
Alan Turing
The Genius Codebreaker Who Helped Win a War and Paved the Way for Computers
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Jackson Henderson
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Revin Laxtor
À propos de cette écoute
What if a single mind held the key to winning a world war, inventing the modern computer, and asking the first serious questions about artificial intelligence—all before the age of forty?
That mind belonged to Alan Turing, and this book tells his remarkable story.
Alan Turing: The Genius Codebreaker Who Helped Win a War and Paved the Way for Computers is an accessible, compelling exploration of one of the most brilliant and misunderstood figures of the 20th century. Written for curious listeners of all backgrounds, this book unpacks the science, context, and personal struggles behind Turing’s legacy—explaining complex ideas in clear terms and revealing why his influence is still felt in every corner of modern life.
Beginning with his childhood fascination with numbers and puzzles, the book traces Turing’s journey from an awkward schoolboy to a groundbreaking mathematician and codebreaker. In his early twenties, he developed the concept of a universal computing machine—what we now know as the theoretical foundation for all computers. He didn’t just imagine it; he described exactly how such a machine would function, years before the first computers were built.
During World War II, Turing’s genius found urgent purpose at Bletchley Park, the British codebreaking centre. Here, he led efforts to crack the German Enigma cipher, a seemingly unbreakable code used to coordinate military operations. Turing’s creation of the Bombe machine, an electromechanical device capable of sifting through thousands of settings, gave the Allies a critical edge. Historians now credit this work with shortening the war by years—and saving millions of lives.
But Turing’s story is not only about scientific triumph. It is also about injustice. Despite his wartime heroism, he was prosecuted in 1952 for homosexuality, then a criminal offence in Britain. Stripped of his security clearance and forced to undergo chemical castration,
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