A Logic of Expertise

07/22/2021
by   Joseph Singleton, et al.
0

In this paper we introduce a simple modal logic framework to reason about the expertise of an information source. In the framework, a source is an expert on a proposition p if they are able to correctly determine the truth value of p in any possible world. We also consider how information may be false, but true after accounting for the lack of expertise of the source. This is relevant for modelling situations in which information sources make claims beyond their domain of expertise. We use non-standard semantics for the language based on an expertise set with certain closure properties. It turns out there is a close connection between our semantics and S5 epistemic logic, so that expertise can be expressed in terms of knowledge at all possible states. We use this connection to obtain a sound and complete axiomatisation.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
04/29/2022

Who's the Expert? On Multi-source Belief Change

Consider the following belief change/merging scenario. A group of inform...
research
05/27/2019

Epistemic Logic with Partial Dependency Operator

In this article, we introduce partial dependency modality D into epistem...
research
07/13/2019

Statistical Epistemic Logic

We introduce a modal logic for describing statistical knowledge, which w...
research
07/27/2017

Toward an Epistemic-Logical Theory of Categorization

Categorization systems are widely studied in psychology, sociology, and ...
research
03/17/2022

Revisiting the Dunn-Belnap logic

In the present work I introduce a semantics based on the cognitive attit...
research
01/12/2022

Diffix Elm: Simple Diffix

Historically, strong data anonymization requires substantial domain expe...
research
07/27/2017

A Logic for Global and Local Announcements

In this paper we introduce global and local announcement logic (GLAL), ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset