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A Madman Dreams of Turing Machines Hardcover β 22 August 2006
by
Janna Levin
(Author)
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In this remarkable work of fiction, astrophysicist Janna Levin reimagines the lives of two of the most important and influential minds of our time.
The narrator is a scientist herself, a physicist obsessed with Kurt Gödel, the greatest logician of many centuries, and with Alan Turing, the extraordinary mathematician, breaker of the Enigma Code during World War II. “They are both brilliantly original and outsiders,” the narrator tells us. “They are both besotted with mathematics. But for all their devotion, mathematics is indifferent, unaltered by any of their dramas . . . Against indifference, I want to tell their stories.” Which she does in a haunting, incantatory voice, the two lives unfolding in parallel narratives that overlap in the magnitude of each man’s achievement and demise: Gödel, delusional and paranoid, would starve himself to death; Turing, arrested for homosexual activities, would be driven to suicide. And they meet as well in the narrator’s mind, where facts are interwoven with her desire and determination to find meaning in the maze of their stories: two men devoted to truth of the highest abstract nature, yet unable to grasp the mundane truths of their own lives.
A unique amalgam of luminous imagination and richly evoked historic character and event—A Madman Dreams of Turing Machines is a story about the pursuit of truth and its effect on the lives of two men. A story of genius and madness, incredible yet true.
The narrator is a scientist herself, a physicist obsessed with Kurt Gödel, the greatest logician of many centuries, and with Alan Turing, the extraordinary mathematician, breaker of the Enigma Code during World War II. “They are both brilliantly original and outsiders,” the narrator tells us. “They are both besotted with mathematics. But for all their devotion, mathematics is indifferent, unaltered by any of their dramas . . . Against indifference, I want to tell their stories.” Which she does in a haunting, incantatory voice, the two lives unfolding in parallel narratives that overlap in the magnitude of each man’s achievement and demise: Gödel, delusional and paranoid, would starve himself to death; Turing, arrested for homosexual activities, would be driven to suicide. And they meet as well in the narrator’s mind, where facts are interwoven with her desire and determination to find meaning in the maze of their stories: two men devoted to truth of the highest abstract nature, yet unable to grasp the mundane truths of their own lives.
A unique amalgam of luminous imagination and richly evoked historic character and event—A Madman Dreams of Turing Machines is a story about the pursuit of truth and its effect on the lives of two men. A story of genius and madness, incredible yet true.
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherKnopf
- Publication date22 August 2006
- Dimensions13.97 x 2.54 x 21.59 cm
- ISBN-101400040302
- ISBN-13978-1400040308
Product details
- Publisher : Knopf; First Edition (22 August 2006)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1400040302
- ISBN-13 : 978-1400040308
- Dimensions : 13.97 x 2.54 x 21.59 cm
- Customer reviews:
Customer Reviews
3.7 out of 5 stars
3.7 out of 5
15 global ratings
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Len Margolin
1.0 out of 5 stars
fiction
Reviewed in the United States πΊπΈ on 13 March 2019Verified Purchase
Like the author, I am a theoretical physicist with 50 years of well-cited publications. I am also well-read about famous scientists, including both Godel and Turing. This book is not historical, it is simply the made up fantasies of one unconstrained author. If you really want to "meet" these creative mathematicians, to understand what they did and why, look elsewhere.
16 people found this helpful
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Travis Pelt
2.0 out of 5 stars
Can I Interest You in a Monkey?
Reviewed in the United States πΊπΈ on 28 January 2008Verified Purchase
A dancing monkey? That does magic tricks and speaks French and recites the great po'ems of yore and that can even joust on tigerback?? Now image you said yes and I gave you a Yorkie terrier. That sense of disappointment is how I felt when I read this book.
You've got two eccentric crazy scientists with beautifully messed up lives and childhoods. It seems like everything they do in their personal lives was scripted by Douglas Adams. Yes they die tragically and stupidly and miserably: because their lives, again, are so strange as to be beyond the scope of fiction. It seems as though it would take great skill and effort to turn these amazingly interesting lives and write a biography that's as interesting as a treatise on tapioca pudding.
