Computable Numbers: Difference between revisions
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{{wikipediainfo|Turing's proof}} | {{retitle|''{{PAGENAME}}''}}{{wikipediainfo|Turing's proof}} | ||
'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' was the title of a scientific paper by [[Alan Turing]], where he disproves [[David Hilbert]]'s thesis that all mathematical problems are solvable. | '''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' was the title of a scientific paper by [[Alan Turing]], where he disproves [[David Hilbert]]'s thesis that all mathematical problems are solvable. | ||
Turing worked on this paper for over a year and published it before [[World War II]]. The proof uses the concept of a [[Universal Machine]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Turing Test (novel)|The Turing Test]]'') | Turing worked on this paper for over a year and published it before [[World War II]]. The proof uses the concept of a [[Universal Machine]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Turing Test (novel)|The Turing Test]]'') | ||
[[Category:Mathematics from the real world]] | [[Category:Mathematics from the real world]] |
Revision as of 00:00, 18 December 2018
Computable Numbers was the title of a scientific paper by Alan Turing, where he disproves David Hilbert's thesis that all mathematical problems are solvable.
Turing worked on this paper for over a year and published it before World War II. The proof uses the concept of a Universal Machine. (PROSE: The Turing Test)