LOAIMay 5, 2019

A reconstruction of the multipreference closure

arXiv:1905.03855v21 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses a theoretical limitation in defeasible reasoning for logics, offering an incremental improvement over existing closure methods.

The paper tackles the problem of handling exceptions in KLM preferential logics by reconstructing the Multi Preference closure (MP-closure) in the propositional case, showing it is a variant of the lexicographic closure and results in a rational consequence relation stronger than the rational closure but incomparable with the lexicographic closure.

The paper describes a preferential approach for dealing with exceptions in KLM preferential logics, based on the rational closure. It is well known that the rational closure does not allow an independent handling of the inheritance of different defeasible properties of concepts. Several solutions have been proposed to face this problem and the lexicographic closure is the most notable one. In this work, we consider an alternative closure construction, called the Multi Preference closure (MP-closure), that has been first considered for reasoning with exceptions in DLs. Here, we reconstruct the notion of MP-closure in the propositional case and we show that it is a natural variant of Lehmann's lexicographic closure. Abandoning Maximal Entropy (an alternative route already considered but not explored by Lehmann) leads to a construction which exploits a different lexicographic ordering w.r.t. the lexicographic closure, and determines a preferential consequence relation rather than a rational consequence relation. We show that, building on the MP-closure semantics, rationality can be recovered, at least from the semantic point of view, resulting in a rational consequence relation which is stronger than the rational closure, but incomparable with the lexicographic closure. We also show that the MP-closure is stronger than the Relevant Closure.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes