Giovanni Sommaruga (auth.), Giovanni Sommaruga (eds.)9783642006586, 3642006582
This book presents the scientific outcome of a joint effort of the computer science departments of the universities of Berne, Fribourg and Neuchâtel.
Within an initiative devoted to “Information and Knowledge”, these research groups collaborated over several years on issues of logic, probability, inference, and deduction. The goal of this volume is to examine whether there is any common ground between the different approaches to the concept of information.
The structure of this book could be represented by a circular model, with an innermost syntactical circle, comprising statistical and algorithmic approaches; a second, larger circle, the semantical one, in which “meaning” enters the stage; and finally an outermost circle, the pragmatic one, casting light on real-life logical reasoning.
These articles are complemented by two philosophical contributions exploring the wide conceptual field as well as taking stock of the articles on the various formal theories of information.
Table of contents :
Front Matter….Pages –
Introduction….Pages 1-12
Philosophical Conceptions of Information….Pages 13-53
Information Theory, Relative Entropy and Statistics….Pages 54-78
Information: The Algorithmic Paradigm….Pages 79-94
Information Algebra….Pages 95-127
Uncertain Information….Pages 128-160
Comparing Questions and Answers: A Bit of Logic, a Bit of Language, and Some Bits of Information….Pages 161-192
Channels: From Logic to Probability….Pages 193-233
Modeling Real Reasoning….Pages 234-252
One or Many Concepts of Information?….Pages 253-267
Back Matter….Pages –
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