The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing
The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing
Martin Davis, a fluent interpreter of mathematics and philosophy, locates the source of this knowledge in the work of the remarkable German thinker G. W. Leibniz, who, among other accomplishments, was a distinguished jurist, mining engineer, and diplomat but found time to invent a contraption called the "Leibniz wheel," a sort of calculator that could carry out the four basic operations of arithmetic. Leibniz subsequently developed a method of calculation called the calculus raciocinator, an innovation his successor George Boole extended by, in Davis's words, "turning logic into algebra." (Boole emerges as a deeply sympathetic character in Davis's pages, rather than as the dry-as-dust figure of other histories. He explained, Davis reports, that he had turned to mathematics because he had so little money as a student to buy books, and mathematics books provided more value for the money because they took so long to work through.) Davis traces the development of this logic, essential to the advent of "thinking machines," through the workshops and studies of such thinkers as Georg Cantor, Kurt G?del, and Alan Turing, each of whom puzzled out just a little bit more of the workings of the world--and who, in the bargain, made the present possible.
$3.18
Original: $10.59
-70%
The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing—
$10.59
$3.18
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Description
Martin Davis, a fluent interpreter of mathematics and philosophy, locates the source of this knowledge in the work of the remarkable German thinker G. W. Leibniz, who, among other accomplishments, was a distinguished jurist, mining engineer, and diplomat but found time to invent a contraption called the "Leibniz wheel," a sort of calculator that could carry out the four basic operations of arithmetic. Leibniz subsequently developed a method of calculation called the calculus raciocinator, an innovation his successor George Boole extended by, in Davis's words, "turning logic into algebra." (Boole emerges as a deeply sympathetic character in Davis's pages, rather than as the dry-as-dust figure of other histories. He explained, Davis reports, that he had turned to mathematics because he had so little money as a student to buy books, and mathematics books provided more value for the money because they took so long to work through.) Davis traces the development of this logic, essential to the advent of "thinking machines," through the workshops and studies of such thinkers as Georg Cantor, Kurt G?del, and Alan Turing, each of whom puzzled out just a little bit more of the workings of the world--and who, in the bargain, made the present possible.
The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing | Book Grocer
$3.18
Original: $10.59
-70%
The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing—
$10.59
$3.18
You may also like
NEW
God's Children Are Little Broken Things: Winner of the 2023 Dylan Thomas Prize
$12.98
-70%NEW
Harmless Like You
$8.47
$2.54
-70%NEW
Umbrella Mouse to the Rescue
$5.65
$1.70
NEW
Good Bad Love: From the Richard & Judy Book Club bestselling author of The Guilty One
$8.47
-70%NEW
Once Upon a Raven's Nest: a life on Exmoor in an epoch of change
$12.35
$3.70
-70%NEW
Fing
$5.65
$1.70
NEW
10 Leadership Virtues for Disruptive Times: Coaching Your Team Through Immense Change and Challenge
$10.59
-70%NEW
Closing In: A page-turning suspenseful thriller
$8.47
$2.54
-70%NEW
How Can I Forgive You?: The Courage to Forgive, the Freedom Not To
$8.47
$2.54
NEW
Black Lake Manor
$10.59
NEW
How the Force Can Fix the World: Lessons on Life, Liberty, and Happiness from a Galaxy Far, Far Away