Turing Archive Director Questions Alan Turing Suicide Report 121
Posted
by
timothy
from the article-of-faith dept.
from the article-of-faith dept.
That Alan Turing committed suicide is widely accepted as fact. Now, an anonymous reader writes, "According to Professor Jack Copeland, director of the The Turing Archive for the History of Computing, 'The coroner [in Turing's case] didn't really investigate the evidence at all, he just jumped to the conclusion that he committed suicide. He seems to have been very biased from the statements in newspapers at the time.' Copeland further said that medical evidence suggested Turing died from inhaling cyanide rather than drinking or ingesting it."
suicide with cyanide? (Score:5, Informative)
As a chemist who has worked with cyanide, I question whether he would have chosen this method to end his own life. Cyanide poisoning is extremely unpleasant and chemists who work with it generally are aware of this. Cyanide gas is very easy to produce from cyanide solutions, just a matter of adjusting or failing to adjust the pH. I have given myself low level cyanide poisoning without being aware of it until the symptoms appeared hours later, and many others have been saved by having the antidote at hand when they realized they had been exposed.
The gas could easily have been produced in his laboratory by his own accident or neglect, or by someone else.
In my opinion Turing's death by cyanide poisoning was not an intentional suicide.
Re:suicide with cyanide? (Score:4, Informative)
Darwin awards aren't given to people whose exposure to danger is consciously undertaken, and most certainly not those for whom the risk was for the betterment of society- for instance, coal mine workers, soldiers, infectious agent researchers, and of course, scientists.
http://www.darwinawards.com/rules/rules2.html [darwinawards.com]
Anyway, I do find myself hoping that Alan Turing's death was accidental instead of deliberate.
Re:All right! (Score:2, Informative)
Slashdot's finally gotten to the point where its stories are driven by the Google Doodle!
http://games.slashdot.org/story/10/05/21/1555205/a-playable-pac-man-on-google-doodle [slashdot.org]
http://games.slashdot.org/story/10/05/24/2228226/google-pac-man-cost-48m-person-hours [slashdot.org]
http://idle.slashdot.org/story/11/06/10/1527254/google-guitar-doodle-song-gallery [slashdot.org]
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/10/09/08/1212244/google-logo-changes-again-hinting-rt-search [slashdot.org]
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/05/11/21/0541246/inside-googles-london-complex [slashdot.org]
Gay = "potential commie spy" back then... (Score:5, Informative)
Back in the 1950s, anyone who was gay was considered as being vulnerable to blackmail by the "filthy reds", who could threaten to expose them unless the subject agreed to work undercover for the commies.
They even applied this standard to the relatively few people who were OPENLY gay, even though there was no basis for exposing somebody who was already out of the closet.
Way better article at BBC (Score:5, Informative)
The beeb has an article [bbc.co.uk] that addresses the apple thing--he often ate an apple before bedtime, so the fact that a half-eaten apple was found on his night stand wasn't unusual at all, and the apple was never tested for cyanide.
Re:Widely reported as fact ... (Score:5, Informative)
the funny thing is that the assessment is that he would have been harassed relatively less in the US (he could have gotten a position there after his visit in Princeton).
Apparently being gay was not considered as suspicious as being a communist back then
Well, the only thing you can conclude from the whole sad story is that bigots are idiots. They took away Turing's security clearance because they were afraid his sexual orientation made him vulnerable to blackmail, even though by this point he was a *known* homosexual. The biggest potential threat to national security would have been Turing going to work for a foreign power because he could no longer work in Britain.
America was no better.In 1949 rocket scientists Qian Xuesen applied to become a naturalized US citizen, when reviewing his application noticed, "hey, this guy is Chinese!" He was imprisoned for a year and deported to China because being Chinese he was considered a security risk. He also happened to be the most brilliant young rocket scientist of his generation; so his deportation resulted in the worst possible outcome. He didn't give US rocketry secrets to China, he gave China its own rocketry *program*. Quian became the father of the Chinese ballistic missile program and later space program. He was deeply involved with education, instrumental to training the engineers and scientists who are running China's space program today.
Re:Widely reported as fact ... (Score:3, Informative)
Somewhere in the bowels of the archives of the US Government is the paperwork regarding Qian Xuesen's attempt at naturalization, his enprisonment, and his deportment. On those papers will be the names and signatures of the US Government bureaucrats who decided to do this. I wonder if any of them are still alive?
I would like to confront them with the results of their ignorant stupidity.
Well, no, what I *actually* would like to do is throw them and their supervisors into a large bonfire...