A collection of articles by Alan Turing on several topics, each with a lengthy preface and sometimes a few relevant articles by other people. The first topic is computability theory; Turing did not prove the existence of noncomputable functions by considering the Halting problem, but by using the Cantor diagonal argument; he also invented hypercomputation by considering Turing machines equipped with oracles. The second topic is Turing's cryptanalytic work on breaking the German naval Engima, which was one of the great engineering projects of the Second World War, alongside Manhattan project. The third topic is artificial intelligence, including the famous paper that introduces the Turing test; every student of computer science must read it. The last section has miscellanea, including a paper that suggests that a diffusion reaction is responsible for embryogenesis; developmental biology must have progressed in the last 50 years, and I don't know, how much of this paper is still considered true, but the point is that Stephen Wolfram did not invent the idea of simple rules giving rise to complicated patterns.
Jenny18 is a sex chat bot that passes the Turing test. Turing did not consider the situation where the judge uses his penis rather than his brain when making the judgment.