An epistemic logic for becoming informed

Article


Primiero, G. 2009. An epistemic logic for becoming informed. Synthese. 167 (2), pp. 363-389. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-008-9413-8
TypeArticle
TitleAn epistemic logic for becoming informed
AuthorsPrimiero, G.
Abstract

Various conceptual approaches to the notion of information can currently be traced in the literature in logic and formal epistemology. A main issue of disagreement is the attribution of truthfulness to informational data, the so called Veridicality Thesis (Floridi 2005). The notion of Epistemic Constructive Information (Primiero 2007) is one of those rejecting VT. The present paper develops a formal framework for ECI. It extends on the basic approach of Artemov’s logic of proofs (Artemov 1994), representing an epistemic logic based on dependent justifications, where the definition of information relies on a strict distinction from factual truth. The definition obtained by comparison with a Normal Modal Logic translates a constructive logic for “becoming informed”: its distinction from the logic of “being informed”—which internalizes truthfulness—is essential to a general evaluation of information with respect to truth. The formal disentanglement of these two logics, and the description of the modal version of the former as a weaker embedding into the latter, allows for a proper understanding of the Veridicality Thesis with respect to epistemic states defined in terms of information.

KeywordsPhilosophy of information, Epistemic logic, Logic of justification, Modal logic
Research GroupFoundations of Computing group
JournalSynthese
ISSN0039-7857
Publication dates
Online22 Oct 2008
PrintMar 2009
Publication process dates
Deposited25 Sep 2013
Output statusPublished
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-008-9413-8
LanguageEnglish
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