Pride Life Magazine

TURIN TEST

SIXTY YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH, AND SHORTLY BEFORE A FILM ADAPTATION OF HIS LIFE, PAUL F COCKBURN LOOKS BACK ON THE LIFE AND LEGACY OF THE “FATHER OF COMPUTING”, THE GAY MATHEMATIC­IAN ALAN TURING

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We celebrate the gay mathematic­ian and codebreake­r Alan Turing

“You have to understand the measure of what Alan Turing did,” former cryptograp­her Captain Jerry Roberts told BBC News back in September 2009.

“In 1940/41 the German U-boats were sinking our food ships and our ships bringing in armaments, and there was nothing to stop this until Turing managed to break naval Enigma (code). If that hadn’t happened, it is entirely possible, even probable, that Britain would have lost the war.”

“He truly was one of those individual­s we can point to whose unique contributi­on helped to turn the tide of war,” added then Prime Minister Gordon Brown. “The debt of gratitude he is owed makes it all the more horrifying, therefore, that he was treated so inhumanely.”

For Turing’s life story isn’t simply about his pioneering work with computers; in 1952, he was found guilty of then-illegal homosexual acts and given the choice between prison and chemical castration. He chose the latter. It was only in 2009 that the Government issued an official apology.

Two years later, in June 1954, he was found dead with a half-eaten apple — the presumed method of administer­ing cyanide — at his bedside. The subsequent inquest ruled that he had committed suicide.

Alan Mathison Turing was born on 23 June 1912 in a nursing home in Paddington, London, the younger son of a career civil servant working in India. According to Andrew Hodges, author of influentia­l biography Alan Turing: The Enigma, Turing’s natural inclinatio­n towards mathematic­s and science “was not one of family or tradition but of an isolated and autonomous mind”. A seminal influence was the book Natural Wonders Every Child Should Know by Edwin Tenney Brewster, which opened his eyes to science.

By early adolescenc­e, while boarding at Sherborne School in Dorset, there was another “awakening”: Turing was attracted to older pupil, Christophe­r Morcom. According to Hodges, the pair found common ground in mathematic­s, though it would be “impossible to separate the different aspects of thought and feeling. This was first love, which Alan would himself come to regard as the first of many for others of his own sex.”

This emotional and intellectu­al companions­hip ended abruptly with Morcom’s death from tuberculos­is. Devastated, Turing redoubled his interest in the human mind and matter which took his studies further into physics. As he told Morcom’s mother, he was determined to soldier on with “as much energy if not as much interest into my work as if (Morcom) were alive, because that is what he would like me to do.”

Turing’s academic pursuits took him to King’s College, Cambridge, where Hodges suggests Turing found his “first real home”, accepting both of his homosexual­ity and his intellectu­al enquiries. He graduated in 1934, gained a Fellowship of King’s College in 1935 and won the Smith’s Prize in 1936 for work on probabilit­y theory. But it was his exploratio­n of the idea of “universal machines” capable of carrying out particular tasks that is now so clearly linked to computer hardware and software.

Following the declaratio­n of war with Nazi Germany on 3 September 1939, Turing began working full-time at the cryptograp­hy headquarte­rs at Bletchley Park, Buckingham­shire, soon focusing his attention on decipherin­g the “unbreakabl­e” German Naval communicat­ions. Arguably, this work gave Turing his strongest sense yet of having “dialogue with a machine,” vital in his developmen­t of the concept of computer programmin­g.

However, Turing’s wartime experience also gave him a quite different experience, of living and working with colleagues and “other ranks” of society with whom he’d not normally have met. This was not without its dangers, however; at one social occasion, Turing apparently shocked an assistant by openly admitting his homosexual­ity.

Following the war, Turing worked on the design of the ACE (Automatic Computing Engine) at the National Physical Laboratory, but post-war secrecy ensured constructi­on was slow and he returned to Cambridge before becoming Deputy Director of the Computing Laboratory at the University of Manchester. In 1950, in a paper on Computing Machinery and Intelligen­ce, he proposed the experiment which became known as the “Turing Test”, an attempt to define a standard for artificial intelligen­ce. He was elected to Fellowship of the Royal Society in July 1951.

The following January, Turing’s house was burgled. During the police investigat­ion, the 39-year-old Turing acknowledg­ed a sexual relationsh­ip with 19-year-old Arnold Murray. Both men were charged with gross indecency under Section 11 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885. Found guilty on 31 March 1952, Turing accepted the alternativ­e to a custodial sentence — a year’s course of oestrogen injections intended to neutralise his libido. Chemical castration.

“Eccentric, solitary, gloomy, vivacious, resigned, angry, eager, dissatisfi­ed — these had always been his ever-varying characteri­stics, and despite the strength that he showed the world in coping with outrageous fortune, no-one could safely have predicted his future course,” wrote Andrew Hodges in 1995. “He was found by his cleaner when she came in on 8 June 1954. He had died the day before of cyanide poisoning, a half-eaten apple beside his bed. His mother believed he had accidental­ly ingested cyanide from his fingers after an amateur chemistry experiment, but it is more credible that he had successful­ly contrived his death to allow her alone to believe this.” Not everyone agrees, however. In 2012, Professor Jack Copeland of the University of Canterbury, Christchur­ch, suggested that the evidence presented at the 1954 inquest would now be insufficie­nt to establish a suicide verdict; that the investigat­ion was conducted so poorly that even murder cannot be ruled out and that an “open verdict” would be preferable.

After many years of campaignin­g by the public, Turing was given a royal pardon at the close of 2013 but some argue that the injustice continues.

“Singling out Turing just because he is famous is wrong,” campaigner Peter Tatchell said at the time. “An apology and pardon is due to another 50,000-plus men who were also convicted of consenting, victimless homosexual relationsh­ips during the 20th century.”

A different “Turing Test” that Britain has yet to pass, perhaps?

The Imitation Game, starring Benedict Cumberbatc­h as Alan Turing, is out now

“He was found guilty of then- illegal homosexual acts and given the choice between prison and chemical castration. He chose the latter”

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 ??  ?? TURING DEVOTED HIMSELF TO DECIPHERIN­G THE “UNREAKABLE” GERMAN NAVAL CODE
TURING DEVOTED HIMSELF TO DECIPHERIN­G THE “UNREAKABLE” GERMAN NAVAL CODE
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 ??  ?? KEIRA KNIGHTLEY AND BENEDICT CUMBERBATC­H AS ALAN TURING IN THE IMITATION GAME
KEIRA KNIGHTLEY AND BENEDICT CUMBERBATC­H AS ALAN TURING IN THE IMITATION GAME

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