6,318 research outputs found
Apperceptive patterning: Artefaction, extensional beliefs and cognitive scaffolding
In “Psychopower and Ordinary Madness” my ambition, as it relates to Bernard Stiegler’s recent literature, was twofold: 1) critiquing Stiegler’s work on exosomatization and artefactual posthumanism—or, more specifically, nonhumanism—to problematize approaches to media archaeology that rely upon technical exteriorization; 2) challenging how Stiegler engages with Giuseppe Longo and Francis Bailly’s conception of negative entropy. These efforts were directed by a prevalent techno-cultural qualifier: the rise of Synthetic Intelligence (including neural nets, deep learning, predictive processing and Bayesian models of cognition). This paper continues this project but first directs a critical analytic lens at the Derridean practice of the ontologization of grammatization from which Stiegler emerges while also distinguishing how metalanguages operate in relation to object-oriented environmental interaction by way of inferentialism. Stalking continental (Kapp, Simondon, Leroi-Gourhan, etc.) and analytic traditions (e.g., Carnap, Chalmers, Clark, Sutton, Novaes, etc.), we move from artefacts to AI and Predictive Processing so as to link theories related to technicity with philosophy of mind. Simultaneously drawing forth Robert Brandom’s conceptualization of the roles that commitments play in retrospectively reconstructing the social experiences that lead to our endorsement(s) of norms, we compliment this account with Reza Negarestani’s deprivatized account of intelligence while analyzing the equipollent role between language and media (both digital and analog)
Labelled transition systems as a Stone space
A fully abstract and universal domain model for modal transition systems and
refinement is shown to be a maximal-points space model for the bisimulation
quotient of labelled transition systems over a finite set of events. In this
domain model we prove that this quotient is a Stone space whose compact,
zero-dimensional, and ultra-metrizable Hausdorff topology measures the degree
of bisimilarity such that image-finite labelled transition systems are dense.
Using this compactness we show that the set of labelled transition systems that
refine a modal transition system, its ''set of implementations'', is compact
and derive a compactness theorem for Hennessy-Milner logic on such
implementation sets. These results extend to systems that also have partially
specified state propositions, unify existing denotational, operational, and
metric semantics on partial processes, render robust consistency measures for
modal transition systems, and yield an abstract interpretation of compact sets
of labelled transition systems as Scott-closed sets of modal transition
systems.Comment: Changes since v2: Metadata updat
Probabilistic Argumentation. An Equational Approach
There is a generic way to add any new feature to a system. It involves 1)
identifying the basic units which build up the system and 2) introducing the
new feature to each of these basic units.
In the case where the system is argumentation and the feature is
probabilistic we have the following. The basic units are: a. the nature of the
arguments involved; b. the membership relation in the set S of arguments; c.
the attack relation; and d. the choice of extensions.
Generically to add a new aspect (probabilistic, or fuzzy, or temporal, etc)
to an argumentation network can be done by adding this feature to each
component a-d. This is a brute-force method and may yield a non-intuitive or
meaningful result.
A better way is to meaningfully translate the object system into another
target system which does have the aspect required and then let the target
system endow the aspect on the initial system. In our case we translate
argumentation into classical propositional logic and get probabilistic
argumentation from the translation.
Of course what we get depends on how we translate.
In fact, in this paper we introduce probabilistic semantics to abstract
argumentation theory based on the equational approach to argumentation
networks. We then compare our semantics with existing proposals in the
literature including the approaches by M. Thimm and by A. Hunter. Our
methodology in general is discussed in the conclusion
A rich hierarchy of functionals of finite types
We are considering typed hierarchies of total, continuous functionals using
complete, separable metric spaces at the base types. We pay special attention
to the so called Urysohn space constructed by P. Urysohn. One of the properties
of the Urysohn space is that every other separable metric space can be
isometrically embedded into it. We discuss why the Urysohn space may be
considered as the universal model of possibly infinitary outputs of algorithms.
The main result is that all our typed hierarchies may be topologically
embedded, type by type, into the corresponding hierarchy over the Urysohn
space. As a preparation for this, we prove an effective density theorem that is
also of independent interest.Comment: 21 page
Probabilistic modal {\mu}-calculus with independent product
The probabilistic modal {\mu}-calculus is a fixed-point logic designed for
expressing properties of probabilistic labeled transition systems (PLTS's). Two
equivalent semantics have been studied for this logic, both assigning to each
state a value in the interval [0,1] representing the probability that the
property expressed by the formula holds at the state. One semantics is
denotational and the other is a game semantics, specified in terms of
two-player stochastic parity games. A shortcoming of the probabilistic modal
{\mu}-calculus is the lack of expressiveness required to encode other important
temporal logics for PLTS's such as Probabilistic Computation Tree Logic (PCTL).
To address this limitation we extend the logic with a new pair of operators:
independent product and coproduct. The resulting logic, called probabilistic
modal {\mu}-calculus with independent product, can encode many properties of
interest and subsumes the qualitative fragment of PCTL. The main contribution
of this paper is the definition of an appropriate game semantics for this
extended probabilistic {\mu}-calculus. This relies on the definition of a new
class of games which generalize standard two-player stochastic (parity) games
by allowing a play to be split into concurrent subplays, each continuing their
evolution independently. Our main technical result is the equivalence of the
two semantics. The proof is carried out in ZFC set theory extended with
Martin's Axiom at an uncountable cardinal
Solving Bongard Problems with a Visual Language and Pragmatic Reasoning
More than 50 years ago Bongard introduced 100 visual concept learning
problems as a testbed for intelligent vision systems. These problems are now
known as Bongard problems. Although they are well known in the cognitive
science and AI communities only moderate progress has been made towards
building systems that can solve a substantial subset of them. In the system
presented here, visual features are extracted through image processing and then
translated into a symbolic visual vocabulary. We introduce a formal language
that allows representing complex visual concepts based on this vocabulary.
Using this language and Bayesian inference, complex visual concepts can be
induced from the examples that are provided in each Bongard problem. Contrary
to other concept learning problems the examples from which concepts are induced
are not random in Bongard problems, instead they are carefully chosen to
communicate the concept, hence requiring pragmatic reasoning. Taking pragmatic
reasoning into account we find good agreement between the concepts with high
posterior probability and the solutions formulated by Bongard himself. While
this approach is far from solving all Bongard problems, it solves the biggest
fraction yet
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