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Two approaches to the formalisation of defeasible deontic reasoning
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    Two approaches to the formalisation of defeasible deontic reasoning (English)
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    21 April 1997
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    This paper contrasts two ways of formalizing defeasible deontic reasoning. One is the method of Horty, which develops a special nonmonotonic logic for deontic statements. The other, which the author recommends, adds standard deontic principles to an existing nonmonotonic (non-deontic) logic, such as Reiter's default logic. Both types of system are designed to give a plausible analysis of moral dilemmas and possible conflicts of prima facie obligations. It is odd, then, that the second method accepts commitment to the principle \(\sim (OA \& O \sim A)\), though the author argues that this is acceptable.
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    formalisation of defeasible deontic reasoning
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    deontic logic
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    nonmonotonic logic
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    default logic
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    analysis of moral dilemmas
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    prima facie obligations
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