Alan Turing — "The machine is a metaphor for the human mind."
The machine is a metaphor for the human mind.
The machine is a metaphor for the human mind.
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.
"A computer would deserve to be called intelligent if it could deceive a human into believing that it was human."
"This is only a foretaste of what is to come, and only the shadow of what is going to be."
"The digital computer is a universal machine, capable of simulating any other machine."
"It seems probable that once the machine thinking method had started, it would not take long to outstrip our feeble powers and would take control."
"The universe is full of mysteries, and it is our task to unravel them."
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
A machine and a human mind share the same essential logic: receive input, process it by rules, generate output. This view flattens the boundary between tool and thinker. Rather than treating computation as mere arithmetic, it invites us to see machines as literal embodiments of cognition — and by extension, suggests that human thought itself is, at its core, a form of information processing that can be studied, reproduced, and understood.
Turing spent his career dissolving the boundary between machine and mind. His 1936 concept of a universal computing machine abstracted human computation into formal rules, and his 1950 paper 'Computing Machinery and Intelligence' asked whether machines could think. He designed the Turing Test precisely because he believed the mind's operations could be replicated mechanically. His own mind — methodical, pattern-seeking, relentlessly logical — made the metaphor feel not just plausible but personal.
In the 1940s and 1950s, the notion that a machine could mimic thought was radical and controversial. Post-war Britain was grappling with the implications of computing technology developed during WWII code-breaking efforts at Bletchley Park. Behaviorism dominated psychology, and the idea that mind was reducible to information processing challenged religious and philosophical assumptions about human uniqueness. This was the dawn of cognitive science, when the question "Can machines think?" was genuinely unsettled.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty