Irving John Good

By admin , 21 December 2015
Irving
John
Good
Male
Description

Mathematician and cryptologist responsible for the term "technological singularity," Good was a pioneering figure in computing, statistics, and codebreaking.

On 27 May 1941, having just obtained his doctorate at Cambridge, Good walked into Hut 8, Bletchley's facility for breaking German naval ciphers, for his first shift. This was the day that Britain's Royal Navy destroyed the German battleship Bismarck after it had sunk the Royal Navy's HMS Hood. Bletchley had contributed to Bismarck's destruction by discovering, through wireless-traffic analysis, that the German flagship was sailing for Brest, France, rather than Wilhelmshaven, from which she had set out.

Hut 8 had not, however, been able to decrypt on a current basis the 22 German Naval Enigma messages that had been sent to Bismarck. The German Navy's Enigma ciphers were considerably more secure than those of the German Army or Air Force, which had been well penetrated by 1940. Naval messages were taking three to seven days to decrypt, which usually made them operationally useless for the British.

In 1947 Newman invited Good to join him and Turing at Manchester University. There for three years he lectured in mathematics and researched computers, including the Manchester Mark 1. In 1948 Good was recruited by the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), successor to Bletchley Park. He remained there until 1959, while also taking up a brief associate professorship at Princeton University and a short consultancy with IBM.

From 1959 until he moved to the U.S. in 1967, Good held government-funded positions and from 1964 a senior research fellowship at Trinity College, Oxford, and the Atlas Computer Laboratory, where he continued his interests in computing, statistics, and chess. He later left Oxford, declaring it "a little stiff".

Virgina Tech
Mathematician and cryptologist responsible for the term "technological singularity"
Date of Birth
1916-12-09
Date of Death
2009-04-05
Irving John Good

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