Regrettably, Levin has that substance-sucking skill and made that neo-Herculian effort to put all this into one slender volume replete of soul and vitality. What should be a gripping entertaining read is, instead, simply depressing. Oddly, Levin seems to have a great mind for the sciences is also gifted with a deep understanding of literary conventions. She makes some interesting choices in which conventions to include (like adding herself in at random point of the novel for no more effect than to make a reader say 'Wow, that's odd) and which conventions not to use, like parallelism. You'd think that if an author was writing about the lives of two respected mathematicians and both were riddled with mental and emotional problems, drawing parallels between the two would be a great way to form cohesion. But Levin bravely thrusts cohesion aside and allows the book to mire itself in what becomes random details of these people's lives.
Now, sorry for the harshness. I was truly amazed at how mediocre a story was made of this Godel and Turing. I would strongly suggest reading upon the these two characters in greater depth (along with Tesla, my personal favorite). Turing's tale is especially sad and complex as his efforts made a huge difference in winning WWII and yet his treatment by government officials was astoundingly harsh and cruel (for example, for being a homosexual, he was imprisoned and medially castrated.)
If you are looking for interesting books to bone up on your science knowledge, there is no better book than Billy Bryson's History of Nearly Everything.
You've got two eccentric crazy scientists with beautifully messed up lives and childhoods. It seems like everything they do in their personal lives was scripted by Douglas Adams. Yes they die tragically and stupidly and miserably: because their lives, again, are so strange as to be beyond the scope of fiction. It seems as though it would take great skill and effort to turn these amazingly interesting lives and write a biography that's as interesting as a treatise on tapioca pudding.
Regrettably, Levin has that substance-sucking skill and made that neo-Herculian effort to put all this into one slender volume replete of soul and vitality. What should be a gripping entertaining read is, instead, simply depressing. Oddly, Levin seems to have a great mind for the sciences is also gifted with a deep understanding of literary conventions. She makes some interesting choices in which conventions to include (like adding herself in at random point of the novel for no more effect than to make a reader say 'Wow, that's odd) and which conventions not to use, like parallelism. You'd think that if an author was writing about the lives of two respected mathematicians and both were riddled with mental and emotional problems, drawing parallels between the two would be a great way to form cohesion. But Levin bravely thrusts cohesion aside and allows the book to mire itself in what becomes random details of these people's lives.
Now, sorry for the harshness. I was truly amazed at how mediocre a story was made of this Godel and Turing. I would strongly suggest reading upon the these two characters in greater depth (along with Tesla, my personal favorite). Turing's tale is especially sad and complex as his efforts made a huge difference in winning WWII and yet his treatment by government officials was astoundingly harsh and cruel (for example, for being a homosexual, he was imprisoned and medially castrated.)
If you are looking for interesting books to bone up on your science knowledge, there is no better book than Billy Bryson's History of Nearly Everything.
14 people found this helpful
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M Fam
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Bad Start That Becomes An Amazing Read
Reviewed in the United States πΊπΈ on 15 March 2008Verified Purchase
Although Levin is an amazing physicist, her first foray into the world of literary fiction is, on first read, not so amazing. That said, the subject matter of her novel is more than fascinating and so, the fact that her storytelling and craftsmanship as a writer is more than lacking at the beginning of the book, the story sells itself as a tour de force in its fictionalization of the lives of two geniuses who struggle with a deep awkwardness with life.
At the beginning of the book the prose is almost a torture to read: some times overwrought,
'While they continue to play an anomalously quiet game, the pit of dread is jostled and falls deep into the fertile gastrointestinal soil where it begins its life cycle. Will it fester as an ulcer, or blossom into rancid abnormal cells? That depends on how each chooses to tend that messy garden';
and at other times over the top,
'The iron frame of Kurt's bed was a brutal conductor of the chill singeing his hand so sharply as he hoisted himself awake this morning that it might as well have left a burn, and the cloud of condensation that escaped from his damp mouth could have been smoke'.
