David Boyle

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David Boyle


Born
May 20, 1958

Died
June 20, 2025

Website

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David Courtney Boyle was a British author and journalist who wrote mainly about history and new ideas in economics, money, business, and culture. He lived in Steyning in West Sussex.
He conducted an independent review for the Treasury and the Cabinet Office on public demand for choice in public services which reported in 2013. Boyle was a co-founder and policy director of Radix, which he characterized in 2017 as a radical centrist think tank. He was also co-director of the mutual think tank New Weather Institute.

David Boyle isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

Generation Z will also have to deal with our toxic tickbox systems



This post first appeared on the RADIX UK blog.

It has been a lovely Christmas period with both my children in the house. One still lives here all the time and the one is more usually away at university.

What makes this most apparent when they are both here is that they play music very loudly, and when one of them likes the latest rap records and the other prefers Wagner, you Read more of this blog post »
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Published on January 08, 2024 09:32
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Quotes by David Boyle  (?)
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“He proposed an imitation game. There would be a man (A), a woman (B) and an interrogator (C) in a separate room, reading the written answers from the others, trying to work out which was the woman. B would be trying to hinder the process. Now, said Turing, imagine that A was replaced by a computer. Could the interrogator tell whether they were talking to a machine or not after five minutes of questioning? He gave snatches of written conversation to show how difficult the Turing Test would be: Q: Please write me a sonnet on the subject of the Forth Bridge. A: Count me out on this one. I never could write poetry. To imitate that a computer would need deep knowledge of social mores and the use of language. To pass the Turing Test the computer would have to do more than imitate. It would have to be a learning entity.”
David Boyle, Alan Turing: Unlocking the Enigma

“One of the most famous paradoxes ever articulated is often known by the title ‘the liar’s paradox’. At its simplest you can express it just by saying: ‘I am lying’. The liar’s paradox is a complicated business, discombobulating to think about because after all, if I’m lying, then my statement ‘I am lying’ must itself be a lie, unless I was actually telling the truth, in which case I would have been telling a lie.”
David Boyle, Alan Turing: Unlocking the Enigma

“He was briefly a member of the Home Guard, but got bored of it in 1942 and stopped turning up. The commander tried to frighten him with military law, only to find that on his application form under the question: ‘do you understand that by enrolling in the Home Guard you place yourself liable to military law?’ Turing had written ‘No’.”
David Boyle, Alan Turing: Unlocking the Enigma

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