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On an autumn day
in 1769, a Hungarian nobleman named Wolfgang von Kempelen attended a conjuring
show at the court of Maria Theresa, empress of Austria-Hungary. So unimpressed
was Kempelen by the performance that he declared he could do better himself.
Maria Theresa held him to his word and gave him six months to prepare
a show of his own. Kempelen did not disappoint; he returned to the court
the following spring with a mechanical man, fashioned from wood, powered
by clockwork, dressed in a stylish Turkish costumeand capable of
playing chess.
The Turk, as this contraption became known, was an instant success, and
Tom Standages book chronicles its illustrious career in Europe and
America over the next eighty five years. Associated over time with a host
of historical figures, including Benjamin Franklin, Catherine the Great,
Napoleon Bonaparte, Charles Babbage, and Edgar Allan Poe, Kempelens
creation unwittingly also helped to inspire the development of the power
loom, the computer, and the detective story. Everywhere it went, the Turk
baffled spectators and provoked frenzied speculation about whether a machine
could really think. Many rival theories were published, but they served
only to undermine each other.
Part historical detective story, part biography, The Turk relates
the saga of the machines remarkable and checkered career against
the backdrop of the industrial revolution, as mechanical technology opened
up dramatic new possibilities and the relationship between people and
machines was being redefined. Today, in the midst of the computer age,
it has assumed a new significance, as scientists and philosophers continue
to debate the possibility of machine intelligence. To modern eyes, the
Turk now seems to have been a surprisingly farsighted invention, and its
saga is a colorful and important part of the history of technology.