Originally posted by Northender
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Alan Turing
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amateur51
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Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostMuch in the way assembly-language programming is discouraged - and is well on the way to becoming a black art - in our own day.
By the way the Welsh composer Daniel Jones also worked at Bletchley Park (see Grove's). And some of his music we are told reflects his "metrical experiments, which were influenced by his understanding of patterns and symmetrical shapes in nature (he kept a microscope for noting plant structures)." Now that recalls does it not Turing's interests towards the end of his life in morphogenetics (the development of living things). I wonder whether they knew each other and if so whether they discussed the subject over luncheon. Daniel Jones is not mentioned in Mr. Hodges's fascinating Turing biography.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Gordon View PostThanks for that Sydney. I knew DJ had spent time at Bletchley but not the rest of it. [ I should have known, having a copy of Grove]. The music of DJ is well worth a listen particularly his string quartets - Chandos CHAN 9535 - despite his being from South Wales! Another claim to fame - he was born the day after Kingsway Hall was opened!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostBachgen drwg!
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Originally posted by mercia View Posta posthumous royal pardon
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-25495315
I'm reminded of something that I heard Michael Portillo say on R4 the other day about how the British do the right thing but only after they have exhausted all other possibilities
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI'm reminded of something that I heard Michael Portillo say on R4 the other day about how the British do the right thing but only after they have exhausted all other possibilities
"You can always count on Americans to do the right thing - after they've tried everything else." - Winston Churchill
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Can someone be pardoned when they have done nothing wrong? I suppose it's an admission that the conviction was wrong, which is something, but what about all the others who were also abominably treated? I feel sort of uncomfortable about this, but perhaps it's better than nothing. I may be misinterpreting the word 'pardon', but to me it implies sins forgiven. If there were no sins, how can they be forgiven?Last edited by Mary Chambers; 24-12-13, 10:40.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostCan someone be pardoned when they have done nothing wrong? I suppose it's an admission that the conviction was wrong, which is something, but what about all the others who were also abominable treated? I feel sort of uncomfortable about this, but perhaps it's better than nothing. I may be misinterpreting the word 'pardon', but to me it implies sins forgiven. If there were no sins, how can they be forgiven?
The question that no-one seems to raise is: having done so much in his relatively short life, what else might Akan Turing have achieved had he klived a further twenty-five years, possibly in a stable nurturing relationship?
'Victimless crime' cries Peter Tatchell of Turing's punishment, and quite rightly. But what if the true victim were humankind?
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostCan someone be pardoned when they have done nothing wrong? I suppose it's an admission that the conviction was wrong, which is something, but what about all the others who were also abominable treated? I feel sort of uncomfortable about this, but perhaps it's better than nothing. I may be misinterpreting the word 'pardon', but to me it implies sins forgiven. If there were no sins, how can they be forgiven?
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostCan someone be pardoned when they have done nothing wrong? I suppose it's an admission that the conviction was wrong, which is something, but what about all the others who were also abominably treated? I feel sort of uncomfortable about this, but perhaps it's better than nothing. I may be misinterpreting the word 'pardon', but to me it implies sins forgiven. If there were no sins, how can they be forgiven?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
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