Re: [UAI] The concept of cointensive precisiation

2005-05-10 Thread Peter McBURNEY
Javier, all -- The assertion that science only concerns about beliefs, not about actions, may be true for basic science, but not for applied science. Would you say that decision analysis or any of its branches (for instance, medical decision making) is not science? I agree with you that applied sc

Re: [UAI] The concept of cointensive precisiation

2005-05-10 Thread Francisco Javier Diez
Peter McBURNEY wrote: Surely a fundamental difference between scientific argument and legal argument is that the former concerns argument over beliefs, about what is true of the world, while the latter is argument over actions, about what to do in some situation. Any rational consideration abo

RE: [UAI] The concept of cointensive precisiation

2005-05-07 Thread Peter Tillers
07 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'UAI' Subject: Re: [UAI] The concept of cointensive precisiation   Peter,  all --   Peter Tillers wrote:   >Nonetheless, there is not a complete or radical separation between the kind >of legal argument that one sees in the courtroom and the kind

Re: [UAI] The concept of cointensive precisiation

2005-05-07 Thread Peter McBURNEY
Peter, all -- Peter Tillers wrote: Nonetheless, there is not a complete or radical separation between the kind of legal argument that one sees in the courtroom and the kind of "argument" that a scientist engages in when she attempts, say, to determine the cause or causes of some disease. Logic

Re: [UAI] The concept of cointensive precisiation

2005-04-22 Thread zadeh
In their constructive and thought-provoking comments on the concept of cointensive precisiation (uai digest, Vol 4, Issue 4), Professor Peter Tillers and Tod Levitt point to an issue which has a position of centrality in natural language understanding--the issue of context-dependence of meaning.