Belief Revision as a Truth-Tracking Process

Authors
Publication date 2011
Host editors
  • K.R. Apt
Book title TARK XIII
Book subtitle Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge : proceedings of the Thirteenth Conference (TARK 2011)
ISBN
  • 9781450307079
Event TARK XIII, Thirteenth conference on Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge
Pages (from-to) 187-190
Publisher New York, NY: ACM
Organisations
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract
We analyze the learning power of iterated belief revision methods, and in particular their universality: whether or not they can learn everything that can be learnt. We look in particular at three popular methods: conditioning, lexicographic revision and minimal revision. Our main result is that conditioning and lexicographic revision are universal on arbitrary epistemic states, provided that the observational setting is sound and complete (only true data are observed, and all true data are eventually observed) and provided that a non-standard (non-well-founded) prior plausibility relation is allowed. We show that a standard (well-founded) belief-revision setting is in general too narrow for this. We also show that minimal revision is not universal. Finally, we consider situations in which observational errors (false observations) may occur. Given a fairness condition (saying that only finitely many errors occur, and that every error is eventually corrected), we show that lexicographic revision is still universal in this setting, while the other two methods are not.
Document type Conference contribution
Note Extended abstract.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1145/2000378.2000400
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