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Sources of, and exploiting, inconsistency: preliminary report

Sources of, and exploiting, inconsistency: preliminary report Although much effort has been expended by researchers in trying to maintain a consistent belief base in formalizing commonsense reasoning, there is some evidence that the nature of commonsense reasoning itself brings inconsistencies with it. I will outline a number of sources of such inconsistencies, and discuss why they appear unavoidable. I will also suggest that, far from being a roadblock to effective commonsense, (detected) inconsistencies are often a reasoner's best guide to what to do next. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics Taylor & Francis

Sources of, and exploiting, inconsistency: preliminary report

Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics , Volume 7 (1-2): 12 – Jan 1, 1997
12 pages

Sources of, and exploiting, inconsistency: preliminary report

Abstract

Although much effort has been expended by researchers in trying to maintain a consistent belief base in formalizing commonsense reasoning, there is some evidence that the nature of commonsense reasoning itself brings inconsistencies with it. I will outline a number of sources of such inconsistencies, and discuss why they appear unavoidable. I will also suggest that, far from being a roadblock to effective commonsense, (detected) inconsistencies are often a reasoner's best guide to what...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1958-5780
eISSN
1166-3081
DOI
10.1080/11663081.1997.10510899
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Although much effort has been expended by researchers in trying to maintain a consistent belief base in formalizing commonsense reasoning, there is some evidence that the nature of commonsense reasoning itself brings inconsistencies with it. I will outline a number of sources of such inconsistencies, and discuss why they appear unavoidable. I will also suggest that, far from being a roadblock to effective commonsense, (detected) inconsistencies are often a reasoner's best guide to what to do next.

Journal

Journal of Applied Non-Classical LogicsTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 1997

Keywords: belief; inconsistency; commonsense reasoning

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