9 research outputs found

    ABSTRACT Precedent and Procedure: an argumentation-theoretic analysis

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    Recent research on arguments treats them as entirely abstract, only related by an attack relation, which always succeeds unless the attacker can itself be defeated. However, this does not seem adequate for legal argumentation. Some proposals have suggested regulating attack relations using preferences or values. However, this does not explain how an audience can prefer or value an argument, yet be constrained by the procedure of debate not to accept it. Nor does it explain how certain types of attack may not be allowed in a particular context. For this reason, evaluation of the status of arguments within a given framework must be allowed to depend not only on the attack relations along with the intrinsic strength of arguments, but also on the nature of the attacks and the context in which they are made. In this paper we present a formal, functional decomposition style, description of articulated arguments and contexts which allows us to represent and reason with types of attacks with respect to context. This machinery allows us to account for a number of factors currently considered to be beyond the remit of formal argumentation frameworks

    Front matter

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    Proceedings of the 1st Semantics and Linguistic Theory Conference, held April 19-21, 1991 at Cornell University, edited by Steven K. Moore and Adam Zachary Wyner

    Manner and degree: An introduction

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