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domingo, septiembre 29, 2024
InicioHemerotecaAlan Turing, el genio de la informática moderna tenía malas calificaciones

Alan Turing, el genio de la informática moderna tenía malas calificaciones

Alan Turing, el padre de la informática y quien pudo descifrar los códigos alemanes en la Segunda Guerra Mundial, no era de niño precisamente el genio en el que terminó convirtiéndose, si se le da crédito a sus libretas de calificaciones durante la época escolar.

Escribiendo en 1929, el profesor de matemáticas de un Turing adolescente admitió que su alumno mostró una “promesa distinta” en el tema. Sin embargo, señaló que carecía de la capacidad de plantear en el papel una solución “inteligible y legible”, necesaria para ser un “matemático de primera clase”. ”

Su maestro de física incluso advirtió: “Debe recordar que Cambridge querrá conocimientos sólidos en vez de ideas vagas”. Y su tutor de inglés no se quedó atrás, pues lo reprendió por sus ideas “grandiosas”.

Las pruebas de las fallas académicas que tuvo esta mente maestra de las matemáticas se exhiben en una nueva exposición: Codebreakers and Groundbreakers, en el Museo Fitzwilliam de Cambridge

“Alan Turing es el padre de la informática moderna”, dijo Patricia McGuire, archivista de King’s College. “Su trabajo sobre números computables sigue siendo uno de los documentos fundamentales de la informática”.

Los boletines de calificaciones fueron un préstamo de los Archivos Digitales de Alan Turing en el King’s College.

También están expuestas las cartas que Turing le envió a su madre desde Bletchley Park, en las que detalla cómo él y un amigo ayudaron a dos niños judíos a encontrar refugio en Gran Bretaña.

 

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