Alan Turing — "May not machines carry out something which ought to be described as thinking but…"
May not machines carry out something which ought to be described as thinking but which is very different from what a man does?
May not machines carry out something which ought to be described as thinking but which is very different from what a man does?
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"The possibility of a machine thinking is a disturbing thought for many people."
"The true nature of intelligence is not to be found in the ability to solve problems, but in the ability to ask the right questions."
"The idea behind digital computers may be explained by saying that these machines are intended to carry out any operations which could be done by a human computer."
"It is not easy to devise a game which is fair in this respect between the machine and the man."
"The machine should be able to make mistakes."
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Turing asks whether machines could perform a process that deserves the label 'thinking,' even if that process differs fundamentally from human cognition. He challenges the assumption that thinking must look or feel the same across all entities — opening the possibility that non-human intelligence is real intelligence, just operating by different mechanisms.
Turing spent his career reducing mental tasks to formal, mechanical operations — from Turing machines to the Bombe codebreaker. This question directly seeds his 1950 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence' paper and the Turing Test. He rejected the idea that biological substrate defines thought, likely shaped by his outsider status and unconventional mind.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s, electronic computers had just emerged from wartime secrecy. Most scientists viewed machines as pure calculators, not thinkers. Cold War anxiety about automation, Soviet technology, and nuclear futures made questions about machine capability politically charged. Turing's question arrived precisely when humanity first had hardware capable of making it non-hypothetical.
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