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3Reasoning with Precedents as Constrained Natural ReasoningIn Errol Lord & Barry Maguire (eds.), Weighing Reasons, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 193-212. 2016.This chapter develops a picture according to which decision making in the common law is entirely guided by reasons rather than rules, and differs from ordinary decision making only to the extent that a common law reasoner, conforming to the requirements of precedent, must adapt his or her own weighting, or priority ordering, on reasons so that it coheres with a priority ordering derived from a background case base. Common law reasoning is thus cast as a form of constrained natural reasoning, in …Read more
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Gründe als DefaultsIn Hans Johann Glock, Julian Nida-Rümelin & Elif Özmen (eds.), Deutsches Jahrbuch Philosophie, . pp. 1035-1061. 2012.
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33Deontic Logic and Normative Systems. 17th International Conference, DEON 2025 (edited book)College Publications. 2025.
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Agency and Deontic LogicOUP Usa. 2009.This original new work develops deontic logic against the background of a theory of agency in indeterministic time. The goal is to present a formal account of what individuals and groups of agents ought to do under various conditions and over extended periods of time.
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196Frege on Definitions: A Case Study of Semantic ContentOUP Usa. 2010.In this short monograph, John Horty explores the difficulties presented for Gottlob Frege's semantic theory, as well as its modern descendents, by the treatment of defined expressions. The book begins by focusing on the psychological constraints governing Frege's notion of sense, or meaning, and argues that, given these constraints, even the treatment of simple stipulative definitions led Frege to important difficulties. Horty is able to suggest ways out of these difficulties that are both philo…Read more
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48Group OughtsIn Agency and deontic logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 122-141. 2001.The notion of what an agent ought to do is generalized to yield a notion of what groups of agents ought to do. Relations among the obligations governing groups and subgroups are explored, as well as the connections among different species of individual act utilitarianism, group act utilitarianism, and rule utilitarianism.
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63Ought to BeIn Agency and deontic logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 34-58. 2001.Supplements the background theory of indeterministic time with a standard deontic logic, representing what ought to be the case. Taken together with the formal notion of action introduced in the previous chapter, the framework now allows us to speak about what it ought to be that the agent does, and to explore the possibility that this notion should be identified with the notion of what the agent ought to do. Examples are developed to show that the two notions should not be identified.
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45Ought to DoIn Agency and deontic logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 59-95. 2001.An analogy is developed between action in an indeterministic setting and choice under uncertainty, as it is studied in decision theory. Various dominance relations among actions are explored, and used both to provide a semantic account of what agents ought to do and to formulate a notion of dominance act utilitarianism. The ideas are related to problems involving independence, conditionals, and sure‐thing reasoning.
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74Conditional OughtsIn Agency and deontic logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 96-121. 2001.The notion of what an agent ought to do is refined to yield a notion conditional obligation, representing what the agent ought to do under various circumstances. Patterns of reasoning in the conditional deontic logic are explored. In contrast to the dominance account developed earlier, a competing notion of orthodox act utilitarianism is formulated.
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58Strategic OughtsIn Agency and deontic logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 142-164. 2001.The notion of what an agent ought to do at a moment is generalized to yield a notion of what the agent ought to do over extended periods of time. This requires us to develop the notion of a strategy as a function from moments to actions available at those moments and appropriate notions of strategic dominance. A strategic ought operator is introduced and used to analyze the debate between actualists and possibilists concerning the ways in which an agent's obligations depend on his or her future …Read more
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95Indeterminism and AgencyIn Agency and deontic logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 6-33. 2001.Develops the formal theory of action, or agency, that forms the background of the book. The account is cast against the background of Prior's theory of branching, or indeterministic, time. Against this background, the chapter develops precise notions of action and ability for both individuals and groups.
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34The Logic of Precedent: Constraint, Freedom, and Common Law ReasoningCambridge University Press. 2024.Unlike statutory law, which relies on the explicit formulation of rules, common law is thought to emerge from a complex doctrine of precedential constraint, according to which decisions in earlier cases constrain later courts while still allowing these courts the freedom to address new situations in creative ways. Although this doctrine is applied by legal practitioners on a daily basis, it has proved to be considerably more difficult to develop an adequate theoretical account of the doctrine it…Read more
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58Nonmonotonic LogicIn Lou Goble (ed.), The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic, Wiley-blackwell. 2008.The goal of a logic is to define a consequence relation between a set of formulas Γ and, in most cases, an individual formula A. This definition generally takes one of two forms. From a proof theoretic standpoint, A is said to be a consequence of Γ whenever there is a deduction of A from the set Γ, viewed as a set of premises; from a model theoretic standpoint, A is said to be a consequence of Γ whenever A holds in every model that satisfies each formula in Γ.
