The doctrinal paradox, the discursive dilemma, and logical aggregation theory
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Publication:1934272
DOI10.1007/s11238-012-9310-yzbMath1281.91069OpenAlexW2116703123MaRDI QIDQ1934272
Publication date: 28 January 2013
Published in: Theory and Decision (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11238-012-9310-y
social choice theoryimpossibility theoremsjudgment aggregationdiscursive dilemmageneral logicdoctrinal paradoxlogical aggregationconclusion-based approachpremiss-based approach
Related Items (17)
The logic of group decisions: judgment aggregation ⋮ The birth of social choice theory from the spirit of mathematical logic: Arrow's theorem in the framework of model theory ⋮ Convex MV-algebras: many-valued logics meet decision theory ⋮ Philippe Mongin 1950--2020 ⋮ The median rule in judgement aggregation ⋮ A theorem on aggregating classifications ⋮ Local supermajorities ⋮ Respect for experts vs. respect for unanimity: the liberal paradox in probabilistic opinion pooling ⋮ Weighted representative democracy ⋮ Judgment aggregation and the problem of tracking the truth ⋮ Judgement aggregation in non-classical logics ⋮ Metrizable ordinal proximity measures and their aggregation ⋮ Neutrality and relative acceptability in judgment aggregation ⋮ Judgment aggregation in nonmonotonic logic ⋮ Philippe Mongin (1950-2020) ⋮ An Arrovian impossibility in combining ranking and evaluation ⋮ Aggregation of opinions in networks of individuals and collectives
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