-
27Bivalence and Future ContingencyIn Sven Ove Hansson & Vincent F. Hendricks (eds.), Introduction to Formal Philosophy, Springer. pp. 333-347. 2012.This work presents an overview of four different approaches to the problem of future contingency and determinism in temporal logics. All of them are bivalent, viz. they share the assumption that propositions concerning future contingent facts have a determinate truth-value. We introduce Ockhamism, Peirceanism, Actualism and T × W semantics, the four most relevant bivalent alternatives in this area, and compare them from the point of view of their expressiveness and their underlying metaphysics o…Read more
-
30Time of Logics and Time of PhysicsIn Philippe Huneman & Christophe Bouton (eds.), Time of Nature and the Nature of Time: Philosophical Perspectives of Time in Natural Sciences, Springer Verlag. pp. 39-53. 2017.The history of reasoning about time is filled with paradoxes and conundra; contemporary physics is no exception. Logics in general, and more specifically temporal logics, represent a rigorous formal tool in order to solve or clarify problems of this kind. In what follows we will first explain, from the point of view of philosophical logic, what is a paradox and what should count as a solution to it. After that we will illustrate A.N. Prior’s formalization of the traditional paradox of future con…Read more
-
73Dynamic epistemic logics for abstract argumentationSynthese 199 (3-4): 8641-8700. 2021.This paper introduces a multi-agent dynamic epistemic logic for abstract argumentation. Its main motivation is to build a general framework for modelling the dynamics of a debate, which entails reasoning about goals, beliefs, as well as policies of communication and information update by the participants. After locating our proposal and introducing the relevant tools from abstract argumentation, we proceed to build a three-tiered logical approach. At the first level, we use the language of propo…Read more
-
111Bivalence and Future ContingencyIn Sven Ove Hansson & Vincent F. Hendricks (eds.), Introduction to Formal Philosophy, Imprint: Springer. pp. 333-347. 2018.This work presents an overview of four different approaches to the problem of future contingency and determinism in temporal logics. All of them are bivalent, viz. they share the assumption that propositions concerning future contingent facts have a determinate truth-value (true or false). We introduce Ockhamism, Peirceanism, Actualism and T × W semantics, the four most relevant bivalent alternatives in this area, and compare them from the point of view of their expressiveness and their underlyi…Read more
-
69Persuasive Argumentation and Epistemic AttitudesIn L. Soares Barbosa & A. Baltag (eds.), Dynamic Logic. New Trends and Applications. DALI 2019. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 12005, . 2020.This paper studies the relation between persuasive argumentation and the speaker’s epistemic attitude. Dung-style abstract argumentation and dynamic epistemic logic provide the necessary tools to characterize the notion of persuasion. Within abstract argumentation, persuasive argumentation has been previously studied from a game-theoretic perspective. These approaches are blind to the fact that, in real-life situations, the epistemic attitude of the speaker determines which set of arguments will…Read more
-
42TRL semantics and Burgess' formulaIn Carlo Proietti & Roberto Ciuni (eds.), Logic and Philosophy of Time : Themes from Prior. Volume 2 - Themes from Prior. Volume 2, . forthcoming.
-
72Understanding Group Polarization with Bipolar Argumentation FrameworksFrontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications 287. 2016.Group polarization occurs when an initial attitude or belief of individuals becomes more radical after group discussion. Polarization often leads subgroups towards opposite directions. Since the 1960s this effect has been observed and repeatedly confirmed in lab experiments by social psychologists. Persuasive Arguments Theory emerged as the most convincing explanation for this phenomenon. This paper is a first attempt to frame the PAT explanation more formally by means of Bipolar Argumentation F…Read more
-
53The Peter Principle states that employees tend to be promoted until they reach their level of incompetence. In a sophisticated simulation study, Pluchino et al confirmed a version of the principle. However, they also noted that their model has the counterintuitive consequence that “the best ways for improving the efficiency of a given organization are either to promote each time an agent at random or to promote randomly the best and the worst members”. We argue that what promotion rule is used c…Read more
-
37Probabilistic Semantics for a Discussive Temporal LogicThe Logica Yearbook. forthcoming.The paper introduces a probabilistic semantics for the paraconsistent temporal logic Ab presented by the authors in a previous work on future contingents. Probabilistic concepts help framing two possible interpretations of the logic in question - a `subjective' and an `objective' one - and explaining the rationale behind both of them. We also sketch a proof-method for Ab and address some considerations regarding the conceptual appeal of our proposal and its possible future developments.
