Logic List Mailing Archive

"Logic of change, change of logic"

10-14 September 2008
Prague, Czech Republic

Logic of change, change of logic

Villa Lanna, Prague, 10 - 14 September 2008.

Tools from logic and mathematics have played a central role in models of 
human beliefs, of human desires and preferences and indeed the actions 
which are based on them. However, beliefs, preferences and perhaps even 
desires change. Thus the development, which has been greatly accelerated 
in recent times, of extensions of the logical and mathematical techniques
 
to account for the problems of change. However, as different paradigms 
(AGM theory and dynamic logic in the 'logic' camp, Bayesian update and 
Jeffrey conditionalisation in the probability camp, to take just a few 
examples of theories of belief change) jostle to impose themselves, it is
 
perhaps the moment to take a step back and ask: what do we want from a 
theory of change?

This question-as philosophical and methodological as it is technical-is at
 
the heart of this colloquium / workshop. The aim is to bring together 
specialists working on the problem of attitude change, from a wide range 
of paradigms, to present and discuss their views on the objectives of 
theories of change. The ambition is to identify the main issues for 
theories of change, and clarify the major positions one could hold 
concerning the project of understanding or modelling attitude change.

Philosophical and methodological contributions, and technical 
contributions with methodological or philosophical reflections are 
welcome. Relevant questions include:

1. What are the criteria for evaluating theories / models for change?
To what extent to current theories satisfy these criteria?
2. What are the consequences of understanding these questions
descriptively rather than normatively?
3. What is the relationship between belief change and utility /
preference change?
4. What is the relationship between the problem of attitude change and
the general problem of rational action?
5. What are the different types of change? Is there an important
difference between change and learning? Between sudden and gradual
change? Are there different triggers for different types of change? How
are they to be dealt with by the theory?
6. Can or should one expect a 'general' theory of (eg.) belief revision
(covering, for example, the different rules for iterated belief
revision)? And a 'general' theory of belief change, integrating methods
for informational and factual change (for example, belief revision and
belief update)
7. What is the importance of completeness results / representation
theorems / computational results (establishing, for example, the
complexity of different revision methods) etc. for the problem of
understanding change?
8. What role can mathematical tools for dealing with change, eg. the
notion of continuity, play in theories of attitude change?

Invited speakers (list to be finalised):
Alexandru Baltag, Richard Bradley, Sven Ove Hanssen, David Makinson,
Hans Rott, Johan van Benthem, Hans van Ditmarsch

Programe committee:
Alexandru Baltag, Richard Bradley, Sven Ove Hanssen, Brian Hill,
David Makinson, Ondrej Majer, Hans van Ditmarsch

Organising committee:
Brian Hill, Ondrej Majer, Michal Peli

Deadline for submissions: 1 May 2008

Submissions of abstracts of not more than 1000 words should be made
online, in PDF format, at
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=loccol08
Please, note that you have to create an easychair-account befor
submitting your paper. Submissions will be peer-reviewed, and thus
should be prepared for blind review.

The conference website: www.flu.cas.cz/colloquium
The conference mail: colloquium@flu.cas.cz