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  1. Aug 31, 2024 · Ask the Chatbot a Question. John McCarthy (born September 4, 1927, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.—died October 24, 2011, Stanford, California) was an American mathematician and computer scientist who was a pioneer in the field of artificial intelligence (AI); his main research in the field involved the formalization of commonsense knowledge.

  2. John McCarthy was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on September 4, 1927, to an Irish immigrant father and a Lithuanian Jewish immigrant mother, [4] John Patrick and Ida (Glatt) McCarthy. The family was obliged to relocate frequently during the Great Depression , until McCarthy's father found work as an organizer for the Amalgamated Clothing Workers in Los Angeles, California .

  3. His father, John Patrick McCarthy, worked variously as a carpenter, fisherman, union organizer, and inventor; and his mother, Ida Glatt, was a Jewish Lithuanian involved in the suffrage movement, the effort to secure the vote for women. Both were members of the Communist Party of America, and McCarthy grew up in a politically charged atmosphere.

  4. Dec 1, 2007 · McCarthy was born in Boston in 1927 to John Patrick and Ida Glatt McCarthy, immigrants from, respectively, Ireland and Lithuania. The Depression started a few years after his birth; McCarthy's parents lost their house, and the family—which now included a second child—became briefly peripatetic.

  5. Jan 8, 2015 · John McCarthy, 1927–2011. The father of artificial intelligence. ... Born in Boston to Irish and Lithuanian immigrant parents, he was a sickly child and started school a year late. After his ...

  6. John McCarthy turned 80 on September 4, 2007. This article is a celebration of that mile-stone. It includes a glimpse of McCarthy’s life, an overview of the major themes of his work, and a discussion of several of his major papers. The aim is to introduce a more complete pic-ture of McCarthy’s long-term research to the AI Magazine readership.

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  8. Sep 4, 2024 · John McCarthy was the first to describe the time-sharing model of computing. In 1961, he suggested that if this approach were adopted, "the day is near when computing may be organised as a public utility, similar to the telephone system that is a public utility." According to him, this could be the foundation for a significant new industry.