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    The Turing Test

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    male participant is replaced with a machine. To pass the test‚ the interviewer must still not be able to tell between the man and the woman. Today‚ the imitation game is known as the Turing Test and there have been some changes made to it. Instead of the scenario with the man and woman‚ it has been simplified to a person trying to determine if they are speaking with another human or a computer. 2. I do not think the Turing Test is a good way to determine whether a machine is intelligent

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    In response to French’s criticism on how the Turing Test is lacking in terms of evaluating machine intelligence accurately‚ Dale Jacquette criticizes his argument. “It is an empirical matter whether all intelligence is‚ or is not‚ sufficiently like human intelligence to be indistinguishable in verbal behavioral expression from that of intelligent humans. It is an open question to be decided by science rather than by a priori philosophical analogies and thought experiments” (Jacquette 68). Jacquette

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    Introduction “The Turing Test” is most accurately used to refer to a pitch made by Turing (1950) as an approach of dealing with the question whether machines can think. According to Turing‚ the question whether machines can think is itself “too meaningless” to deserve any debate (442). In other words‚ the Turing Test is a method for determining whether or not a computer is capable of thinking like a human. The test is named after Alan Turing‚ an English mathematician who pioneered artificial intelligence

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    may produce an AI equivalent of the human brain. Evidence The first argument was whether or not a machine could pass the Turing test. It was argued that if a machine had enough memory and was programmed correctly it could pass the Turing test. Results showed that a machine could pass complex tests that were presented. However‚ the argument was made that these tests were still simply programs. The machine still had to receive relative input to produce a given output. It could not create an output

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    Alan Turing

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    ALAN TURING Alan Turing is a brilliant British mathematician and one of the leading best scientists in the 20th century. He is the “Father of Modern Computer” and “Artificial Intelligence”. His not famous or well known outside scientific circles during his lifetime because his crucial work was considered the Top secret until the late 1970s. He became the center of media attention when Queen Elizabeth II granted him a Royal Pardon on December 23‚ 2013. He was also the one who cracked the German

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    Alan Turing

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    reading The New Yorker to Time Magazine I have learned much about Alan Turing. I would like share with you how Alan Turing changed the computer age by focusing on three aspects of his life: the first his early life‚ second his adult life and third his work and accomplishments. II. Body a. Alan Mathieson Turing Early Life i. Alan Mathieson Turing was born on June 23 1912‚ the second and last child of Julius Mathieson and Ethel Sara Turing. He was born in a nursing home in Paddington‚ London according to

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    Alan Turing

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    The pioneer of computer science‚ Alan Turing Introduction Alan Mathison Turing(1912-1954) is one of the most intelligent scientists in the world‚ who is not only famous as a war savor but also a computer scientist. During the Second World War‚ Turing successfully cracked the German Enigma ciphers and turned the scale of the war‚ saving thousands of livings. Thanks to the celebration of Turing’s centenary in 2012‚ nowadays‚ the name of Alan Turing is universally known as the pioneer of computer

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    Alan Turing

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    Alan Mathison Turing (23 June 1912 – 7 June 1954)‚ was a British mathematician‚ logician‚ cryptanalyst‚ and computer scientist. He was highly influential in the development of computer science‚ giving a formalisation of the concepts of "algorithm" and "computation" with the Turing machine‚ which can be considered a model of a general purpose computer. Turing is widely considered to be the father of computer science and artificial intelligence. He was stockily built‚ had a high-pitched voice‚ and

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    Alan Turing: Breaking the Enigma Code Steven Go Professor Tobie Tondi Religious Questions of the Holocaust THRS 390 – 01 February 17‚ 2015 YZDS EHVSQM means nothing‚ and remains useless‚ unless one is given the correct code to decrypt the secret message. Perhaps it means “Stop Please” or “Heil Hitler” as the German Nazi’s would always end their secret message when relaying them during World War II. Germans utilized the Enigma machine to scramble and encipher hidden messages to relay

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    alan turing

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    Alan turings enigma code breaker was a very important part of history. First I explain the enigma machine. The enigma made by germans was a method of sending codes across to other enigmas‚ it was a very difficult code to break as there were many settings included allowing for many combinations. There was 60 rotor positions‚ 17576 starting positions on rotor and a plugboard only available to military 26!/6! 10! 2to the power of 10. Options. To break this code the bombe machine was created which would

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