[FOM] History of computable functions
praatika@mappi.helsinki.fi
praatika at mappi.helsinki.fi
Thu Nov 5 01:24:34 EST 2009
Lainaus "Andrej Bauer" <andrej.bauer at andrej.com>:
> A student of mine is working on a seminar in which he will show in
> excruciating detail that the general recursive functions embed in
> untyped lambda calculus (this is at undergraduate level). He would
> like to know more about the history of computable functions, lambda
> calculus, Turing machines, etc., with a reasonably correct timeline of
> who did what when. Can someone please suggest some reading material?
Here are some standard references:
Martin Davis (1982) “Why Gödel didn’t have Church’s thesis”,
Information and Control 54, 3-24.
Martin Davis (1983) “The prehistory and early history of automated
reasoning”, teoksessa J. Siekmann & G. Wrightson (eds.) Automation of
Reasoning, vol. 1, Berlin, Springer-Verlag, 1-28.
Martin Davis (1987) “Mathematical logic and the origin of modern
computers”, teoksessa Studies in the History of Mathematics, 137-165.
Washington, D.C., Mathematical Association of America.
Gandy, Robin (1988) “The confluence of ideas in 1936”, in Rolf Herken
(ed.) (1988) The Universal Turing Machine. A Half-Century Survey,
Oxford University Press, Verlagen Berlin, 55-111.
S.C: Kleene (1981) “Origins of recursive function theory”, Annals of
the History of Computing 3, 52-67.
Best, Panu
Panu Raatikainen
Ph.D., Academy Research Fellow,
Docent in Theoretical Philosophy
Department of Philosophy
University of Helsinki
Finland
E-mail: panu.raatikainen at helsinki.fi
http://www.mv.helsinki.fi/home/praatika/
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