Title: Logic of Fiction and Logic in Computer Science
1Logic of Fiction and Logic in Computer Science
- Chayunt Mathon
- Department of Philosophy, Chulalongkorn
University - Thailand
2Fictions
- Fictional Discourse
- Fictive Discourse
- Metafictive Discourse
- Transitive Discourse
- Theories of Fiction
- Ontological Analysis
- Fictive-operator Analysis
- Pretense, Imagination, and Make Believe Analysis
3Fictional Discourse
- Woods and Alward, 2004 though that the below
aspects of fiction are axiom of naïve theories of
fictionality or our pre-theoretic intuitions
regarding fictions.Reference is possible to
fictional beings even though they do not exit. - A. Some sentences about fictional beings and
events are true. - B. Some inference about fictional beings and
events are correct. - C. These three facts are name possible, in a
central way, by virtue of the creative authority
of authors of fiction. Indeed, the primary and
originating criterion of truth for fictional
sentences is the authors sayso. - D. These three facts are name possible, in a
central way, by virtue of the creative authority
of authors of fiction. Indeed, the primary and
originating criterion of truth for fictional
sentences is the authors sayso. - E. It is possible for a fictional truth to make
reference to real things. For example, Sherlock
Holmes lived in London is true and refers to the
actual capital city of England.
4Ontological View
- This view believes that sentences of fictional
and non-fictional discourse have the same logical
form, but a distinct range of entities serve as
the semantic values of fictional and
non-fictional expressions. The exemplars are - Qusasi-actualist Meinongean accounts of the
referents of fictional names (Parsons, 1975 and
1980 and Routley, 1979 and Cf. Castaneda,
1979 and Zalta, 1983). The version of Parsons
correlated with each non-empty set of properties
a distinct, specific object existent and
non-existent. Fictional objects are a subclass of
the class of non-existent objects. They are the
objects correlated with sets of the following
sort, where x is a fictional object - x the object correlated with p according to
the relevant body of literature, x has p. - An example of this scheme is p according to
the Conan Doyle stories, Sherlock Homes has p.
The consequence of such treat is that, fictional
objects can enter to a sentence or the like and
make it to have truth-value true.
5Fictive-Operator Analysis
- This view believes that sentences of fictional
and non-fictional discourse have different
logical form. The sentences of fictional
discourse are analyzed in term of tacit or
explicit fictive operator. Each of the approach
differs in interpretation of fictive operator.
But their general scheme or logical form is -
- It is true-in-t that ?
- Where t is fictional text and ? is fictional
sentence. For example, It is true-in-the-Holmes-s
tories that Sherlock Holmes was a detective. The
exemplars are - ? Possible world analyses (Plantinga, 1974 and
Kaplan, 1973 and Gabriel, 1979 andLewis,
1983). The version of Lewis truth theory of the
fictional discourse is - A sentence of the form It is true-in-t that ?
is true iff ? is true at every world where t is
told at known fact rather than fiction. -
- For example, It is true-in-the-Holmes-stories
that Sherlock Holmes was a detective is true
just in case at all possible worlds in which the
Holmes stories are told as known fact, the
occupant of the Holmes-role is detective. - ? Fictional world analyses (Howell, 1979 and
Pavel, 1986 and Woltersdorff, 1980). Simply,
fictional worlds are worlds of fiction, but they
need not be consistent, even need not be
complete. Such analyses interpret fictive
operator as -
- It is true-in-t that ? is (actually) true
just in case ? is true at all of the fictional
worlds determined by t. - ? Non-referential, substitutional-quantificationa
l accounts Woods, 1974. The version of Woods
truth theory of the fictional discourse is - A sentence of the form It is true-in-t that ?
is true just in case either (1) ? occurs in t or
(2) ? can be derived from sentences that occur
in t through repeated application of
fictional-inference rule.
6Imaginative Analyses
- This group of views is analyzed in term of some
kind of imaginative activities. According to this
kind of analyses, storytellers do not assert the
sentences they utter, nor do readers believe the
sentences they encounter, they get involved in
the story in certain way. - ? Authorial pretense analyses Searl, 1975. The
version of Searls truth theory of the fictional
discourse is -
- Authors do not assert sentences they utter,
they pretend to do so and part of this pretense
involves pretending to refer to real individuals
(in the case of the sentences contain fictional
names). In this manner, authors create fictional
characters and events. When critics or readers
say that ? they really refer to the fictional
entity in ?, they do so because of the shared
pretense. -
- ? Reader/appreciator make-believe analyses
Walton, 1990. According to the version of
Walton, games of make-believe are rule-governed
activities. Such rules prescribe that particular
propositions be imagined. These are the fictional
truths of the game. A prop in a game of
make-believe is an object that, in virtue of the
rules of the game, generates fictional truths.
