A logical approach to the dynamics of commitments
Publication date
1999-11
Authors
Meyer, J.-J.
Hoek, W. van der
Linder, B. van
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Document Type
Preprint
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Abstract
In this paper we present a formalisation of motivational attitudes, the attitudes that
are the driving forces behind the actions of agents. We consider the statics of these attitudes both at the assertion level, i.e. ranging over propositions, and at the practition level, i.e. ranging over actions, as well as the dynamics of these attitudes, i.e. how they
change over time. Starting from an agent's wishes, which form the primitive, most funda-
mental motivational attitude, we define its goals as induced by those wishes that do not
yet hold, i.e. are unfulfilled, but are within the agent's practical possibility to bring about,
i.e. are implementable for the agent. Among these unfulfilled, implementable wishes the
agent selects those that qualify as its goals. Based on its knowledge on its goals and practical possibilities, an agent may make certain commitments. In particular, an agent may
commit itself to actions that it knows to be correct and feasible to bring about some of its
known goals. As soon as it no longer knows its commitments to be useful, i.e. leading to
fulfilment of some goal, and practically possible, an agent is able to undo these commitments. Both the act of committing as well as that of undoing commitments is modelled
as a special model-transforming action in our framework, which extends the usual statetransition paradigm of Propositional Dynamic Logic. In between making and undoing
commitments, an agent is committed to all the actions that are known to be identical for
all practical purposes to the ones in its agenda. By modifying the agent's agenda during
the execution of actions in a straightforward way, it is ensured that commitments display
an intuitively acceptable behaviour with regard to composite actions.