Reasoning Situated in Time I: Basic Concepts (1990)
| Citations: | 90 - 41 self |
BibTeX
@MISC{Elgot-drapkin90reasoningsituated,
author = {Jennifer J. Elgot-drapkin and Donald Perlis},
title = {Reasoning Situated in Time I: Basic Concepts},
year = {1990}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
The needs of a real-time reasoner situated in an environment may make it appropriate to view error-correction and non-monotonicity as much the same thing. This has led us to formulate situated (or step) logic, an approach to reasoning in which the formalism has a kind of real-time self-reference that affects the course of deduction itself. Here we seek to motivate this as a useful vehicle for exploring certain issues in commonsensereasoning. In particular, a chief drawback of more traditional logics is avoided: from a contradiction we do not have all wffs swamping the (growing) conclusion set. Rather, we seek potentially inconsistent, but nevertheless useful, logics where the real-time self-referential feature allows a direct contradiction to be spotted and corrective action taken, as part of the same system of reasoning. Some specific inference mechanisms for real-time default reasoning are suggested, notably a form of introspection relevant to default reasoning. Special treatment of ...