Here is his theory - A sentence of the form It is true-in-t that S
is true iff fiction t is such that one who
engages in pretense of kind K in a game
authorized for it makes it fictional of herself
that she speaks truly - For example it is true-in-The Hound of the
Baskervilles that Holmes was a detective has to
be paraphrased as The Hound of the Baskervilles
is such that one who engages in pretense of kind
K in a game authorized for it to makes it
fictional of herself that she speaks truly.
7Nature of Fictions
- A fiction is a made-up story. (Scholes, Robert
(1991) Element of Literature) - Theres no one right way to read a piece of
fiction. There are many good ways. This does not
mean that anyones reading of a piece of fiction
is equal to anyone elses. There are better and
worse reading, depending on how well readers can
attune themselves to the story, on how carefully
they have looked at the language, become aware of
the tone, understood the theme, notice patterns
of imagery, and, in general, become quite and
really listened to a separate human being. But
given equal attention and sensitivity to a story,
there are many legitimate approaches. (Clayton,
John J. (2000) The Heath Introduction to Fiction )
8Structure of Formal logical System
- Grammar formal Language/symbols
- Deductive Apparatus axiom(s)/ Rules of Inference
- ? Proof Theory
- Semantics Interpretations of formal language
9Historical sematics approach of Logic of Fiction
- We, intuitively, can valuate a metafictive
proposition to be TRUE - Denying the Objectual Interpretation of Classical
Logic (only FALSE value can be given for a
metafictive proposition) - The relevant semantics is ordinary
Model-Theoretic - A metafictive proposition can be TRUE because of
an aspect of Correspondence Theory of Truth the
story say so or the author say so.
10Historical systematic approach to the Logic of
Fiction
- Woods, John (1974), The Logic of Fiction
Philosophical Sounding of Deviant Logic - .
- .
- .
- Nossum, Rolf (2003), A Contextual Approach to
the Logic of Fiction, LNAI 2680 - .
- .
- .
- Woods, John and Peter Alward (2004). The Logic
of Fiction In Gabbay, D. M. (ed.), Handbook of
Philosophical Logic
11Logic of Fiction vs. logics in computer science
12Logic in computer sciencetopics where logic is
applied to computer science and artificial
intelligence logic has important role in some
area of computer science in general and AI in
particular
- Unconcerned logics Boolean Logic, Fuzzy Logic,
Quantum Logic, etc. - Concerned logics
- - Common Sense Logicism including narrative
understanding (AI) John McCarthy - - The Default based logics/kinds of
Nonmonotonic Logics Belief Revision (AI)
Closed world reasoning (Database of computer
science) Rational Planning
13Woods, John and Peter Alward (2004). The Logic
of Fiction
- Take the ordinary Model-Theoretic Semantics.
- Yet
- In Proof Theory proposed
- 1. default (Reiter, 1980) (Makinson, 1993) )
as Generic proposition (The default that Holmes
has a skin is derived from the generic
proposition that humans have skins Holmes is a
human.) - 2. Implicatures (Grice, 1989) (Levinson,
2000) as speakers common knowledge
14Monotonic-Nonmonotonic Logics
- Monotonic Logic
- - Aristotelian logic
- - Classical logic
- - deal only with patterns of inference that hold
without exception
- Nonmonotonic Logics
- - It is reasonable to ignore outlandish
possibilities.
15Default based logic
- To ignore outlandish possibilities is to have
default(s). - Manipulate some Default Rule for example
- General form
-
- In the presence of A1,,An and in the absence
of B1,,Bn, conclude C. - Normal default form General form
-
- In the presence of A1,,An and in the absence
of -C, conclude C.
16Recall
-
- (Clayton, John J. (2000) The Heath Introduction
to Fiction ) - Theres no one right way to read a piece of
fiction. There are many good ways. This does not
mean that anyones reading of a piece of fiction
is equal to anyone elses. There are better and
worse reading, depending on how well readers can
attune themselves to the story, on how carefully
they have looked at the language, become aware of
the tone, understood the theme, notice patterns
of imagery, and, in general, become quite and
really listened to a separate human being. But
given equal attention and sensitivity to a story,
there are many legitimate approaches.
17AND
- Need of ordinary Model-Theoretic
18What should we concern in logics in Computer
Science?
- No values 0, 1
- No Physical status of 0/1 values, 0v., 5v
- Yes the informal reading of the values 0, 1 (the
informal semantics)
19Informal semantics approach
- Logic of Fiction (Philosophical)
- many values logic, bivalence logic with truth
valueless proposition (?), mixed semantics (at
least one of them must be ordinary
Model-Theoretic) - ? ordinary Model-Theoretic with default based
proof theory - logic of fictions (Computer Science/AI, default
based ) - Non-ordinary Model-Theoretic semantics for
example, Preference Model-Theoretic, others - ? sole ordinary Model-Theoretic (because of
the nature of fictions human should care)
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