Jacques Pitrat (born in Feb. 1934, died in Oct. 2019) was one of the French symbolic artificial intelligence pioneers. He developed knowledge based systems, expert systems, and theorem provers, and was a strong advocate of meta-knowledge based systems.

Graduated from École Polytechnique, and member of the Corps de l'armement, he began his career at the Laboratoire Central de l'Armement (French equivalent of DARPA) from 1959 to 1967. In 1966 he defended his Habilitation thesis (Doctorat d'État) about a theorem proving software using meta-theorems.

He worked at the CNRS from 1967 till his retirement, ending his career as emeritus research director at the end of 2015. He taught artificial intelligence at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie in Paris from 1967 till 1998. He was elected an AAAI Fellow in 1994.[1]

Published books

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  • Réalisation de programmes de démonstration de théorèmes utilisant des méthodes heuristiques. Thesis, 1966.
  • Un programme de démonstration de théorèmes. Monographies d'informatique de l'AFCET. Dunod. 1970.
  • Textes, ordinateurs et compréhension. Eyrolles. 1985. Translated to English : An artificial approach to understanding natural language. North Oxford Academic (Grande-Bretagne) et GP Publishing (USA) 1988.
  • Métaconnaissance, Futur de l'Intelligence Artificielle. Hermès. 1990.
  • Penser autrement l'informatique. Hermès. 1993.
  • De la machine à l'intelligence. Hermès. 1995.
  • Artificial Beings - The conscience of a conscious machine ISTE, Wiley, Mars 2009. ISBN 978-1848211018

References

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  1. ^ "Elected AAAI Fellows". AAAI. Retrieved 2024-01-04.

Web resources

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