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1. Richard Dawkins: Podcast

Richard Dawkins is the bestselling author of The Selfish Gene and The God Delusion. He’s also a pre-eminent scientist, the first holder of the Charles Simonyi Chair of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford, and is a fellow of New College, Oxford. Called “Darwin’s Rottweiler” by the media, he is one of the most famous advocates of Darwinian evolution. His most recent book is The Oxford Guide to Modern Science Writing, a collection of the best science writing in the last century.

This is the second in a series of podcasts we’re running from an interview with Dawkins. Last time, he talked about Watson and Crick. Now, Dawkins looks at Alan Turing, one of the fathers of the modern computer. Dawkins has included a selection from Turing’s Computing Machinery and Intelligence in his book.

Transcript after the jump.

DORIAN DEVINS: Alan Turing, another British scientist, computer mathematician…

RICHARD DAWKINS: Yes. Alan Turing. Well, one of the fathers of the modern computer. So Turing was, I suppose, the nearest British approach to the father of the modern computer, apart from [Charles] Babbage in the 19th Century. Turing was the leading code-breaker in the Second World War at the Bletchley Park code-breaking establishment, which was phenomenally successful in breaking German codes. The famous Enigma code that the Germans used—the Germans never realized that their Enigma code had been broken. And the result of breaking the Enigma code was that Allied British and American generals would sometimes get German orders more or less at the same time as German generals were getting them. So it was a most extraordinarily valuable contribution to the Allied war effort. However, Turing committed suicide after the war because he was arrested for homosexual activity, and in those days in Britain, homosexual behavior was illegal. And Turing, who should have been given a medal and a knighthood, feted as the savior of his nation, was instead arrested for homosexuality and was given a choice between a two year prison sentence or being given a course of hormone injections which would have had some kind of feminizing effect and would have made him grow breasts. He chose instead to eat an apple that he’d injected with cyanide. One of the most tragic stories in British science. He was a great mathematician, a brilliant mathematician, a brilliant philosopher, and one of his contributions was the Turing Machine. Another one was the Turing Test, the hypothetical test for whether a computer could think; the so-called Turing Test, where you have a human in one room and an entity, which might be a computer and might be another human in another room, communicating by teleprinter. And the task of the real human, the subject, is to discover whether what he’s talking to is a computer or another human. The Turing Test, if the computer passes the Turing Test, what it means is that a human can’t tell the difference between the computer and another human. And the Turing Test you very often find mentioned in philosophical works about the nature of consciousness and machine intelligence.

DEVINS: It’s quite interesting to be able to read something by him, rather than just about him too.

DAWKINS: Yes. He was a real eccentric, a very, very strange man, and as I say, his downfall and his death is one of the most tragic and actually wicked stories that I know.

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2. A Blast from the...Future?

Well, we've all been busy making plans, setting themes for ourselves, making goals for the new year, etc., this past week or two. We've been looking ahead, into the future, with anticipation and energy. What a great thing!

Now, courtesy of my husband and Internet guide, Randy, I'll pass along a neat website called FutureMe.org. When you visit the website, you can send yourself an email, to be delivered anytime in the future, on the date of your choosing.

This reminds me of the letters some of my daughters' teachers have them write. At the beginning of 6th grade, my younger daughter had to write a letter to herself sharing what her fears were, what she was excited about, etc. As elementary school graduation neared, those letters were passed out, and the kids had a chance to revisit their own past. They laughed about how silly some of their fears turned out to be, and mostly just felt proud of how far they had come since writing those letters.

So, if you've made goals, chosen a theme, joined HipWriterMama's 30-Day Challenge, or just decided to try to write this year, think about visiting FutureMe.org and writing yourself a letter. Share what your hopes and fears are now, and ask yourself if you've made strides toward accomplishing your goal.

Before you write that email, though, make sure you've read Sara Lewis Holmes' Resolved post at Read Write Believe. As you write that email to your future self, be kind to your now self. Be encouraging. Ask how you'll feel if you don't achieve all your dreams this month, this year, whatever. Say the words to yourself that you would say to your closest friend in the same situation.

And be sure to offer yourself some major congratulations (and some kind of reward--manicure? two hours in a bookstore with a big hot chocolate and a pile of books to browse? attendance at a writing conference?) if you have worked hard toward your goals.

See ya later. I have to go catch up on my email...to me!

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