Active Logics: A Unified Formal Approach to Episodic Reasoning
| Citations: | 33 - 2 self |
BibTeX
@MISC{Elgot-drapkin_activelogics:,
author = {Jennifer Elgot-drapkin and Sarit Kraus and Michael Miller and Madhura Nirkhe and Donald Perlis},
title = {Active Logics: A Unified Formal Approach to Episodic Reasoning},
year = {}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Artificial intelligence research falls roughly into two categories: formal and implementational. This division is not completely firm: there are implementational studies based on (formal or informal) theories (e.g., CYC, SOAR, OSCAR), and there are theories framed with an eye toward implementability (e.g., predicate circumscription). Nevertheless, formal /theoretical work tends to focus on very narrow problems (and even on very special cases of very narrow problems) while trying to get them "right" in a very strict sense, while implementational work tends to aim at fairly broad ranges of behavior but often at the expense of any kind of overall conceptually unifying framework that informs understanding. It is sometimes urged that this gap is intrinsic to the topic: intelligence is not a unitary thing for which there will be a unifying theory, but rather a "society" of subintelligences whose overall behavior cannot be reduced to useful characterizing and predictive principles.







