dougo: (Default)
dougo ([personal profile] dougo) wrote2011-10-26 02:53 pm

John McCarthy

John McCarthy died on Monday. He coined the term "artificial intelligence", and created the programming language Lisp in 1958. The Stanford obituary has a good overview of his career; [livejournal.com profile] jwz's post has a nice little anecdote.

I had a very minor McCarthy encounter myself: I stood near him at a book reading at a bookstore in Palo Alto in the early '90s. I don't remember the author or book, but it was about how strong AI is impossible without embodiment. (It might have been Hubert Dreyfus, but I think it was someone younger/less established.) I don't remember if McCarthy had some question or comment, or if someone just pointed him out to me, but I remember later realizing that I had made some comment about Scheme to a friend while within earshot of the inventor of Lisp.

At some point I discovered his web pages about the sustainability of human progress, which are fascinating if sometimes seeming to veer into crackpottery. I hope Stanford keeps these pages up permanently, because I never made it all the way through their somewhat confusing organization, and I think McCarthy had continued to add to them until pretty recently.

One thing I was surprised to learn from his obituary is that he was married to Carolyn Talcott, whose name I know from programming language theory literature. In fact, she was on the PhD thesis committee of someone who was on my PhD thesis committee, so I guess, academically, she's my grandmother!

John McCarthy was also known as the Programming: You're Doing It Completely Wrong guy. Rest in peace.

[identity profile] taskboy3000.livejournal.com 2011-10-27 05:08 pm (UTC)(link)
It feels like we are loosing the Great Old Ones of computer science with no comparable replacements. Sigh.