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The Mechanical Turk
Tom Standage
The True Story of the
Chess-Playing Machine that Fooled the
World
This is Tom Standage’s third
pocket-sized book that delves into the history of science and
engineering, and yet again he has found a subject that is not
only fascinating, but which also resonates with contemporary
issues. In The Victorian Internet, Standage
explored the development of the telegraph, which permitted
long-distance instantaneous communication for the first time.
If we want to know how to cope with the Internet and the
accompanying communications revolution, then we could learn
something from the Victorians.
In The Neptune
File, Standage explained how in the nineteenth century a
new invisible planet was discovered because of its
gravitational tugging, which caused Uranus to deviate from its
predicted path. Today, astronomers can detect invisible
planets orbiting distant stars, because the same tugging
causes the stars to wobble.
Now we have The Mechanical
Turk, the story of the eighteenth century automaton that
convinced the world that a machine could play chess, a feat
that was only truly achieved in the last decade. Standage
reveals how our ancestors reacted to this first apparent
example of artificial intelligence, he explains how the
machine actually worked, and he brings us up to date with the
terrible moment when a computer beat Gary Kasparov, the human
world chess champion.
During the eighteenth century,
Europe went crazy over the rise of automata, newfangled
machines that seemed to mimic life. The automata emerged from
the increasingly ingenious set pieces that clockmakers
constructed to mark the chiming of the hour or a special feast
day. These mechanical theatrical displays ranged from
astronomical shows to kings and shepherds genuflecting before
the Madonna and Child, presenting their gifts and
retreating.
The Frenchman Jacques de Vaucanson
displayed in Paris in 1737 a mechanical flute player, which
could alter its breath, lips and fingers to play a tune. This
was followed by a flautist that could simultaneously play the
drum, and then a mechanical duck which, in Vaucanson’s own
words, “drinks, eats, quacks, splashes about on the water, and
digests his food like a living duck.”
But this was nothing compared to
the creation of Wolfgang von Kempelen, a senior official at
Viennese court of Maria Therese. In the spring of 1770 he
unveiled the Turk, a life-sized figure, carved from wood,
adorned with an ermine-trimmed robe and a turban. The Turk was
seated behind a cabinet that was four feet long, three feet
high and two and a half feet deep. On top of the cabinet was a
chess set.
Kempelen would open the cabinet
doors to reveal a forest of cogs, levers and clockwork
machinery. Rather like a magician, he use a candle to show the
audience that it was impossible to hide a human inside the
automaton. He inserted a large key into the cabinet, wound up
the mechanism, and the Turk was ready to play. After a pause,
accompanied by clicking, ticking and whirring, the Turk moved
his head, surveyed the pieces, then used his left hand to
reach out and move one of the pieces. The Turk could not only
move pieces, it could understand its opponents moves, think
and respond accordingly.
In fact, it was a remarkably good
chess player and when François-André Danican Philidor, the
greatest chess player of the day, beat the Turk, he was forced
to admit that no human player had fatigued him to the same
extent. The Turk toured Europe and America for decades, even
outliving its creator Kempelen, and wherever it went the rich
and famous queued up watch and play. Ben Franklin and Napoleon
took on the Turk, and Napoleon’s stepson even owned the Turk
for a while.
The
Turk and other automata were more than toys, because they
inspired engineers and drove technology forward. For example,
the computer pioneer Charles Babbage was entranced by automata
as a young boy and the sight of the Turk must have fuelled his
desire to build programmable machines. And the clergyman
Edmund Cartwright set about building the first power loom
after seeing the Turk, believing that it must be possible to
be build a weaving machine if Kempelen had built one that
could play chess.
Today it seems bizarre that people
believed that a clockwork machine could play championship
chess, but the Turk was built in the age of the enlightenment
– machines were proving to be faster and stronger than humans,
so why not smarter too? In the summer of 1783, the Montgolfier
brothers created a flying machine, which was no more
incredible than an intelligent machine.
But how did the Turk work? I am not
about to spoil the ending of an intriguing book, but my
favourite theory was formulated by the French magician Jean
Robert-Houdin. He stated that Polish soldiers in the Russian
army had rebelled and their commanding officer, Worousky, had
lost both legs in the fight. He sought refuge with a Russian
doctor called Osloff. During his convalescence, they played
chess regularly, until Worousky became skilled in the game.
When Kempelen visited the doctor
while on a trip to learn Russian, he met the Polish fugitive
and came up with the idea of building the Turk. Worousky, having lost his legs, could hide
inside the Turk, could be smuggled out of Russia, and could
subsequently tour the world as the hidden power inside the
automaton.
Standage’s book is filled with
equally delightful stories, which means that the story of
artificial intelligence from the Turk to today is squeezed
into the final chapter. As with his other books, I feel as
though I would be more satisfied with a more gradual and
substantial connection between the main subject and its modern
counterpart. On the other hand, if this extra material had
been included, then perhaps I would complain that it intrudes
on and belittles the tale of the incredible Turk.
The solution is probably a separate
book that examines the role of chess in the development of
artificial intelligence over the last century. Standage
touches on many of the points that have arisen during this
period, and each could be explored in more detail. For
example, to what extent is a specialised machine truly
intelligent? Even the computer that beat the world chess
champion is utterly clueless in every other dimension. As the
computer scientist Anatol Holt said, “A brilliant chess move
while the room is filling with smoke because the house is
burning down does not show intelligence.”
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