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96Action Types in Stit SemanticsReview of Symbolic Logic 10 (4): 617-637. 2017.Stit semantics grows out of a modal tradition in the logic of action that concentrates on an operator representing the agency of an individual in seeing to it that some state of affairs holds, rather than on the actions the individual performs in doing so. The purpose of this paper is to enrich stit semantics, and especially epistemic stit semantics, by supplementing the overall framework with an explicit treatment of action types. We show how the introduction of these new action types allows us…Read more
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Handbook of Deontic Logic and Normative System, Volume 2 (edited book)College Publications. forthcoming.
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79Modifying the reason modelArtificial Intelligence and Law 29 (2): 271-285. 2020.In previous work, I showed how the “reason model” of precedential constraint could naturally be generalized from the standard setting in which it was first developed to a richer setting in which dimensional information is represented as well. Surprisingly, it then turned out that, in this new dimensional setting, the reason model of constraint collapsed into the “result model,” which supports only a fortiori reasoning. The purpose of this note is to suggest a modification of the reason model of …Read more
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211Agency and deontic logicOxford University Press. 2001.John Horty effectively develops deontic logic (the logic of ethical concepts like obligation and permission) against the background of a formal theory of agency. He incorporates certain elements of decision theory to set out a new deontic account of what agents ought to do under various conditions over extended periods of time. Offering a conceptual rather than technical emphasis, Horty's framework allows a number of recent issues from moral theory to be set out clearly and discussed from a unif…Read more
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77Reasoning with dimensions and magnitudesArtificial Intelligence and Law 27 (3): 309-345. 2019.This paper shows how two models of precedential constraint can be broadened to include legal information represented through dimensions. I begin by describing a standard representation of legal cases based on boolean factors alone, and then reviewing two models of constraint developed within this standard setting. The first is the “result model”, supporting only a fortiori reasoning. The second is the “reason model”, supporting a richer notion of constraint, since it allows the reasons behind a …Read more
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Some Aspects of Meaning in Non-Contingent LanguageDissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 1986.Frege's writings on meaning are often interpreted within the framework of possible worlds semantics. The resulting theories rely on contingency to account for a variety of linguistic phenomena, such as the behavior of expressions in propositional attitude contexts, or the idea that a definition might fix the reference of an expression without establishing its meaning. In this thesis, I interpret Frege's ideas within a different framework, to provide a semantic theory that is able to account for …Read more
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237Evaluating new options in the context of existing plansArtificial Intelligence 127 (2): 199-220This paper contributes to the foundations of a theory of rational choice for artificial agents in dynamic environments. Our work is developed within a theoretical framework, originally due to Bratman, that models resource-bounded agents as operating against the background of some current set of intentions, which helps to frame their subsequent reasoning. In contrast to the standard theory of rational choice, where options are evaluated in isolation, we therefore provide an analysis of situations …Read more
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147A sceptical theory of inheritance in nonmonotonic semantic networksArtificial Intelligence 42 (2-3): 311-348. 1990.inheritance reasoning in semantic networks allowing for multiple inheritance with exceptions. The approach leads to a definition of iaheritance that is..
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81Deontic Modals: Why Abandon the Classical Semantics?Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 95 (4): 424-460. 2014.I begin by reviewing classical semantics and the problems presented by normative conflicts. After a brief detour through default logic, I establish some connections between the treatment of conflicts in each of these two approaches, classical and default, and then move on to consider some further issues: priorities among norms, or reasons, conditional oughts, and reasons about reasons
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757The result model of precedentLegal Theory 10 (1): 19-31. 2004.The result model of precedent holds that a legal precedent controls a fortiori cases—those cases, that is, that are at least as strong for the winning side of the precedent as the precedent case itself. This paper defends the result model against some objections by Larry Alexander, drawing on ideas from the field of Artificial Intelligence and Law in order to define an appropriate strength ordering for cases
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