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(2018) The Lvov-Warsaw school, Dordrecht, Springer.

Variations on Jaśkowski's discursive logic

Barbara Dunin-Kęplicz , Alina Powała , Andrzej Szałas

pp. 485-497

Stanisław Jaśkowski, in his 1948–1949 papers on propositional calculus for contradictory deductive systems, proposed discursive logic D2. The main motivation behind D2 is the need to properly deal with contradictions that naturally appear in many areas of philosophy and discourse. The intuitive justification of this logic reflects knowledge fusion occurring when "the theses advanced by several participants in a discourse are combined into a single system." This point of view was seminal in the mid twentieth century and remains visionary nowadays.In contemporary autonomous systems operating in dynamic, unpredictable information-rich environments, distributed reasoning routinely takes place. This explains the key role of knowledge fusion, among others, in Distributed Artificial Intelligence. Therefore, different types of modern knowledge and belief bases become primarily concerned with inconsistent or lacking information. This requirement leads to recent approaches to paraconsistent and paracomplete reasoning, where nonmonotonic techniques for disambiguating inconsistencies and completing missing knowledge can be applied.In this chapter we remind Jaśkowski's seminal, pioneering work on paraconsistent reasoning and indicate some of its relations to contemporary research on reasoning in Distributed AI.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-65430-0_34

Full citation:

Dunin-Kęplicz, B. , Powała, A. , Szałas, A. (2018)., Variations on Jaśkowski's discursive logic, in A. Garrido & U. Wybraniec-Skardowska (eds.), The Lvov-Warsaw school, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 485-497.

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