An announcement of the course can also be found in the course information system CAMPUS.
Contents
This course is about the logic of knowledge bases, in two distinct but related senses. On the one hand, a knowledge base is a collection of sentences in a representation language that entails a certain picture of the world represented. On the other hand, having a knowledge base entails being in a certain state of knowledge where a number of other epistemic properties hold. One of the principal aims of this course is to develop a detailed account of the relationship between symbolic representations of knowledge and abstract states of knowledge. Students wishing to attend the course should be familiar with first-order predicate logic.
- Introduction
- The First-Order Language L
- The Knowledge Language KL
- Properties of KL
- Tell and Ask
- An Extended Example
- Knowledge Bases: Abstract & Concrete
- The Representation Theorem
- Only Knowing
- Connection to Autoepistemic Logic
- Knowing About
- Limited Belief
- Knowledge and Action
Course Dates
This course starts on Monday, 20t April 2009.
Lecture | Monday | 14:25h - 15:55h | AH V |
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Wednesday | 8:15h - 09:45h | AH V | |
Tutorial | Wednesday | 13:15h - 14:45h | AH I |
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L²P Course Room
Link to the L²P Course Room for this course
Note:
- All materials and announcements relevant for this course will be published at the L²P Course Room.
- To login, students have to register for the course via Campus Office.