Reflections on gödel's and Gandy's reflections on Turing's thesis

Minds and Machines 12 (2):181-201 (2002)
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Abstract

We sketch the historical and conceptual context of Turing's analysis of algorithmic or mechanical computation. We then discuss two responses to that analysis, by Gödel and by Gandy, both of which raise, though in very different ways. The possibility of computation procedures that cannot be reduced to the basic procedures into which Turing decomposed computation. Along the way, we touch on some of Cleland's views.

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