Results 91 to 100 of about 2,360 (124)
Logic, reasoning and rationality, 20–22 September [PDF]
Beirlaen, Mathieu +3 more
core +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Dynamic Deontic Logic and its Paradoxes
Studia Logica, 2008In Meyer’s promising account [7] deontic logic is reduced to a dynamic logic. Meyer claims that with his account “we get rid of most (if not all) of the nasty paradoxes that have plagued traditional deontic logic.” But as was shown by van der Meyden in [4], Meyer’s logic also contains a paradoxical formula.
openaire +3 more sources
Paradoxes of moral reparation: Deontic foci vs. circumstances
Philosophical Studies, 1989The distinction between deontic focus and deontic circumstance is obvious and essential to the understanding of our reasonings about obligations, permissions, rights, and wrongs. Here we have dealt with the basics. These basics must be developed into a full deontic logic.
openaire +3 more sources
Conditional obligation, deontic paradoxes, and the logic of agency
Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence, 1993zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Paul Bartha
openaire +4 more sources
Deontic Relevant Logic: A Strong Relevant Logic Approach to Removing Paradoxes from Deontic Logic
Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2002In this paper, we propose a strong relevant logic approach to solve the problems of deontic logic paradoxes. Since the paradoxes in deontic logic have the same form as the paradoxes in traditional (weak) relevant logic, which have been rejected by our strong relevant logic, we show that a new family of logic, named deontic relevant logics, can be ...
Takahiro Tagawa, Jingde Cheng
openaire +3 more sources
A Simpler Solution to the Paradoxes of Deontic Logic
Philosophical Perspectives, 1990Some of deontic logic's stickiest problems are revealed by the socalled "paradoxes of deontic logic". None of these is, strictly speaking, a paradox-no one purports to derive a contradiction from a bunch of seemingly uncontroversial premises.' Instead, the general form is this: some system of deontic logic has been proposed.
Fred Feldman
openaire +3 more sources

