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CSL
2006
Springer

Logical Omniscience Via Proof Complexity

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Logical Omniscience Via Proof Complexity
The Hintikka-style modal logic approach to knowledge has a well-known defect of logical omniscience, i.e., an unrealistic feature that an agent knows all logical consequences of her assumptions. In this paper we suggest the following Logical Omniscience Test (LOT): an epistemic system E is not logically omniscient if for any valid in E knowledge assertion A of type `F is known' there is a proof of F in E, the complexity of which is bounded by some polynomial in the length of A. We show that the usual epistemic modal logics are logically omniscient (modulo some common complexity assumptions). We also apply LOT to Justification Logic, which along with the usual knowledge operator Ki(F) (`agent i knows F') contain evidence assertions t:F (`t is a justification for F'). In Justification Logic, the evidence part is an appropriate extension of the Logic of Proofs LP, which guarantees that the collection of evidence terms t is rich enough to match modal logic. We show that just...
Sergei N. Artëmov, Roman Kuznets
Added 22 Aug 2010
Updated 22 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where CSL
Authors Sergei N. Artëmov, Roman Kuznets
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