A recurring issue in any formal model representing agents' (changing) informational attitudes is how to account for the fact that the agents are limited in their access to the available inference steps, possible observations and available messages. This may be because the agents are not logically omniscient and so do not have unlimited reasoning ability. But it can also be because the agents are following a predefined protocol that explicitly limits statements available for observation and/or communication. Within the broad literature on epistemic logic, there are a variety of accounts that make precise a notion of an agent's "limited access" (for example, Awareness Logics, Justification Logics, and Inference Logics). This paper interprets the agents' access set of formulas as a constraint on the agents' information gathering process limiting which formulas can be observed. © 2010 The Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Hoshi, T., & Pacuit, E. (2010). Dynamic logics of knowledge and access. Synthese, 177(SUPPL. 1), 29–49. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-010-9768-5
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