Publikation: From reasonable preferences, via argumentation, to logic
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This article demonstrates that typical restrictions which are imposed in dialogical logic in order to recover first-order logical consequence from a fragment of natural language argumentation are also forthcoming from preference profiles of boundedly rational players, provided that these players instantiate a specific player type and compute partial strategies. We present two structural rules, which are formulated similarly to closure rules for tableaux proofs that restrict players' strategies to a mapping between games in extensive forms (i.e., game trees) and proof trees. Both rules are motivated from players' preferences and limitations; they can therefore be viewed as being player-self-imposable. First-order logical consequence is thus shown to result from playing a specific type of argumentation game. The alignment of such games with the normative model of the Pragma-dialectical theory of argumentation is positively evaluated. But explicit rules to guarantee that the argumentation game instantiates first-order logical consequence have now become gratuitous, since their normative content arises directly from players' preferences and limitations. A similar naturalization for non-classical logics is discussed.
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JACOT, Justine, Emmanuel GENOT, Frank ZENKER, 2016. From reasonable preferences, via argumentation, to logic. In: Journal of Applied Logic. 2016, 18, pp. 105-128. ISSN 1570-8683. eISSN 1570-8691. Available under: doi: 10.1016/j.jal.2016.08.001BibTex
@article{Jacot2016reaso-37535, year={2016}, doi={10.1016/j.jal.2016.08.001}, title={From reasonable preferences, via argumentation, to logic}, volume={18}, issn={1570-8683}, journal={Journal of Applied Logic}, pages={105--128}, author={Jacot, Justine and Genot, Emmanuel and Zenker, Frank} }
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