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From Brute Facts to Institutional Facts in Multiagent-Systems
2011 Workshop and School of Agent Systems, their Environment and Applications, 2011Some multi-agent models point to the use of a institutional dimension to ensure a suitable behavior of the agents and to aid the agents in their activities in the system. In some scenarios, the interaction between agents and institution may be mediated by the environment.
Maiquel DE BRITO, Jomi Fred Hübner
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Analysis of the Use of Events and States as Brute Facts in Modelling of Institutional Facts
Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2014Although the institutional dimension of a multi-agent system can be affected directly by the actions of the agents, it can be also affected by facts originating in the environment or even in the institution. In previous work, we proposed a model, language and its interpreter to specify the institutional consequences of both events and states from ...
Maiquel DE BRITO +2 more
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Further thoughts on institutional facts
International Journal for the Semiotics of Law, 1992Neil Maccormick
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Privacy: an institutional fact
Ethics and Information Technology, 2016Let us show how property is grasped as an institutional fact. If Jones steals a computer, he does not own it in the sense of property, but only exercises control towards it. If he buys the computer, he controls it too, and moreover owns it in the sense of property. In other words, simply exercising control towards something is a brute fact.
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Institutional Facts and the Naturalistic Fallacy
ProtoSociology, 2002In 1964 Searle argued against the naturalistic fallacy thesis that an ought-statement can in fact be derived from is-statements. From an analysis of this argument and of Searle’s social ontology of 1995 – which includes a full-blown theory of institutional facts – I conclude that this argument is unsound on his own (later) terms.
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2020
The use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes is entirely every country’s sovereign choice. Today, 31 countries own and operate 449 Nuclear Power Reactors (NPRs) (see Annex III) covering around 11% of the world’s electric consumption. In 11 countries NPRs cover more than 30% of their needs in electricity.
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The use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes is entirely every country’s sovereign choice. Today, 31 countries own and operate 449 Nuclear Power Reactors (NPRs) (see Annex III) covering around 11% of the world’s electric consumption. In 11 countries NPRs cover more than 30% of their needs in electricity.
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Environmental Consequences of Institutional Facts in Artificial Institutions
2022Rafhael R. Cunha +2 more
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