The work of Alan Turing (1936) set a milestone for the foundation of the concept of algorithm by grounding the notion of effective procedure on a special type of real cognitive phenomenon, namely, that of a human being performing rule-based symbolic transformations with the only aid of paper and pencil. In this work, after a brief historical overview, we show how Turing arrived at a negative solution of the decidability problem for first order logic and in which sense Turing’s explication of the intuitive concept of effective procedure is sufficient to justify Church’s Thesis. We then present a cognitive interpretation of Turing’s theory of computation, according to which Turing machines are viewed as models of real phenomena of mind-enviro...
The paper focuses on some logical and epistemological aspects of the notion of computation. The firs...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
The fields of philosophy of mind and cognitive science have been characterized, in the last few dec...
The work of Alan Turing (1936) set a milestone for the foundation of the concept of algorithm by gro...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
This paper considers whether computational formalisms beyond the Church Turing Thesis (CTT) could be...
As part of ongoing research bridging ethnomethodology and computer science, in this article we offer...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
Turing’s (1950) article on the Turing test is often interpreted as supporting the behaviouristic vie...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
AbstractI explore the conceptual foundations of Alan Turing's analysis of computability, which still...
The importance of algorithms is now recognized in all mathematical sciences, thanks to the developm...
Classical computationalism considers the Turing Machine to be a psychologically implausible model of...
Many important lines of argumentation have been presented during the last decades claiming that mach...
The chapter discusses the concept of Turing-computability from the point of view of mathematical con...
The paper focuses on some logical and epistemological aspects of the notion of computation. The firs...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
The fields of philosophy of mind and cognitive science have been characterized, in the last few dec...
The work of Alan Turing (1936) set a milestone for the foundation of the concept of algorithm by gro...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
This paper considers whether computational formalisms beyond the Church Turing Thesis (CTT) could be...
As part of ongoing research bridging ethnomethodology and computer science, in this article we offer...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
Turing’s (1950) article on the Turing test is often interpreted as supporting the behaviouristic vie...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
AbstractI explore the conceptual foundations of Alan Turing's analysis of computability, which still...
The importance of algorithms is now recognized in all mathematical sciences, thanks to the developm...
Classical computationalism considers the Turing Machine to be a psychologically implausible model of...
Many important lines of argumentation have been presented during the last decades claiming that mach...
The chapter discusses the concept of Turing-computability from the point of view of mathematical con...
The paper focuses on some logical and epistemological aspects of the notion of computation. The firs...
Due to his significant role in the development of computer technology and the discipline of artifici...
The fields of philosophy of mind and cognitive science have been characterized, in the last few dec...