Abstract

This thesis consists in six articles and a comprehensive summary. • The pourpose of the summary is to introduce the AGM theory of belief change and to exemplify the diversity and significance of the research that has been inspired by the AGM article in the last 25 years. The research areas associated with AGM was divided in three parts: criticisms, where we discussed some of the more common criticisms of AGM. Extensions where the most common extensions and variations of AGM are presented and applications where we provided an overview of applications and connections with other areas of research. • Article I elaborates on the connection between partial meet contractions [AGM85] and kernel contractions [Han94a] in belief change theory. Also both functions are equivalent in belief sets, there are notequivalent in belief bases. A way to define incision functions (used in kernel contractions) from selection functions (used in partial meet contractions) and vice versa is presented. It is explained under which conditions there are exact correspondences between selection and incision functions so that the same contraction operations can be obtained by using either of them. • Article II proposes an axiomatic characterization for ensconcement-based contraction functions, belief base functions proposed byWilliams and relates this function with other kinds of base contraction functions. • Article III adapts the Ferme and Hansson model of Shielded Contraction [FH01] as well as Hansson et all Credibility-Limited Revision [HFCF01] for belief bases, to join two of the many variations of the AGM model [AGM85], i.e. those in which knowledge is represented through belief bases instead of logic theories, and those in which the object of the epistemic change does not get the priority over the existing information as it is the case in the AGM model. • Article IV introduces revision by comparison a refined method for changing beliefs by specifying constraints on the relative plausibility of propositions. Like the earlier belief revision models, the method proposed is a qualitative one, in the sense that no numbers are needed in order to specify the posterior plausibility of the new information. The method uses reference beliefs in order to determine the degree of entrenchment of the newly accepted piece of information. Two kinds of semantics for this idea are proposed and a logical characterization of the new model is given. • Article V focuses on the extension of AGM that allows change for a belief base by a set of sentences instead of a single sentence. In [FH94], Fuhrmann and Hansson presented an axiomatic for Multiple Contraction and a construction based on the AGM Partial Meet Contraction. This essay proposes for their model another way to construct functions: Multiple Kernel Contraction, that is a modification of Kernel Contraction,proposed by Hansson [Han94a] to construct classical AGM contractions and belief base contractions. • Article VI relates AGM model with the DFT model proposed by Carlos Alchourron [Alc93]. Alchourron devoted his last years to the analysis of the notion of defeasible conditionalization. His definition of the defeasible conditional is given in terms of strict implication operator and a modal operator f which is interpreted as a revision function at the language level. This essay points out that this underlying revision function is more general than AGM revision. In addition, a complete characterization of that more general kind of revision that permits to unify models of revision given by other authors is given.

Highlights

  • In the logic of theory change, the AGM model has acquired the status of a standard model

  • The AGM model seems to be improper in many contexts

  • The objective of this paper is to present a model that combines both kinds of extensions. This model consists of the extension for belief bases of Shielded Contraction [4], in which the contraction operations are filtered by a group of sentences capable of being retracted, and Credibility-limited Revision [10] in which the new information in the revision is only added if certain acceptability conditions are fulfilled

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Summary

Introduction

In the logic of theory change, the AGM model has acquired the status of a standard model [1]. The AGM model seems to be improper in many contexts This inspired many researchers to propose extensions and generalizations to AGM. 1. Nonprioritized belief revision: the AGM model always accepts the new information. 2. Extensions in the representation of the belief states and of the inputs: belief sets (sets of sentences closed under logical consequence) cannot distinguish between fundamental and derived beliefs. The objective of this paper is to present a model that combines both kinds of extensions This model consists of the extension for belief bases of Shielded Contraction [4], in which the contraction operations are filtered by a group of sentences capable of being retracted, and Credibility-limited Revision [10] in which the new information in the revision is only added if certain acceptability conditions are fulfilled. We will enunciate the axiomatic for these models, a constructive model for each one of these operations, establishing the corresponding representation theorem

Formal preliminaries
Belief bases functions
Shielded base contraction
The set of retractible sentences
Postulates for shielded base contraction
Representation theorem
Credibility-limited base contraction
The set of credible sentences
Makinson
Postulates for credibility-limited base revision
A Proofs
Let be an operator such that
Full Text
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