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arxiv: 1703.01697 · v2 · pith:S2FFPZT4new · submitted 2017-03-06 · 💻 cs.AI · cs.LO

Principles and Examples of Plausible Reasoning and Propositional Plausible Logic

classification 💻 cs.AI cs.LO
keywords logicplausibleexamplesprinciplespropositionalreasoningimportantprecision
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Plausible reasoning concerns situations whose inherent lack of precision is not quantified; that is, there are no degrees or levels of precision, and hence no use of numbers like probabilities. A hopefully comprehensive set of principles that clarifies what it means for a formal logic to do plausible reasoning is presented. A new propositional logic, called Propositional Plausible Logic (PPL), is defined and applied to some important examples. PPL is the only non-numeric non-monotonic logic we know of that satisfies all the principles and correctly reasons with all the examples. Some important results about PPL are proved.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Plausible Reasoning and First-Order Plausible Logic

    cs.AI 2026-04 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    Plausible Logic (PL) is a first-order logic that satisfies 15 of 17 proposed principles for non-numeric plausible reasoning and correctly handles the given examples.