Many Minds in Math and Art

I just finished A Madman Dreams of Turing MachinesJanna Levin‘s novel that weaves threads from the lives of Kurt Godel and Alan Turing.

I was already familiar with Turing and his code-breaking exploits that enabled the allied victory in the battle of the Atlantic from Robert Harris’s thriller Enigma and various historical accounts including the fascinating Most Secret War (R.V. Jones).

What Levin does is breathe some life into the biography.

It took me to The Turing Scrapbook – a great online resource of information compiled by Alan Hodges where I learned all kinds of things. Turing wasn’t only a brilliant mathematician and founder of computer science he was also a visionary thinker. (Plus Olympic-level athlete and marathon runner.) In Levin’s fiction he was bullied at school where he was not a star pupil and did very poorly in many academic areas. He was also persecuted by the British government and some would say hounded to his death. I now have Hodges’ acclaimed biography Alan Turing: The Enigma on my reading list.

Next up for summer reading: The Yellow House- Van Gogh, Gauguin and Nine Turbulent Weeks in Provence by Martin Gayford.

JosieHolford

Recent Posts

Six Degrees: From Knife to A Dark Adapted eye

The great chain of books – #6Degrees – how one book leads to another.  There’s…

6 days ago

The Signs

Pedantry, Politics, and the Park Ranger Activists persist in plastering all available neighborhood surfaces with…

1 week ago

A Lost World

You don't have to be Irish or Catholic (I'm neither) to find this documentary fascinating.…

2 weeks ago

Leadership and the Curse of St. Custard’s

Modern life is full of complexity, chaos, and contradictions. In our efforts to cope, some…

2 weeks ago

An Antidote for Optimism

For if ever you are in danger of feeling a wave of quite unreasonable cheerfulness…

3 weeks ago