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The Turk: The Life and Times of the Famous Eighteenth-Century Chess Playing Machine. (Political booknotes: Turkish delight).


WHEN DEEP BLUE, IBM's monolithic chess-playing computer, faced grandmaster Garry Kasparov Garry Kimovich Kasparov (IPA: [ˈgarʲə ˈkʲɪməvʲə̈ʨ kʌˈsparəf]; Russian:  in a best-of-six match in 1997, breathless pundits followed the action like it was the Showdown at the A.I. Corral corral

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. Warning against "the potential usurpation Usurpation
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presumptuously assumed David’s throne before Solomon’s investiture. [O.T.: I Kings 1:5–10]

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 of mankind by its own technology," Time anointed "Anointed" redirects here. For the process of anointing, see Anointing.

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 Kasparov "the latest standard bearer in humanity's war against our own obsolescence ob·so·les·cent  
adj.
1. Being in the process of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming obsolete.

2. Biology Gradually disappearing; imperfectly or only slightly developed.
." Kasparov had played and beaten Deep Blue once before, and he confidently predicted another win this second time around. Yet, unthinkably, Deep Blue emerged victorious--and as the media pondered the ramifications ramifications nplAuswirkungen pl , Kasparov cried foul play. Unable or unwilling to believe that he had been bested by a computer, Kasparov whined to The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times that he had "met something that I couldn't explain. I have to imagine human interference, or I want an explanation."

Sour grapes aside, Kasparov's defeat, to many people, seemed like just another way in which human achievement was being overtaken by cool mechanical efficiency. Yet few people realized that this sense of electronic ennui had its antecedent ANTECEDENT. Something that goes before. In the construction of laws, agreements, and the like, reference is always to be made to the last antecedent; ad proximun antecedens fiat relatio.  200 years prior, when a chess-playing robot known as "the Turk" confounded observers throughout Europe and America. In his intriguing new book The Turk: The Life and Times of the Famous Eighteenth-Century Chess Playing Machine, Tom Standage traces the Turk's history and defines its legacy. Standage, the technology correspondent for The Economist, has written a fast-paced, entertaining techno-history that, while overshooting Overshooting

The tendency of a pool of MBS to reflect an especially high rate of prepayments the first time it crosses the threshold for refinancing, specially if two or more years have passed since the date of issue without the weighted average coupon of the pool crossing the
 its mark a few times, succeeds on the whole.

The Turk, designed at the behest of Holy Roman empress Maria Theresa, was the most famous in a series of automata automata - automaton  that captivated cap·ti·vate  
tr.v. cap·ti·vat·ed, cap·ti·vat·ing, cap·ti·vates
1. To attract and hold by charm, beauty, or excellence. See Synonyms at charm.

2. Archaic To capture.
 kings and savants across the Continent during the 18th and 19th centuries. Built to perform a wide range of activities--from playing a trumpet to simulating the digestive system of a duck--these automata, powered by intricate systems of gears and camshafts, were miracles of craftsmanship and mechanical skill.

Yet the Turk was unique in the robotic ranks because it appeared capable of rational, independent thought. It consisted of a figure clad in a turban and flowing, "Turkish-style" robes, seated in front of a large chest, on top of which was a chessboard. When challenged to a game, the machine's operator would wind a key in the side of the chest, and, with a whirl of gears, the Turk would grab its piece and make the first move. The Turk easily won most of the games it played. If its opponent made a false move, the machine would shake its head and return the offending piece to its starting position; if the false move was made again, it would sweep its arm across the table, scattering the pieces and ending the game.

The Turk was an instant success, and word of its prowess quickly spread across Europe. During exhibitions, people crowded into lecture halls to see the storied machine and try to find out just how it worked. Most people apparently harbored no illusions that the Turk was a genuine automaton automaton: see robot; robotics , and attended the shows in order to discover by what sleight-of-hand the operator was controlling the machine. The Turk drew crowds in Europe for 40 years--and when Europe grew tired of the machine, its operator packed it off to America, where a whole new world waited to discover its wonders.

During the Turk's travels, it came into contact with several notable historical figures, and Standage is quick to describe the ways in which these people's experiences with the Turk impacted their lives. Some of these stories work and some of them don't. It's believable when Standage claims that Edgar Allan Poe's unique writing style was first developed in an expose Poe wrote about the Turk. But when he attributes the idea for something like Charles Babbage's Difference Engine, a mechanical ancestor of the modern computer, to the Turk's influence on young Babbage's mind, it smacks of ill-considered authorial postulate postulate: see axiom.  rather than credible research.

All in all, it's an interesting story. The book reads like a slightly insane travelogue, populated by carnies, charlatans, and dreamers, all seeking to cash in on the automaton craze in one way or another. Standage is at his best in describing the eras various automata and the characters that exhibited them. Less convincing is his assertion that these automata served as the vanguard of a new industrial age.

Standage, who also authored 1999's The Victorian Internet, specializes in linking the technologies of the past with the discoveries of the present. And, as in his previous book, the connections he makes, while novel, are not always justified. Standage theorizes that these marvelous machines were the true progenitors
This article refers to the Star Trek race, and not a Convention with the same name in the in the role-playing game.


The Progenitors were a race of fictional beings in the Star Trek Universe created by Gene Roddenberry.
 of the Industrial Revolution: "At the intersection between entertainment, technology, and commerce, automata allowed new ideas to flow from one field to another and acted as a catalyst for further innovation." Now, some would say that population growth, mobility of labor, and the expansion of capital were the main factors behind the Industrial Revolution. But, hey, if Standage wants to attribute it to chess-playing robots, that's his prerogative.

Standage wants to pass off the Turk as a primitive form of artificial intelligence, a forerunner to Deep Blue. While it's an interesting concept, I'm not sure if the comparison is entirely valid: Deep Blue, after all, was actually run by circuitry and programming; the Turk was run by a man in a box. Yet it is interesting to note that the Turing test--the modern-day standard for measuring artificial intelligence--confirms a computer's intelligence based upon the skill with which it deceives inquisitors. If there's one thing (besides playing chess) that the Turk was good at, it was deception. And the emotions elicited by Deep Blue and the Turk are curiously similar.

Echoes of Kasparov's sputtering A popular method for adhering thin films onto a substrate. Sputtering is done by bombarding a target material with a charged gas (typically argon) which releases atoms in the target that coats the nearby substrate. It all takes place inside a magnetron vacuum chamber under low pressure.  excuses are heard in the commentary of one of the Turk's critics, who proclaimed that the possibility "`that an AUTOMATON can be made to move the Chessmen Chessmen can refer to the following:
  • "Chessmen", another word for chess pieces in the game of chess
  • Chessmen, a type of buttery cookie featuring chess pieces on them, manufactured by Pepperidge Farm
 properly ... is UTTERLY IMPOSSIBLE.'" One can't help but hear a note of latent fear in this vehement denial. Perhaps the speaker was struck by an all-too-modern feeling that, while the mechanically digesting ducks of the world were well and good, an automaton that usurped what had previously been man's most characteristic province--the brain--hit a little bit too close to home?

As we race forward into an age where the potential for technological advancement is rivaled only by the potential amount of fear that might be caused by those advances, it is good to have some historical grounding. In The Turk, Tom Standage has written a highly entertaining book that, all in all, succeeds in its goal of convincing us that machine intelligence is limited, but man's cunning knows no bounds.

JUSTIN PETERS is a Washington Monthly intern.
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Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Peters, Justin
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Apr 1, 2002
Words:1108
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