The narration changes from past tense to present tense in the same paragraph! While her prose changes drastically for the better midway through the book, this irritating tendency to write a single scene as happening in the past as well as in the present continues unabated.
But, amazingly, halfway into the book it seems as if another Levin is writing the book. A Levin who is confident in her craft and skilled in turning a single moment of the story into a soaring monument of poetry. What happened! Whatever happened it happened for the better. Levin takes command of her themes and infuses them into poetic states throughout the character's events. The most striking example of the preceding can be found on pages 138-9. Levin takes an ambitious but dangerous chance at explaining the event that informs a young Wittgenstein's philosophy. While she humbly admits that this something of Wittgenstein is the unspeakable that 'we must pass over in silence' from his Tractatus, she dares to speak to that silence and she actually makes it reveal itself to the reader.
The moments like that in the story pay of with dividends which have the effect of apologizing for the early writing of an amateur.
At the beginning of the book the prose is almost a torture to read: some times overwrought,
'While they continue to play an anomalously quiet game, the pit of dread is jostled and falls deep into the fertile gastrointestinal soil where it begins its life cycle. Will it fester as an ulcer, or blossom into rancid abnormal cells? That depends on how each chooses to tend that messy garden';
and at other times over the top,
'The iron frame of Kurt's bed was a brutal conductor of the chill singeing his hand so sharply as he hoisted himself awake this morning that it might as well have left a burn, and the cloud of condensation that escaped from his damp mouth could have been smoke'.
The narration changes from past tense to present tense in the same paragraph! While her prose changes drastically for the better midway through the book, this irritating tendency to write a single scene as happening in the past as well as in the present continues unabated.
But, amazingly, halfway into the book it seems as if another Levin is writing the book. A Levin who is confident in her craft and skilled in turning a single moment of the story into a soaring monument of poetry. What happened! Whatever happened it happened for the better. Levin takes command of her themes and infuses them into poetic states throughout the character's events. The most striking example of the preceding can be found on pages 138-9. Levin takes an ambitious but dangerous chance at explaining the event that informs a young Wittgenstein's philosophy. While she humbly admits that this something of Wittgenstein is the unspeakable that 'we must pass over in silence' from his Tractatus, she dares to speak to that silence and she actually makes it reveal itself to the reader.
The moments like that in the story pay of with dividends which have the effect of apologizing for the early writing of an amateur.
42 people found this helpful
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Mead C. Whorton Jr.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Seekers of Truth.
Reviewed in the United States πΊπΈ on 19 January 2007Verified Purchase
This is a marvelous book. However, if you are looking for finely detailed biographies of Godel and Turing then read Logical Dilemmas: The Life and Work of Kurt Godel by John Dawson and Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodge. Ms. Levin has a different mission in her finely crafted work. She spins a wonderful tale of two men seeking truth in the world of mathematics. Godel , the pre-eminent logician of the 20th century, who proves that mathematics is an incomplete sytem but who in the end dies of starvation due to his paranoia. And Turing, the brilliant young Cambridge eccentric, who cracks the German Enigma Code thereby hastening Germany's defeat in WW II and, in addition, laying the groundwork for modern computers. For all that he did, Turing is rewarded by his government by being sentenced to chemical castration for his homosexuality. As a result, he chooses suicide. Janna Levin takes us into the minds of these two brilliant men as their search for truth via mathematics ends in the chaotic demise of both. This book will leave you wondering how these two men accomplished so much in spite of their tortured personal lives. You will also come away with great respect for these two humans and for all who seek the truth including the author, herself. Obtain a copy and read. This book is a little gem!
9 people found this helpful
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Gary Nach
5.0 out of 5 stars
From WHAT? to WOW?
Reviewed in the United States πΊπΈ on 15 October 2014Verified Purchase
I found it slow to start. I found myself asking "what is this?". And then...I was engaged, sucked it.It's a very compelling story of two stories that needed to be told. I'm lookling forward to reading it again.