Alan Turing — "I have had a number of conversations with people who are convinced that machines…"
I have had a number of conversations with people who are convinced that machines cannot think. I have not been convinced by their arguments.
I have had a number of conversations with people who are convinced that machines cannot think. I have not been convinced by their arguments.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"I have had a dream indicating rather clearly that I am on the way to being hetero, though I don't accept it with much enthusiasm either awake or in the dreams."
"The popular view that scientists proceed inexorably from well-established fact to well-established fact, never being influenced by any unproved conjecture, is quite mistaken. Provided it is made clear…"
"The problem of artificial intelligence is to create machines that can learn and adapt."
"Mathematical reasoning may be regarded rather schematically as the exercise of a combination of two facilities, which we may call intuition and ingenuity."
"The machine should be able to make mistakes."
Attributed, general implication from his writings, but exact quote is elusive.
Date: Approx. 1950
ShockingFound in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
Turing is pushing back against confident dismissals of machine intelligence. He's not claiming machines definitely can think — he's saying the arguments he's heard against it are unconvincing. It's a stance of intellectual precision: refusing to accept philosophical conviction as a substitute for rigorous reasoning. He treats the question as genuinely open, requiring better evidence and argument, not assumption.
In 1950, Turing published "Computing Machinery and Intelligence," proposing what became the Turing Test — a behavioral benchmark for machine cognition. During WWII he built electromechanical Bombe machines that cracked Enigma by automating logical inference. His entire career demonstrated machines doing things once thought exclusively human. When critics insisted machines couldn't think, Turing had direct evidence from his own work that made their certainty look unfounded.
The early 1950s produced the first stored-program computers — Manchester Baby (1948), EDSAC, early IBM systems. Most academics and the public still viewed computers as elaborate calculators, not potential minds. Philosophy of mind, split between behaviorism and Cartesian dualism, largely excluded machines from consciousness by definition. Cold War military investment accelerated computing, yet serious discussion of machine intelligence was treated as science fiction rather than legitimate inquiry.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty