This paper compares two ways of formalising defeasible deontic reasoning, both based on the view that the issues of conflicting obligations and moral dilemmas should be dealt with from the perspective of nonmonotonic reasoning. The first way is developing a special nonmonotonic logic for deontic statements. This method turns out to have some limitations, for which reason another approach is recommended, viz. combining an already existing nonmonotonic logic with a deontic logic. As an example of this method the language of Reiter's default logic is extended to include modal expressions, after which the argumentation framework in default logic of [20, 22] is used to give a An earlier version of this article was written while the autho...
In this paper we shall give a short (and incomplete) historic overview of the branch of modal logic ...
We present two multi-agent deontic logics that consistently accommodate various types of normative c...
This thesis consists of two main chapters which connect two areas of deontic logic and justification...
This paper compares two ways of formalising defeasible deontic reasoning, both based on the view tha...
this paper, however, that the techniques of nonmonotonic logic may provide a better theoretical fram...
peer reviewedDefeasible deontic logic uses techniques from non-monotonic logic to address various ch...
Deontic Defeasible Logic (DDL) is a simple and computationally efficient approach for the representa...
Defeasible Deontic Logic is a simple and computationally efficient approach for the representation o...
In this thesis, the main focus is on deontic logic as a tool for formal representation of moral reas...
In this paper we describe an algorithmic framework for a multi-modal logic arising from the combinat...
Defeasible logic is a non-monotonic formalism that deals with incomplete and conflicting information...
The present volume is a sequel to Deontic Logic: Introductory and Systematic Readings : its purpose ...
According to many defenders of defeasible deontic logics, their systems provide an explanation of ho...
peer reviewedTo decide which norms can be removed from a system, we need to know when a norm is redu...
Argumentative systems [SL92, Vre93, Che96] are formalizations of defeasible reasoning [Pol87, Nut88]...
In this paper we shall give a short (and incomplete) historic overview of the branch of modal logic ...
We present two multi-agent deontic logics that consistently accommodate various types of normative c...
This thesis consists of two main chapters which connect two areas of deontic logic and justification...
This paper compares two ways of formalising defeasible deontic reasoning, both based on the view tha...
this paper, however, that the techniques of nonmonotonic logic may provide a better theoretical fram...
peer reviewedDefeasible deontic logic uses techniques from non-monotonic logic to address various ch...
Deontic Defeasible Logic (DDL) is a simple and computationally efficient approach for the representa...
Defeasible Deontic Logic is a simple and computationally efficient approach for the representation o...
In this thesis, the main focus is on deontic logic as a tool for formal representation of moral reas...
In this paper we describe an algorithmic framework for a multi-modal logic arising from the combinat...
Defeasible logic is a non-monotonic formalism that deals with incomplete and conflicting information...
The present volume is a sequel to Deontic Logic: Introductory and Systematic Readings : its purpose ...
According to many defenders of defeasible deontic logics, their systems provide an explanation of ho...
peer reviewedTo decide which norms can be removed from a system, we need to know when a norm is redu...
Argumentative systems [SL92, Vre93, Che96] are formalizations of defeasible reasoning [Pol87, Nut88]...
In this paper we shall give a short (and incomplete) historic overview of the branch of modal logic ...
We present two multi-agent deontic logics that consistently accommodate various types of normative c...
This thesis consists of two main chapters which connect two areas of deontic logic and justification...