1 / 27

Argumentation Logics Lecture 7: Argumentation with structured arguments (3)

Argumentation Logics Lecture 7: Argumentation with structured arguments (3). Henry Prakken Chongqing June 4, 2010. Overview. Argumentation with structured arguments: Rationality postulates Self-defeat Floating conclusions Legal proof is defeasible

milly
Download Presentation

Argumentation Logics Lecture 7: Argumentation with structured arguments (3)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Argumentation LogicsLecture 7:Argumentation with structured arguments (3) Henry Prakken Chongqing June 4, 2010

  2. Overview • Argumentation with structured arguments: • Rationality postulates • Self-defeat • Floating conclusions • Legal proof is defeasible • Can be modelled with argumentation logics • But dynamics is also important

  3. Steps in argumentation • Construct arguments (from a knowledge base) • Determine which arguments attack each other • Determine which attacking arguments defeat each other (with preferences) • Determine the dialectical status of all arguments (justified, defensible or overruled)

  4. Aspic framework: overview Argument structure: Trees where Nodes are wff of a logical language L Links are applications of inference rules Rs = Strict rules (1, ..., 1  ); or Rd= Defeasible rules (1, ..., 1  ) Reasoning starts from a knowledge base K L Attack: on conclusion, premise or inference Defeat: attack + preference ordering on arguments Dialectical status based on Dung (1995)

  5. Rationality postulates(Caminada & Amgoud 2007) • Let E be any stable, preferred or grounded extension: • If B Sub(A) and AE then BE • Always satisfied in ASPIC • The set {| = Conc(A) for some A E} is closed under RS and consistent. • Only satisfied in ASPIC with further conditions on strict rules and argument ordering

  6. Example violation of consistency d1: Ring Married d2: Party animal Bachelor s1: Bachelor  ¬Married K: {Ring, Party animal} d2 < d1 With both the last-link and weakest-link ordering, both “Married” and “¬Married” are justified conclusions.

  7. Solution: add ‘transposition’ of strict rules d1: Ring Married d2: Party animal Bachelor s1: Bachelor  ¬Married s2: Married  ¬Bachelor K: {Ring, Party animal} d2 < d1 With both the last-link and weakest-link ordering, “Married” is a justified and “¬Married” is an overruled conclusion.

  8. Subtleties concerning rebuttals (3) Rd = {,     } Rs = all deductively valid inference rules K: d1: Ring  Married d2: Party animal  Bachelor n1: Bachelor  ¬Married Ring, Party animal

  9. q,r  p Serial self-defeat A’ p A’ A

  10. ¬r1 A is unreliable A: “A is unreliable” r1: W says that p  p r2: W is unreliable  ¬r1 k1: Alice says that Alice is unreliable

  11. r1: W says that p  p r2: W is unreliable  ¬r1 ¬r1 k1: Alice says that Alice is unreliable A is unreliable “A is unreliable” and “¬r1” cannot have a status A: “A is unreliable”

  12. r1: W says that p  p r2: W is unreliable  ¬r1 ¬r1 k1: Alice says that Alice is unreliable J is the killer A is unreliable A: “J is the killer” A: “A is unreliable”

  13. r1: W says that p  p r2: W is unreliable  ¬r1 ¬r1 k1: Alice says that Alice is unreliable J is the killer A is unreliable A: “J is the killer” A: “A is unreliable”

  14. Grounded semantics r1: W says that p  p r2: W is unreliable  ¬r1 ¬r1 k1: Alice says that Alice is unreliable J is the not killer J is the killer A is unreliable B: “J is not the killer” A: “J is the killer” A: “A is unreliable”

  15. Preferred semantics r1: W says that p  p r2: W is unreliable  ¬r1 ¬r1 k1: Alice says that Alice is unreliable J is not the killer J is the killer A is unreliable B: “J is not the killer” A: “J is the killer” A: “A is unreliable”

  16. A problem(?) with grounded semantics We have: We want(?): A B A B C C D D

  17. A similar “problem”floating conclusions d1: x was born in Netherlands  x is Dutch d2: x has Chinese name  X is Chinese d3: x is Dutch  x likes badminton d4: x is Chinese  x likes badminton k1: Wah-chi was born in the Netherlands k2: Wah-chi has a Chinese name

  18. is justified iff all extensions contain an argument with conclusion  (but it does not have to be the same argument) In grounded semantics  is defensible, in preferred semantics  is justified Mei li likes badminton Mei li likes badminton Mei li is Dutch Mei li is Chinese Mei li was born in The Netherlands Mei li has a Chinese name

  19. Floating conclusions:still invalid? (Horty) • Witness John says: the suspect shot the victim to death • If a witness says P then usually P is the case • So, the suspect shot the victim to death • So, the suspect killed the victim • Witness Bob says: the suspect stabbed the victim to death • If a witness says P then usually P is the case • So, the suspect stabbed the victim to death • So, the suspect killed the victim One solution: add an undercutter “if two witnesses contradict each other, then they are both unreliable”

  20. Floating conclusions:Don’t ignore dynamics • Any judge would ask further questions • Did you hear anything? • Where did you stand? • How dark was it? • The law’s way of dealing with dynamics: • Procedures for fair and effective dispute resolution

  21. Uncertainty in legal proof • Legal proof of facts is (almost?) never conclusive • Witnesses can be unreliable • Documents can be forged • DNA tests have an error margin • Confessions might be false • Experts sometimes disagree • … • So legal proof is defeasible

  22. Applying commonsense generalisations Consc of Guilt • Critical questions: are there exceptions to the generalisation? • exceptional classes of people may have other reasons to flea • Illegal immigrants • Customers of prostitutes • … P If P then usually Q Therefore (presumably), Q If Fleas then usually Consc of Guilt Fleas People who flea from a crime scene usually have consciousness of guilt

  23. Expert testimony • Critical questions: • Is E biased? • Do other experts disagree? • Are E’s statements based on evidence? E is expert on P E says that P Therefore (presumably), P is the case

  24. Witness testimony • Critical questions: • Is W sincere? • Is W’s memory OK? • Were W’s senses OK? Witness W says P Therefore (presumably), P

  25. Explanation (Abduction) • Critical questions: • Could there be another reason why Q has been observed? • Does P cause something else which we know to be false? • … P causes Q Q has been observed Therefore (presumably), P is the case

  26. Temporal persistence(Forward) • Critical questions: • Was P known to be false between T1 and T2? • Is the gap between T1 and T2 too long? P is true at T1 and T2 > T1 Therefore (presumably), P is still true at T2

  27. Final remarks • Legal proof is dialectic • Considering pro and con • Quality of investigation influences quality of proof • If you don’t search for counterevidence, you will not find it … • The structure and nature of arguments guides this search

More Related