•  3
    On Alan Turing's anticipation of connectionism
    Synthese 108 (3): 361-377. 2004.
    It is not widely realised that Turing was probably the first person to consider building computing machines out of simple, neuron-like elements connected together into networks in a largely random manner. Turing called his networks ‘unorganised machines’. By the application of what he described as ‘appropriate interference, mimicking education’ an unorganised machine can be trained to perform any task that a Turing machine can carry out, provided the number of ‘neurons’ is sufficient. Turing pro…Read more
  •  314
    Turing's Wittgenstein
    In Ali Hossein Khani & Gary Kemp (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Wittgenstein and Other Philosophers: Part 2, Routledge. forthcoming.
    Did Wittgenstein’s 1939 lectures on the foundations of mathematics—the one certain set of interactions between Wittgenstein and Turing—shape Turing’s philosophy of mind? I argue that Turing’s and Wittgenstein’s criteria for thinking are similar in significant respects, and I investigate possible origins of these similarities in the 1939 lectures. The scholarly literature on the lectures focuses on mathematics and mathematical logic, yet in these lectures Wittgenstein presented several of his gen…Read more
  •  486
    In this paper we apply Anscombe’s account of human linguistic practices and of intentional action in a novel way—to the acts, by members of the Ngāi Tahu tribe in colonial-era Aotearoa New Zealand, of writing Letters to the Editor of local and regional newspapers. We identify the salient contexts of those acts and then draw on Anscombe’s work to identify intentional and moral actions that otherwise risk going unnoticed. Our analysis exemplifies Anscombe’s and Wittgenstein’s view that we can read…Read more
  •  251
    What Turing Did after He Invented the Universal Turing Machine
    Journal of Logic, Language and Information 9 (4): 491-509. 2000.
    Alan Turing anticipated many areas of current research incomputer and cognitive science. This article outlines his contributionsto Artificial Intelligence, connectionism, hypercomputation, andArtificial Life, and also describes Turing's pioneering role in thedevelopment of electronic stored-program digital computers. It locatesthe origins of Artificial Intelligence in postwar Britain. It examinesthe intellectual connections between the work of Turing and ofWittgenstein in respect of their views …Read more
  •  64
    Turing, Wittgenstein and the science of the mind
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 72 (4): 497-519. 1994.
  •  62
    Alan Turing, Father of the Modern Computer
    Rutherford Journal: The New Zealand Journal for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology 4. 2011.
  •  109
    Turing’s Test vs the Moral Turing Test
    Philosophy and Technology 37 (4): 1-14. 2024.
    Given actual autonomous systems with capacities for harm and the public’s apparent willingness to take moral advice from large language models (LLMs), Einar Duenger Bohn’s (2024) renewed discussion of the Moral Turing Test (MTT) is timely. Bohn’s aim is to defend an unequivocally behavioural test. In this paper, I argue against this direction. Interpreted as testing mere behaviour, the Turing test is a poor test of either intelligence or moral agency, and neither Bohn’s version of the test nor A…Read more
  •  78
    Turing's Test vs the Moral Turing Test
    Philosophy and Technology 37 (4): 1-14. 2024.
    Given actual autonomous systems with capacities for harm and the public’s apparent willingness to take moral advice from large language models (LLMs), Einar Duenger Bohn’s (2024) renewed discussion of the Moral Turing Test (MTT) is timely. Bohn’s aim is to defend an unequivocally behavioural test. In this paper, I argue against this direction. Interpreted as testing mere behaviour, the Turing test is a poor test of either intelligence or moral agency, and neither Bohn’s version of the test nor A…Read more
  •  948
    Wittgenstein and Turing on Al: myth versus reality
    In Alice C. Helliwell, Brian Ball & Alessandro Rossi (eds.), _Wittgenstein and Artificial Intelligence_. Volume 1: Mind and Language, Anthem Press. 2024.
    A standard account of Wittgenstein and Turing is that both were philosophical behaviourists regarding the mind, whereas theorists sympathetic to Wittgenstein typically claim that Wittgenstein was a fierce critic of Turing. Proponents of the latter account align Wittgenstein with AI naysayers; for Wittgenstein, they say, the question Can machines think? is nonsensical or absurd. I shall argue that both the standard and the alternative accounts are myths.
  •  32
    Intelligence Naturalized, Turing-style
    In Ali Hossein Khani, Gary Kemp, Hassan Amiriara & Hossein Sheykh Rezaee (eds.), Naturalism and its challenges, Routledge. 2024.
    The modern project of naturalizing intelligence began in the middle of last century, and Alan Turing is one of its most celebrated proponents. The assumption that Turing shared the ontological and methodological commitments of canonical naturalists is based on certain widespread beliefs about Turing—namely, that his test of intelligence is behaviourist and his approach to the mind computationalist. This chapter argues that influential versions of these assumptions are false, and instead that, in…Read more
  •  438
  •  547
    Turing’s Wager?
    with B. Jacj Copeland
    Filozofia i Nauka. Studia Filozoficzne I Interdyscyplinarne 1 (11): 23-36. 2023.
  •  56
    Prosentential theory of truth in Dorothy Grover (1936-2017)
    Encyclopedia of Concise Concepts by Women Philosophers. 2022.
    In this entry, we offer a very brief overview of Dorothy Grover's prosentential theory of truth.
  •  303
    An Analysis of Turing’s Criterion for ‘Thinking’
    Philosophies 7 (6): 124. 2022.
    In this paper I argue that Turing proposed a new approach to the concept of thinking, based on his claim that intelligence is an ‘emotional concept’; and that the response-dependence interpretation of Turing’s ‘criterion for “thinking”’ is a better fit with his writings than orthodox interpretations. The aim of this paper is to clarify the response-dependence interpretation, by addressing such questions as: What did Turing mean by the expression ‘emotional’? Is Turing’s criterion subjective? Are…Read more
  •  2877
    Rethinking Turing’s Test and the Philosophical Implications
    Minds and Machines 30 (4): 487-512. 2020.
    In the 70 years since Alan Turing’s ‘Computing Machinery and Intelligence’ appeared in Mind, there have been two widely-accepted interpretations of the Turing test: the canonical behaviourist interpretation and the rival inductive or epistemic interpretation. These readings are based on Turing’s Mind paper; few seem aware that Turing described two other versions of the imitation game. I have argued that both readings are inconsistent with Turing’s 1948 and 1952 statements about intelligence, and…Read more
  • Two Lectures on Religion by Karl Popper
    In C. Jones, B. Matthews & J. Clement (eds.), Treasures of the University Canterbury Library, Canterbury University Press. pp. 173-177. 2011.
  •  877
    Can a Robot Smile? Wittgenstein on Facial Expression
    In Timothy P. Racine & Kathleen L. Slaney (eds.), A Wittgensteinian Perspective on the Use of Conceptual Analysis in Psychology, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 172-194. 2013.
    Recent work in social robotics, which is aimed both at creating an artificial intelligence and providing a test-bed for psychological theories of human social development, involves building robots that can learn from ‘face-to-face’ interaction with human beings — as human infants do. The building-blocks of this interaction include the robot’s ‘expressive’ behaviours, for example, facial-expression and head-and-neck gesture. There is here an ideal opportunity to apply Wittgensteinian conceptual a…Read more
  • How Human Can They Get? (review)
    Science 248 745. 1999.
  • More Human Than Human: Does The Uncanny Curve Really Matter?
    with Jakub Zlotowski and Christoph Bartneck
    In Diane Proudfoot, Jakub Zlotowski & Christoph Bartneck (eds.), Proceedings of the HRI2013 Workshop on Design of Humanlikeness in HRI: from uncanny valley to minimal design, . pp. 7-13. 2013.
  •  1
    Alan Turing and evil AI
    OUPBlog: Oxford University Press’s Academic Insights for the Thinking World. 2018.
  • We discuss, first, TUring's role in the development of the computer; second, the early history of Artificial Intelligence (to 1956); and third, TUring's fa- mous imitation game, now universally known as the TUring test, which he proposed in cameo form in 1948 and then more fully in 1950 and 1952. Various objections have been raised to Turing's test: we describe some of the most prominent and explain why, in our view, they fail.
  • Robots and Rule-following
    In Christof Teuscher (ed.), Alan Turing: Life and Legacy of a Great Thinker, Springer-verlag. pp. 359-379. 2004.
    Turing was probably the first person to advocate the pursuit of robotics as a route to Artificial Intelligence and Wittgenstein the first to argue that, without the appropriate history, no machine could be intelligent. Wittgenstein anticipated much recent theorizing about the mind, including aspects of connectionist theo- ries of mind and the situated cognition approach in AI. Turing and Wittgenstein had a wary respect for each other and there is significant overlap in their work, in both the ph…Read more