Technical Report of "Deductive Joint Support for Rational Unrestricted
Rebuttal"
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2005.03620v2
- Date: Thu, 9 Jul 2020 17:18:26 GMT
- Title: Technical Report of "Deductive Joint Support for Rational Unrestricted
Rebuttal"
- Authors: Marcos Cramer, Meghna Bhadra
- Abstract summary: In ASPIC-style structured argumentation an argument can rebut another argument by attacking its conclusion.
In restricted rebuttal, the attacked conclusion must have been arrived at with a defeasible rule.
In unrestricted rebuttal, it may have been arrived at with a strict rule, as long as at least one of the antecedents of this strict rule was already defeasible.
- Score: 1.3706331473063877
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
- Abstract: In ASPIC-style structured argumentation an argument can rebut another
argument by attacking its conclusion. Two ways of formalizing rebuttal have
been proposed: In restricted rebuttal, the attacked conclusion must have been
arrived at with a defeasible rule, whereas in unrestricted rebuttal, it may
have been arrived at with a strict rule, as long as at least one of the
antecedents of this strict rule was already defeasible. One systematic way of
choosing between various possible definitions of a framework for structured
argumentation is to study what rationality postulates are satisfied by which
definition, for example whether the closure postulate holds, i.e. whether the
accepted conclusions are closed under strict rules. While having some benefits,
the proposal to use unrestricted rebuttal faces the problem that the closure
postulate only holds for the grounded semantics but fails when other
argumentation semantics are applied, whereas with restricted rebuttal the
closure postulate always holds. In this paper we propose that ASPIC-style
argumentation can benefit from keeping track not only of the attack relation
between arguments, but also the relation of deductive joint support that holds
between a set of arguments and an argument that was constructed from that set
using a strict rule. By taking this deductive joint support relation into
account while determining the extensions, the closure postulate holds with
unrestricted rebuttal under all admissibility-based semantics. We define the
semantics of deductive joint support through the flattening method.
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