A modal approach to intentions, commitments and obligations: Intention plus commitment yields obligation
Publication date
1996
Authors
Wieringa, R.
Dignum, F.P.M.
Meyer, J-J.Ch.
Kuiper, R.
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Document Type
Article in proceedings
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Abstract
In this paper we introduce some new operators that make it possible to reason about decisions
and commitments to do actions. In our framework, a decision leads to an intention to do an action.
The decision in itself does not change the state of the world; a commitment to actually perform
the intended action changes the deontic state of the world such that the intended action becomes
obligated. Of course, the obligated action may never actually occur. In our semantic structure,
we use static (ough-to-be) and dynamic (ought-to-do) obligation operators. The static operator
resembles the classical conception of obligation as truth in ideal worlds, except that it takes the
current state as well as the past history of the world into account. This is necessary because it
allows us to compare the way a state is actually reached with the way we committed ourselves to
reach it. We show that some situations that could formerly not be expressed easily in deontic logic
can be described in a natural way using the extended logic described in this paper.