering days which saw the birth of modern practical computing; Turing had achieved fame well before the second world war, with a seminal account of theoretical computation and his solution to the Entscheidungs problem. An Olympic-class marathon runner, whose refusal to conform to the narrow sexual standards of the day led to persecution and an early death - Turing did fundamental research on Artificial Intelligence, Computer Programming and even Mathematical Biology. This weekend attempts a rounded view of a polymath, one of the great mathematicians of the twentieth century, his life and his times.
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Episodes

Morphogenesis Then and Now

Philip Maini, Oxford University, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary weekend.

Oct 22, 201243 min

What Alan Turing might have discovered

Stephen Wolfram, founder and CEO of Wolfram Research and creator of Mathematica, gives a talk for the Alan Turing Centenary weekend.

Oct 22, 201251 min

Welcome Address

Jonathan Bowen, London South Bank University.

Oct 22, 20123 min
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