[sci.logic] Buffalo Cog Sci / Nicholas Asher

rapaport@cs.Buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (04/25/89)

                         UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
                      STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

                       BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM
                                  and
   GRADUATE RESEARCH INITIATIVE IN COGNITIVE AND LINGUISTIC SCIENCES

                                PRESENT

                             NICHOLAS ASHER

                        Department of Philosophy
                    and Center for Cognitive Science

                     University of Texas at Austin

                    PARADOXES OF INDIRECT DISCOURSE

In natural language and programs where we must reason about  the  states
of  other  systems,  it  is extremely useful to quantify over beliefs of
agents.  I look at  two  proposals  for  quantifying  over  beliefs--one
first-order  and one second-order.  I then consider certain paradoxes of
indirect discourse  that  arise  when  one  allows  quantification  over
beliefs.  These were part of the mediaeval insolubilia and have recently
been discussed by Prior and Thomason.  I show how  inductive  and  semi-
inductive  theories  of  belief (like the one recently developed by Kamp
and myself) can address the  paradoxes  Thomason  discusses  within  the
first-order  theory  of  quantification  over  beliefs, and I propose an
analogous way of handling these paradoxes within the higher order frame-
work.

                          Monday, May 8, 1989
                               4:00 P.M.
                     684 Baldy Hall, Amherst Campus

              There will probably be an evening discussion
                  at a time and place to be announced.

Contact John Corcoran, Dept. of Philosophy, 716-636-2444, or Bill  Rapa-
port, Dept. of Computer Science, 716-636-3193, for further information.