Rational Nonmonotonic Reasoning
📝 Original Info
- Title: Rational Nonmonotonic Reasoning
- ArXiv ID: 1304.2361
- Date: 2013-04-10
- Authors: Researchers from original ArXiv paper
📝 Abstract
Nonmonotonic reasoning is a pattern of reasoning that allows an agent to make and retract (tentative) conclusions from inconclusive evidence. This paper gives a possible-worlds interpretation of the nonmonotonic reasoning problem based on standard decision theory and the emerging probability logic. The system's central principle is that a tentative conclusion is a decision to make a bet, not an assertion of fact. The system is rational, and as sound as the proof theory of its underlying probability log.💡 Deep Analysis
Deep Dive into Rational Nonmonotonic Reasoning.Nonmonotonic reasoning is a pattern of reasoning that allows an agent to make and retract (tentative) conclusions from inconclusive evidence. This paper gives a possible-worlds interpretation of the nonmonotonic reasoning problem based on standard decision theory and the emerging probability logic. The system’s central principle is that a tentative conclusion is a decision to make a bet, not an assertion of fact. The system is rational, and as sound as the proof theory of its underlying probability log.
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Reference
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