pith. sign in

Indicative Conditionals and Dynamic Epistemic Logic

1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

1 Pith paper citing it
abstract

Recent ideas about epistemic modals and indicative conditionals in formal semantics have significant overlap with ideas in modal logic and dynamic epistemic logic. The purpose of this paper is to show how greater interaction between formal semantics and dynamic epistemic logic in this area can be of mutual benefit. In one direction, we show how concepts and tools from modal logic and dynamic epistemic logic can be used to give a simple, complete axiomatization of Yalcin's [16] semantic consequence relation for a language with epistemic modals and indicative conditionals. In the other direction, the formal semantics for indicative conditionals due to Kolodny and MacFarlane [9] gives rise to a new dynamic operator that is very natural from the point of view of dynamic epistemic logic, allowing succinct expression of dependence (as in dependence logic) or supervenience statements. We prove decidability for the logic with epistemic modals and Kolodny and MacFarlane's indicative conditional via a full and faithful computable translation from their logic to the modal logic K45.

fields

cs.LO 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Belief Contraction in Dynamic Epistemic Logic

cs.LO · 2026-06-30 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

Introduces direct belief contraction on unconstrained Kripke models in DEL, shows it satisfies some but not all contraction properties, and gives sound complete axiomatizations for the logic and its extension to private announcements.

citing papers explorer

Showing 1 of 1 citing paper.

  • Belief Contraction in Dynamic Epistemic Logic cs.LO · 2026-06-30 · unverdicted · none · ref 27 · internal anchor

    Introduces direct belief contraction on unconstrained Kripke models in DEL, shows it satisfies some but not all contraction properties, and gives sound complete axiomatizations for the logic and its extension to private announcements.