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(2006) Synthese 152 (1).

Contraction

on the decision-theoretical origins of minimal change and entrenchment

Horacio Arló-Costa, Isaac Levi

pp. 129-154

We present a decision-theoretically motivated notion of contraction which, we claim, encodes the principles of minimal change and entrenchment. Contraction is seen as an operation whose goal is to minimize loses of informational value. The operation is also compatible with the principle that in contracting A one should preserve the sentences better entrenched than A (when the belief set contains A). Even when the principle of minimal change and the latter motivation for entrenchment figure prominently among the basic intuitions in the works of, among others, Quine and Ullian (1978), Levi (1980, 1991), Harman (1988) and Gärdenfors (1988), formal accounts of belief change (AGM, KM – see Gärdenfors (1988); Katsuno and Mendelzon (1991)) have abandoned both principles (see Rott (2000)). We argue for the principles and we show how to construct a contraction operation, which obeys both. An axiom system is proposed. We also prove that the decision-theoretic notion of contraction can be completely characterized in terms of the given axioms. Proving this type of completeness result is a well-known open problem in the field, whose solution requires employing both decision-theoretical techniques and logical methods recently used in belief change.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-005-0351-4

Full citation:

Arló-Costa, H. , Levi, I. (2006). Contraction: on the decision-theoretical origins of minimal change and entrenchment. Synthese 152 (1), pp. 129-154.

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