Alan Turing — "The possibility of a machine thinking is a disturbing thought for many people."
The possibility of a machine thinking is a disturbing thought for many people.
The possibility of a machine thinking is a disturbing thought for many people.
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"I'm afraid that the following syllogism may be used by some in the future. Turing believes machines think. Turing lies with men. Therefore machines do not think. Yours in distress, Alan."
"I am not interested in whether a machine can think, but in whether it can make me think."
"The popular view that the brain is a 'digital computer' is a profound oversimplification."
"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…"
"Programming is a skill best acquired by practice and example rather than from books."
Attributed, general implication from his writings, but exact quote is elusive.
Date: Approx. 1950
ShockingFound in 1 providers: grok
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The idea that machines could think genuinely unsettles people. It challenges the assumption that thought, consciousness, and intelligence are uniquely human traits. If a machine can think, what separates humans from their creations? This forces uncomfortable questions about identity, purpose, and what makes human minds special — questions most people would rather avoid than confront directly.
Turing spent his career building the theoretical and practical foundations for computing, including his famous Turing Test to evaluate machine intelligence. He understood viscerally why this disturbed people — his 1950 paper 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence' directly challenged human exceptionalism, and his own prosecution for homosexuality showed how deeply society resisted ideas threatening its assumptions about nature.
In the late 1940s and 1950s, post-war Britain grappled with technology's rapid advance — atomic bombs, early computers, automation fears. Cold War anxieties amplified concerns about machines replacing or surpassing humans. The Church-Turing thesis and early AI discussions emerged in a culture still processing mechanized warfare's horrors, making machine cognition feel not just philosophically threatening but existentially alarming.
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