Two Concepts of Plausibility in Default Reasoning
In their unifying theory to model uncertainty, Friedman and Halpern (1995–2003) applied plausibility measures to default reasoning satisfying certain sets of axioms. They proposed a distinctive condition for plausibility measures that characterizes "qualitative" reasoning (as contrasted wi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Erkenntnis 2014-06, Vol.79 (Suppl 6), p.1219-1252 |
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description | In their unifying theory to model uncertainty, Friedman and Halpern (1995–2003) applied plausibility measures to default reasoning satisfying certain sets of axioms. They proposed a distinctive condition for plausibility measures that characterizes "qualitative" reasoning (as contrasted with probabilistic reasoning). A similar and similarly fundamental, but more general and thus stronger condition was independently suggested in the context of "basic" entrenchment-based belief revision by Rott (1996–2003). The present paper analyzes the relation between the two approaches to formalizing basic notions of plausibility as used in qualitative default reasoning. While neither approach is a special case of the other, translations can be found that elucidate their relationship. I argue that Rott's notion of plausibility allows for a more modular set-up and has a better philosophical motivation than that of Friedman and Halpern. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s10670-013-9548-y |
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subjects | Artificial intelligence Cognition & reasoning Counterexamples Education Epistemology Ethics Inference Language translation Logic Logical postulates Nonmonotonic logic Ontology Original Article Philosophy Propositional entrenchment Qualitative research Reasoning |
title | Two Concepts of Plausibility in Default Reasoning |
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