Chapter 1. Introduction (Juliet Floyd).- Part I. Logic and
Mathematics to Philosophy.- Chapter 2. Turing, the Mathematician
(Daniele Mundici and Wilfried Sieg).- Chapter 3. Turing, Gödel and
the “Bright Abyss” (Juliette Kennedy).- Chapter 4. Justified True
Belief: Plato, Gettier and Turing (Rohit Parikh and Adriana
Renero).- Chapter 5. Turing on “Common Sense”: Cambridge Resonances
(Juliet Floyd).- Part II. The Universal Machine: From Music to
Morphogenesis.- Chapter 6. Universality is Ubiquitous (Martin
Davis).- Chapter 7. The Early History of Voice Encryption (Craig
Bauer).- Chapter 8. Turing and the History of Computer Music (B.
Jack Copeland and Jason Long).- Chapter 9. Exploring the Frontiers
of Computation: Measurement Based Quantum Computers and the
Mechanistic View of Computation (Armond Duwell).- Chapter 10.
Embodying Computation at Higher Types (S. Barry Cooper).- Part III.
Human, Machine, and Mind.- Chapter 11. On Computing Machinery and
Intelligence (Patrick Henry Winston).- Chapter 12. From Ockham to
Turing --- and Back Again (Michael Rescorla).- Chapter 13. Turing
and Free Will: A New Take on An Old Debate (Diane Proudfoot).-
Chapter 14. Turing and the Integration of Human and Machine
Intelligence (Susan G. Sterrett).- Chapter 15. Is there a
Church-Turing thesis for social algorithms? (Rohit Parikh).
Juliet Floyd is Professor of Philosophy at Boston University
and researches the interplay between logic, mathematics, and
philosophy in late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
She has written extensively on Wittgenstein, Gödel and Turing
and also published articles on Kant, aesthetics, and eighteenth
century philosophy. She is currently Associate Senior Editor
in Twentieth Century philosophy at the Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy and has co-edited (with S. Shieh) Future Pasts: The
Analytic Tradition in Twentieth Century Philosophy (Oxford, 2001)
and (with J.E. Katz) Philosophy of Emerging Media: Understanding,
Appreciation, Application (Oxford, 2016) as well as many
articles.
Alisa Bokulich is Associate Professor of Philosophy at
Boston University and Director of the Center for Philosophy &
History of Science, where she organizes the Boston Colloquium for
Philosophy of Science. She is Associate Member ofHarvard
University’s History of Science Department and a Series Editor for
Boston Studies in the Philosophy & History of Science. Her
research focuses on issues in philosophy of science, including
history and philosophy of quantum mechanics, and philosophy of the
geosciences. She is author of the book Reexamining the
Quantum-Classical Relation: Beyond Reductionism and Pluralism
(Cambridge UP, 2008) and co-editor of three additional books.
“The book provides, probably for the first time, not only all the elements necessary for assessing the full importance of Turing’s legacy but also fundamental lines of thought for connecting his work with new research perspectives. It will be an indispensable reference for understanding and developing all the concepts and ideas introduced by Turing.” (Jean-Marc Ginoux, Isis, Vol. 110 (4), 2019)
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