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Doxastic logic

Doxastic logic is a type of logic concerned with reasoning about beliefs.

The term doxastic derives from the Ancient Greek δόξα (doxa, "opinion, belief"), from which the English term doxa ("popular opinion or belief") is also borrowed. Typically, a doxastic logic uses the notation to mean "It is believed that is the case", and the set denotes a set of beliefs. In doxastic logic, belief is treated as a modal operator.

There is complete parallelism between a person who believes propositions and a formal system that derives propositions. Using doxastic logic, one can express the epistemic counterpart of Gödel's incompleteness theorem of metalogic, as well as Löb's theorem, and other metalogical results in terms of belief.[1]

Types of reasoners edit

To demonstrate the properties of sets of beliefs, Raymond Smullyan defines the following types of reasoners:

  • Accurate reasoner:[1][2][3][4] An accurate reasoner never believes any false proposition. (modal axiom T)
 
  • Inaccurate reasoner:[1][2][3][4] An inaccurate reasoner believes at least one false proposition.
 
  • Consistent reasoner:[1][2][3][4] A consistent reasoner never simultaneously believes a proposition and its negation. (modal axiom D)
 
  • Normal reasoner:[1][2][3][4] A normal reasoner is one who, while believing   also believes they believe p (modal axiom 4).
 
A variation on this would be someone who, while not believing   also believes they don't believe p (modal axiom 5).
 
  • Peculiar reasoner:[1][4] A peculiar reasoner believes proposition p while also believing they do not believe   Although a peculiar reasoner may seem like a strange psychological phenomenon (see Moore's paradox), a peculiar reasoner is necessarily inaccurate but not necessarily inconsistent.
 
  • Regular reasoner:[1][2][3][4] A regular reasoner is one who, while believing  , also believes  .
 
  • Reflexive reasoner:[1][4] A reflexive reasoner is one for whom every proposition   has some proposition   such that the reasoner believes  .
 
If a reflexive reasoner of type 4 [see below] believes  , they will believe p. This is a parallelism of Löb's theorem for reasoners.
  • Conceited reasoner:[1][4] A conceited reasoner believes their beliefs are never inaccurate.
 
Rewritten in de re form, this is logically equivalent to:
 
This implies that:
 
This shows that a conceited reasoner is always a stable reasoner (see below).
  • Unstable reasoner:[1][4] An unstable reasoner is one who believes that they believe some proposition, but in fact do not believe it. This is just as strange a psychological phenomenon as peculiarity; however, an unstable reasoner is not necessarily inconsistent.
 
  • Stable reasoner:[1][4] A stable reasoner is not unstable. That is, for every   if they believe   then they believe   Note that stability is the converse of normality. We will say that a reasoner believes they are stable if for every proposition   they believe   (believing: "If I should ever believe that I believe   then I really will believe  "). This corresponds to having a dense accessibility relation in Kripke semantics, and any accurate reasoner is always stable.
 
  • Modest reasoner:[1][4] A modest reasoner is one for whom for every believed proposition  ,   only if they believe  . A modest reasoner never believes   unless they believe  . Any reflexive reasoner of type 4 is modest. (Löb's Theorem)
 
  • Queer reasoner:[4] A queer reasoner is of type G and believes they are inconsistent—but is wrong in this belief.
  • Timid reasoner:[4] A timid reasoner does not believe   [is "afraid to" believe  ] if they believe that belief in   leads to a contradictory belief.
 

Increasing levels of rationality edit

 
The symbol   means   is a tautology/theorem provable in Propositional Calculus. Also, their set of beliefs (past, present and future) is logically closed under modus ponens. If they ever believe   and   then they will (sooner or later) believe  :
 
This rule can also be thought of as stating that belief distributes over implication, as it's logically equivalent to
 .
Note that, in reality, even the assumption of type 1 reasoner may be too strong for some cases (see Lottery paradox).
  • Type 1* reasoner:[1][2][3][4] A type 1* reasoner believes all tautologies; their set of beliefs (past, present and future) is logically closed under modus ponens, and for any propositions   and   if they believe   then they will believe that if they believe   then they will believe  . The type 1* reasoner has "a shade more" self awareness than a type 1 reasoner.
 
  • Type 2 reasoner:[1][2][3][4] A reasoner is of type 2 if they are of type 1, and if for every   and   they (correctly) believe: "If I should ever believe both   and  , then I will believe  ." Being of type 1, they also believe the logically equivalent proposition:   A type 2 reasoner knows their beliefs are closed under modus ponens.
 
  • Type 3 reasoner:[1][2][3][4] A reasoner is of type 3 if they are a normal reasoner of type 2.
 
  • Type 4 reasoner:[1][2][3][4][5] A reasoner is of type 4 if they are of type 3 and also believe they are normal.
 
  • Type G reasoner:[1][4] A reasoner of type 4 who believes they are modest.
 

Self-fulfilling beliefs edit

For systems, we define reflexivity to mean that for any   (in the language of the system) there is some   such that   is provable in the system. Löb's theorem (in a general form) is that for any reflexive system of type 4, if   is provable in the system, so is  [1][4]

Inconsistency of the belief in one's stability edit

If a consistent reflexive reasoner of type 4 believes that they are stable, then they will become unstable. Stated otherwise, if a stable reflexive reasoner of type 4 believes that they are stable, then they will become inconsistent. Why is this? Suppose that a stable reflexive reasoner of type 4 believes that they are stable. We will show that they will (sooner or later) believe every proposition   (and hence be inconsistent). Take any proposition   The reasoner believes   hence by Löb's theorem they will believe   (because they believe   where   is the proposition   and so they will believe   which is the proposition  ). Being stable, they will then believe  [1][4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Smullyan, Raymond M., (1986) Logicians who reason about themselves, Proceedings of the 1986 conference on Theoretical aspects of reasoning about knowledge, Monterey (CA), Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc., San Francisco (CA), pp. 341–352
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Belief, Knowledge and Self-Awareness[dead link]
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Modal Logics[dead link]
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Smullyan, Raymond M., (1987) Forever Undecided, Alfred A. Knopf Inc.
  5. ^ a b Rod Girle, Possible Worlds, McGill-Queen's University Press (2003) ISBN 0-7735-2668-4 ISBN 978-0773526686

Further reading edit

  • Lindström, St.; Rabinowicz, Wl. (1999). "DDL Unlimited. Dynamic Doxastic Logic for Introspective Agents". Erkenntnis. 51 (2–3): 353–385. doi:10.1023/A:1005577906029. S2CID 116984078.
  • Linski, L. (1968). "On Interpreting Doxastic Logic". Journal of Philosophy. 65 (17): 500–502. doi:10.2307/2024352. JSTOR 2024352.
  • Segerberg, Kr. (1999). "Default Logic as Dynamic Doxastic Logic". Erkenntnis. 50 (2–3): 333–352. doi:10.1023/A:1005546526502. S2CID 118747031.
  • Wansing, H. (2000). "A Reduction of Doxastic Logic to Action Logic". Erkenntnis. 53 (1–2): 267–283. doi:10.1023/A:1005666218871. S2CID 58939606.

doxastic, logic, type, logic, concerned, with, reasoning, about, beliefs, term, doxastic, derives, from, ancient, greek, δόξα, doxa, opinion, belief, from, which, english, term, doxa, popular, opinion, belief, also, borrowed, typically, doxastic, logic, uses, . Doxastic logic is a type of logic concerned with reasoning about beliefs The term doxastic derives from the Ancient Greek do3a doxa opinion belief from which the English term doxa popular opinion or belief is also borrowed Typically a doxastic logic uses the notation Bx displaystyle mathcal B x to mean It is believed that x displaystyle x is the case and the set B b1 bn displaystyle mathbb B left b 1 ldots b n right denotes a set of beliefs In doxastic logic belief is treated as a modal operator There is complete parallelism between a person who believes propositions and a formal system that derives propositions Using doxastic logic one can express the epistemic counterpart of Godel s incompleteness theorem of metalogic as well as Lob s theorem and other metalogical results in terms of belief 1 Contents 1 Types of reasoners 2 Increasing levels of rationality 3 Self fulfilling beliefs 4 Inconsistency of the belief in one s stability 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingTypes of reasoners editTo demonstrate the properties of sets of beliefs Raymond Smullyan defines the following types of reasoners Accurate reasoner 1 2 3 4 An accurate reasoner never believes any false proposition modal axiom T p Bp p displaystyle forall p mathcal B p to p nbsp dd Inaccurate reasoner 1 2 3 4 An inaccurate reasoner believes at least one false proposition p p Bp displaystyle exists p neg p wedge mathcal B p nbsp dd Consistent reasoner 1 2 3 4 A consistent reasoner never simultaneously believes a proposition and its negation modal axiom D p Bp B por p Bp B p displaystyle neg exists p mathcal B p wedge mathcal B neg p quad text or quad forall p mathcal B p to neg mathcal B neg p nbsp dd Normal reasoner 1 2 3 4 A normal reasoner is one who while believing p displaystyle p nbsp also believes they believe p modal axiom 4 p Bp BBp displaystyle forall p mathcal B p to mathcal BB p nbsp dd A variation on this would be someone who while not believing p displaystyle p nbsp also believes they don t believe p modal axiom 5 p Bp B Bp displaystyle forall p neg mathcal B p to mathcal B neg mathcal B p nbsp dd Peculiar reasoner 1 4 A peculiar reasoner believes proposition p while also believing they do not believe p displaystyle p nbsp Although a peculiar reasoner may seem like a strange psychological phenomenon see Moore s paradox a peculiar reasoner is necessarily inaccurate but not necessarily inconsistent p Bp B Bp displaystyle exists p mathcal B p wedge mathcal B neg B p nbsp dd Regular reasoner 1 2 3 4 A regular reasoner is one who while believing p q displaystyle p to q nbsp also believes Bp Bq displaystyle mathcal B p to mathcal B q nbsp p q B p q B Bp Bq displaystyle forall p forall q mathcal B p to q to mathcal B mathcal B p to mathcal B q nbsp dd Reflexive reasoner 1 4 A reflexive reasoner is one for whom every proposition p displaystyle p nbsp has some proposition q displaystyle q nbsp such that the reasoner believes q Bq p displaystyle q equiv mathcal B q to p nbsp p q B q Bq p displaystyle forall p exists q mathcal B q equiv mathcal B q to p nbsp dd If a reflexive reasoner of type 4 see below believes Bp p displaystyle mathcal B p to p nbsp they will believe p This is a parallelism of Lob s theorem for reasoners Conceited reasoner 1 4 A conceited reasoner believes their beliefs are never inaccurate B p p Bp orB p Bp p displaystyle mathcal B neg exists p neg p wedge mathcal B p quad text or quad mathcal B forall p mathcal B p to p nbsp dd Rewritten in de re form this is logically equivalent to p B Bp p displaystyle forall p mathcal B mathcal B p to p nbsp dd This implies that p BBp Bp displaystyle forall p mathcal B mathcal B p to mathcal B p nbsp dd This shows that a conceited reasoner is always a stable reasoner see below Unstable reasoner 1 4 An unstable reasoner is one who believes that they believe some proposition but in fact do not believe it This is just as strange a psychological phenomenon as peculiarity however an unstable reasoner is not necessarily inconsistent p BBp Bp displaystyle exists p mathcal B mathcal B p wedge neg mathcal B p nbsp dd Stable reasoner 1 4 A stable reasoner is not unstable That is for every p displaystyle p nbsp if they believe Bp displaystyle mathcal B p nbsp then they believe p displaystyle p nbsp Note that stability is the converse of normality We will say that a reasoner believes they are stable if for every proposition p displaystyle p nbsp they believe BBp Bp displaystyle mathcal B mathcal B p to mathcal B p nbsp believing If I should ever believe that I believe p displaystyle p nbsp then I really will believe p displaystyle p nbsp This corresponds to having a dense accessibility relation in Kripke semantics and any accurate reasoner is always stable p BBp Bp displaystyle forall p mathcal BB p to mathcal B p nbsp dd Modest reasoner 1 4 A modest reasoner is one for whom for every believed proposition p displaystyle p nbsp Bp p displaystyle mathcal B p to p nbsp only if they believe p displaystyle p nbsp A modest reasoner never believes Bp p displaystyle mathcal B p to p nbsp unless they believe p displaystyle p nbsp Any reflexive reasoner of type 4 is modest Lob s Theorem p B Bp p Bp displaystyle forall p mathcal B mathcal B p to p to mathcal B p nbsp dd Queer reasoner 4 A queer reasoner is of type G and believes they are inconsistent but is wrong in this belief Timid reasoner 4 A timid reasoner does not believe p displaystyle p nbsp is afraid to believe p displaystyle p nbsp if they believe that belief in p displaystyle p nbsp leads to a contradictory belief p B Bp B Bp displaystyle forall p mathcal B mathcal B p to mathcal B bot to neg mathcal B p nbsp dd Increasing levels of rationality editType 1 reasoner 1 2 3 4 5 A type 1 reasoner has a complete knowledge of propositional logic i e they sooner or later believe every tautology theorem any proposition provable by truth tables PCp Bp displaystyle vdash PC p Rightarrow vdash mathcal B p nbsp dd The symbol PCp displaystyle vdash PC p nbsp means p displaystyle p nbsp is a tautology theorem provable in Propositional Calculus Also their set of beliefs past present and future is logically closed under modus ponens If they ever believe p displaystyle p nbsp and p q displaystyle p to q nbsp then they will sooner or later believe q displaystyle q nbsp p q Bp B p q Bq displaystyle forall p forall q mathcal B p wedge mathcal B p to q to mathcal B q nbsp dd This rule can also be thought of as stating that belief distributes over implication as it s logically equivalent to p q B p q Bp Bq displaystyle forall p forall q mathcal B p to q to mathcal B p to mathcal B q nbsp dd Note that in reality even the assumption of type 1 reasoner may be too strong for some cases see Lottery paradox Type 1 reasoner 1 2 3 4 A type 1 reasoner believes all tautologies their set of beliefs past present and future is logically closed under modus ponens and for any propositions p displaystyle p nbsp and q displaystyle q nbsp if they believe p q displaystyle p to q nbsp then they will believe that if they believe p displaystyle p nbsp then they will believe q displaystyle q nbsp The type 1 reasoner has a shade more self awareness than a type 1 reasoner p q B p q B Bp Bq displaystyle forall p forall q mathcal B p to q to mathcal B mathcal B p to mathcal B q nbsp dd Type 2 reasoner 1 2 3 4 A reasoner is of type 2 if they are of type 1 and if for every p displaystyle p nbsp and q displaystyle q nbsp they correctly believe If I should ever believe both p displaystyle p nbsp and p q displaystyle p to q nbsp then I will believe q displaystyle q nbsp Being of type 1 they also believe the logically equivalent proposition B p q Bp Bq displaystyle mathcal B p to q to mathcal B p to mathcal B q nbsp A type 2 reasoner knows their beliefs are closed under modus ponens p q B Bp B p q Bq displaystyle forall p forall q mathcal B mathcal B p wedge mathcal B p to q to mathcal B q nbsp dd Type 3 reasoner 1 2 3 4 A reasoner is of type 3 if they are a normal reasoner of type 2 p Bp BBp displaystyle forall p mathcal B p to mathcal B mathcal B p nbsp dd Type 4 reasoner 1 2 3 4 5 A reasoner is of type 4 if they are of type 3 and also believe they are normal B p Bp BBp displaystyle mathcal B forall p mathcal B p to mathcal B mathcal B p nbsp dd Type G reasoner 1 4 A reasoner of type 4 who believes they are modest B p B Bp p Bp displaystyle mathcal B forall p mathcal B mathcal B p to p to mathcal B p nbsp dd Self fulfilling beliefs editFor systems we define reflexivity to mean that for any p displaystyle p nbsp in the language of the system there is some q displaystyle q nbsp such that q Bq p displaystyle q equiv mathcal B q to p nbsp is provable in the system Lob s theorem in a general form is that for any reflexive system of type 4 if Bp p displaystyle mathcal B p to p nbsp is provable in the system so is p displaystyle p nbsp 1 4 Inconsistency of the belief in one s stability editIf a consistent reflexive reasoner of type 4 believes that they are stable then they will become unstable Stated otherwise if a stable reflexive reasoner of type 4 believes that they are stable then they will become inconsistent Why is this Suppose that a stable reflexive reasoner of type 4 believes that they are stable We will show that they will sooner or later believe every proposition p displaystyle p nbsp and hence be inconsistent Take any proposition p displaystyle p nbsp The reasoner believes BBp Bp displaystyle mathcal B mathcal B p to mathcal B p nbsp hence by Lob s theorem they will believe Bp displaystyle mathcal B p nbsp because they believe Br r displaystyle mathcal B r to r nbsp where r displaystyle r nbsp is the proposition Bp displaystyle mathcal B p nbsp and so they will believe r displaystyle r nbsp which is the proposition Bp displaystyle mathcal B p nbsp Being stable they will then believe p displaystyle p nbsp 1 4 See also edit nbsp Philosophy portalEpistemic modal logic Belief revision Common knowledge logic George Boolos Jaakko Hintikka Modal logic Raymond SmullyanReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Smullyan Raymond M 1986 Logicians who reason about themselves Proceedings of the 1986 conference on Theoretical aspects of reasoning about knowledge Monterey CA Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc San Francisco CA pp 341 352 a b c d e f g h i j https web archive org web 20070930165226 http cs wwc edu KU Logic Book book node17 html Belief Knowledge and Self Awareness dead link a b c d e f g h i j https web archive org web 20070213054220 http moonbase wwc edu aabyan Logic Modal html Modal Logics dead link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Smullyan Raymond M 1987 Forever Undecided Alfred A Knopf Inc a b Rod Girle Possible Worlds McGill Queen s University Press 2003 ISBN 0 7735 2668 4 ISBN 978 0773526686Further reading editLindstrom St Rabinowicz Wl 1999 DDL Unlimited Dynamic Doxastic Logic for Introspective Agents Erkenntnis 51 2 3 353 385 doi 10 1023 A 1005577906029 S2CID 116984078 Linski L 1968 On Interpreting Doxastic Logic Journal of Philosophy 65 17 500 502 doi 10 2307 2024352 JSTOR 2024352 Segerberg Kr 1999 Default Logic as Dynamic Doxastic Logic Erkenntnis 50 2 3 333 352 doi 10 1023 A 1005546526502 S2CID 118747031 Wansing H 2000 A Reduction of Doxastic Logic to Action Logic Erkenntnis 53 1 2 267 283 doi 10 1023 A 1005666218871 S2CID 58939606 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doxastic logic amp oldid 1183211479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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