Alan Turing: The Hidden Wartime Manuscript by the Father of Computing
The Aspen Institute and Bonhams invite you to a wine and cheese reception and a private viewing of an unknown wartime manuscript of the utmost rarity, consisting of 56 pages of mathematical notes by Alan Turing, in which he works on the foundations of mathematical notation and computer science, likely the only extensive holograph manuscript by him in existence. Also on view will be a 1944 Enigma machine.
With remarks from Walter Isaacson , president and CEO, the Aspen Institute and author of ”The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution” (Simon and Schuster).
The Aspen Institute and Bonhams invite you to a wine and cheese reception and a private viewing of an unknown wartime manuscript of the utmost rarity, consisting of 56 pages of mathematical notes by Alan Turing, in which he works on the foundations of mathematical notation and computer science, likely the only extensive holograph manuscript by him in existence. Also on view will be a 1944 Enigma machine.