AIMar 27, 2013

The Relationship between Knowledge, Belief and Certainty

arXiv:1304.1508v138 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses foundational issues in formal epistemology and modal logic, providing incremental theoretical insights into axiomatizing certainty and belief structures.

The paper investigates the relationship between knowledge, belief, and certainty by modeling certainty as probabilistic belief, showing that logic KD45 axiomatizes certainty under fixed probability assignments, and S5 under positive probability worlds, with extensions to other modal logics and Miller's principle.

We consider the relation between knowledge and certainty, where a fact is known if it is true at all worlds an agent considers possible and is certain if it holds with probability 1. We identify certainty with probabilistic belief. We show that if we assume one fixed probability assignment, then the logic KD45, which has been identified as perhaps the most appropriate for belief, provides a complete axiomatization for reasoning about certainty. Just as an agent may believe a fact although phi is false, he may be certain that a fact phi, is true although phi is false. However, it is easy to see that an agent can have such false (probabilistic) beliefs only at a set of worlds of probability 0. If we restrict attention to structures where all worlds have positive probability, then S5 provides a complete axiomatization. If we consider a more general setting, where there might be a different probability assignment at each world, then by placing appropriate conditions on the support of the probability function (the set of worlds which have non-zero probability), we can capture many other well-known modal logics, such as T and S4. Finally, we consider which axioms characterize structures satisfying Miller's principle.

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