This chapter1 analyses the relationships and differences between the various machines
that Alan M. Turing invented, projected, created and programmed, in his work in fields
ranging from logic and the theory of computability to cryptanalysis, computer science and
artificial intelligence. Turing’s position in his article ‘On Computable Numbers’ was one of
complete trust in the ability of a machine’s ‘table of instructions’ to achieve whatever result
the ‘programmer’ desired. Nine years later, working on the design of the ACE project, he put
forward a rather different view concerning the ability of the stored-program electronic
computer to perform ‘intelligent’ tasks. The first surviving document to show Turing’s new
attitude towards machines was his ‘Proposed Electronic Calculator’2. The machine that
Turing proposed there, was different from both the universal Turing machine and the
machine outlined in von Neumann’s ‘First Draft’.3 I compare Turing’s project with von
Neumann’s in order to underline similarities and—above all—the differences
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