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Bertrand du Castel is a French-American author and scientist who won in 2005 the Visionary Award from Card Technology Magazine for pioneering the Java Card, which by 2007 had sold more than 3.5 billion units worldwide. In 2008, du Castel and Timothy M. Jurgensen published ''Computer Theology: Intelligent Design of the World Wide Web'', a theology of the World Wide Web based on a comparative study of human societies and computer networks. ==Biography== Du Castel was born in 1952 in France a descendant of Louis-Eugène Cavaignac, who governed France as Prime Minister before being defeated by Napoléon III, and Paul Dubois, whose Joan of Arc sculpture stands in Washington D.C. A graduate of Ecole Polytechnique with a 1977 PhD from the University of Paris in Theoretical Computer Science, he was a Post-Doctoral Fellow at the IBM France Research Center before hiring with Schlumberger in France in 1978. He emigrated to the United States in 1983 where he has lived in Austin, Texas since, becoming an American citizen in 1994. In 2000, du Castel was invited by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence to make a presentation of artificial intelligence advances in the industry that were original to academia. Consequently, du Castel was invited to present at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (2001), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2001), University of Texas at Austin (2002), Peking University (2002), Tsinghua University (2002), Purdue University (2002), Grenoble Institute of Technology (2003), University of Paris (2004) and University of Hamburg (2004), which increasingly constituted the matter of a book on the relationship between religion and digital networks. In 2005〔Acknowledgments of Computer Theology: Intelligent Design of the World Wide Web〕 du Castel joined with Timothy M. Jurgensen, author of two books on computer security,〔 〕〔 〕 to write ''Computer Theology: Intelligent Design of the World Wide Web'', which uses theological principles to study the role of religion in computer networks, and reciprocally studies religion in the light of well-established computer concepts such as trust. The book eventually proposed in 2008 a reference for the field of Computer Theology, following the road traced earlier by Donald Knuth〔 〕〔 〕 and Anne Foerst,〔 〕 aiming at a better understanding of computer evolution as well as religion. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bertrand du Castel」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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