| F. Dretske. Seeing and Knowing, Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press, 1969. |
....by a lack of availability of appropriate technical tools. But by now, the theory has assembled its mathematical foundations based on intuitions basically coming from set theory and logic [1, 8, 23, 25] With a remarkably original view of information (which is fully adapted by situation theory) [27, 28], a logic, based not on truth but on information, is being developed [24] This logic will probably be an extension of first order logic [5] rather than being an alternative to it. Individuals, properties, relations, spatio tempo ral locations, and situations are basic constructs of ....
....locations. The meaning of is a relation defined not only over d, c, and e, but also over oe. 3 Situations: A Computational Perspective Intelligent agents generally make their way in the world by being able to pick up certain information from a situation, process it, and react accordingly [24, 27, 28, 36]. Being in a (mental) situation, such an agent has information about situations it sees, believes in, hears about, etc. Alice, for example, upon hearing an utterance of A bear is running towards you, would have the information, by relying on the utterance situation, that her friend is the ....
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F. Dretske. Seeing and Knowing, Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press, 1969.
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Dretske F I 1969 Seeing and Knowing. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
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