Logic in Nonmonotonic Reasoning
... wholesale theories about the world and acting in accordance with them. Both commonsense and nonmonotonic reasoning are just special forms of a general scientific methodology in this sense. The way of thinking in partially known circumstances suggested by nonmonotonic reasoning consists in using rea ...
... wholesale theories about the world and acting in accordance with them. Both commonsense and nonmonotonic reasoning are just special forms of a general scientific methodology in this sense. The way of thinking in partially known circumstances suggested by nonmonotonic reasoning consists in using rea ...
THE PARADOXES OF STRICT IMPLICATION John L
... implication with a relation between meanings. However, we must be more explicit about just what this relation is. Let us begin with the case of analytic equivalence. It is probably the predominant view that the statement that p (e.g., the statement that 2 + 2 = 4) and the statement that q are analyt ...
... implication with a relation between meanings. However, we must be more explicit about just what this relation is. Let us begin with the case of analytic equivalence. It is probably the predominant view that the statement that p (e.g., the statement that 2 + 2 = 4) and the statement that q are analyt ...
Acts of Commanding and Changing Obligations
... A word about my choice of monadic deontic operators here may be in order. Monadic deontic logics are known to be inadequate to deal with conditional obligations and R. M. Chisholm’s contrary-to-duty paradox; dyadic deontic logics are better in this respect. But there are still other problems which a ...
... A word about my choice of monadic deontic operators here may be in order. Monadic deontic logics are known to be inadequate to deal with conditional obligations and R. M. Chisholm’s contrary-to-duty paradox; dyadic deontic logics are better in this respect. But there are still other problems which a ...
relevant reasoning as the logical basis of
... i.e., the conclusion of a valid reasoning must be true if all premises are true. However, as a result of defining the material implication as a truth-function of its antecedent and consequent but ignoring whether or not there is a necessarily relevant and/or conditional relation between its antecede ...
... i.e., the conclusion of a valid reasoning must be true if all premises are true. However, as a result of defining the material implication as a truth-function of its antecedent and consequent but ignoring whether or not there is a necessarily relevant and/or conditional relation between its antecede ...
Inference in FOL Last Lecture
... for each of these implications, find out whether all of its premises are now in the KB, in which case infer the consequent and add it to the KB, remembering how it was inferred. If necessary, attempt to prove the implication also via backward chaining premises that are conjuncts are processed one co ...
... for each of these implications, find out whether all of its premises are now in the KB, in which case infer the consequent and add it to the KB, remembering how it was inferred. If necessary, attempt to prove the implication also via backward chaining premises that are conjuncts are processed one co ...
Combining Paraconsistent Logic with Argumentation
... but plausible argument orderings are possible in which C 6≺ D2 and so C defeats D2 . This is problematic, since s can be any formula, so any defeasible argument unrelated to A2 or B2 , such as D2 , can, depending on the argument ordering, be defeated by C. Clearly, this is extremely harmful, since t ...
... but plausible argument orderings are possible in which C 6≺ D2 and so C defeats D2 . This is problematic, since s can be any formula, so any defeasible argument unrelated to A2 or B2 , such as D2 , can, depending on the argument ordering, be defeated by C. Clearly, this is extremely harmful, since t ...