(Boldface items are particularly important or interesting.)
(Many items that do not have links may be available online from the UB
Libraries
Electronic Journal
holdings.)
"What is the difference between a Turing machine and the modern
computer? It's the same as that between Hillary's ascent of Everest and
the establishment of a Hilton hotel on its peak."
Alan Perlis
Reprinted, with corrections, in
Martin Davis (ed.),
The Undecidable:
Basic Papers on Undecidable Propositions, Unsolvable Problems
and Computable Functions
(New York: Raven Press, 1965): 116-154.
Click on the title to do a Google search
of various online versions.
The most common on-line version is best read using Microsoft
Internet Explorer (or any other browser that uses cascaded
style sheets).
Abstract:
This paper contains a proof that every program
with gotos can be transformed into a semantically equivalent
program without goto. A transformation algorithm is given.
Argues "that Turing's analysis of computation by a human being
does not apply directly to mechanical devices." Gandy was Turing's only
Ph.D. student.
A follow-up article that simplifies and generalizes Gandy's paper:
Sieg, Wilfried,
&
Byrnes, John
(1999),
"An Abstract Model for Parallel Computation:
Gandy's Thesis",
The
Monist
82(1) (January):
150-164.
Israel, David
(2002),
"Reflections on Gödel's and Gandy's Reflections on
Turing's Thesis",
Minds and Machines
12(2) (May): 181-201.
Shagrir, Oron
(2002),
"Effective Computation by Humans and Machines",
Minds and Machines
12(2) (May): 221-240.
Website that contains a variety of interesting papers on
various aspects of Turing's work, most written by Copeland, a well-respected
contemporary philosopher, including: