Non-monotonic Reasoning and the Reversibility of Belief Change


Autoria(s): Hunter, Dan
Data(s)

1991

Resumo

Traditional approaches to nonmonotonic reasoning fail to satisfy a number of plausible axioms for belief revision and suffer from conceptual difficulties as well. Recent work on ranked preferential models (RPMs) promises to overcome some of these difficulties. Here we show that RPMs are not adequate to handle iterated belief change. Specifically, we show that RPMs do not always allow for the reversibility of belief change. This result indicates the need for numerical strengths of belief.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/71195/

Publicador

Morgan Kaufmann Publishers

Relação

Hunter, Dan (1991) Non-monotonic Reasoning and the Reversibility of Belief Change. In UAI'91 Proceedings of the Seventh conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers , pp. 159-164.

Direitos

Copyright 1991 Morgan Kaufmann Publishers

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Law

Tipo

Conference Paper