-
69Explicating Ignorance and Doubt : A Possible Worlds ApproachIn Rik Peels & Martijn Blaauw (eds.), The Epistemic Dimensions of Ignorance, Cambridge University Press. pp. 81-95. 2016.
-
41Ceteris paribus modalities and the future contingents problemIn Lena Kurzen & Fernando Velasquez Quesada (eds.), Logics for Dynamics of Information and Preferences., . pp. 304-325. 2009.This paper presents two systems of temporal logic, \Lambda_{CPT} and \Lambda_{CPT@}, with ceteris paribus modalities. The principal aim is to show how this approach can be useful to give an ockhamist solution to the future contingents problem along the same lines of A. Prior. The interest of this work lies also in the fact that \Lambda_{CPT@} represents an alternative modal account of supervaluationist and post-semantics approaches to temporal reasoning.
-
88The problem of future contingents is one of the most ancient and debated puzzles in Western philosophy, and Supervaluationism is, today, one of the most prominent solutions to the problem. Recently, John MacFarlane has carried a well-known criticism to Supervaluationism and put forward a new solution of the problem of future contingents, which is known as Double Time Reference Theory. Here, we compare DTRT with Supervaluationist semantics, and we show that the success of MacFarlane's criticism c…Read more
-
48Polarization and bipolar probabilistic argumentation frameworksCEUR Workshop Proceedings 2012 22-27. 2017.Discussion among individuals about a given issue often induces polarization and bipolarization effects, i.e. individuals radicalize their initial opinion towards either the same or opposite directions. Experimental psychologists have put forward Persuasive Arguments Theory as a clue for explaining polarization. PAT claims that adding novel and persuasive arguments pro or contra the debated issue is the major cause for polarization. Recent developments in abstract argumentation provide the tools …Read more
-
67The dynamics of group polarizationIn Alexandru Baltag, Jeremy Seligman & Tomoyuki Yamada (eds.), Logic, Rationality, and Interaction. LORI 2017. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 10455, Springer. pp. 195-208. 2017.Exchange of arguments in a discussion often makes individuals more radical about their initial opinion. This phenomenon is known as Group-induced Attitude Polarization. A byproduct of it are bipolarization effects, where the distance between the attitudes of two groups of individuals increases after the discussion. This paper is a first attempt to analyse the building blocks of information exchange and information update that induce polarization. I use Argumentation Frameworks as a tool for enco…Read more
-
30Claude Gratton, Infinite Regress ArgumentsCogency - Journal of Reasoning and Argumentation 4 (1): 213-215. 2012.
-
272The abundance of the future: A paraconsistent approach to future contingentsLogic and Logical Philosophy 22 (1): 21-43. 2013.Supervaluationism holds that the future is undetermined, and as a consequence of this, statements about the future may be neither true nor false. In the present paper, we explore the novel and quite different view that the future is abundant: statements about the future do not lack truth-value, but may instead be glutty, that is both true and false. We will show that the logic resulting from this “abundance of the future” is a non-adjunctive paraconsistent formalism based on subvaluations, which…Read more
-
123Pluralistic Ignorance and Collective Belief: A DDL ApproachJournal of Philosophical Logic. forthcoming.
Lund, Scania, Sweden
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Logic and Philosophy of Logic |
| Philosophy of Social Science |