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What Is a Question

TLDR
In this paper, the lattice structure of the space of assertions and questions is examined, and it is shown that the symmetries between the logical relations in each of the spaces derive directly from lattice structures.
Abstract
A given question can be defined in terms of the set of statements or assertions that answer it Application of the logic of inference to this set of assertions allows one to derive the logic of inquiry among questions There are interesting symmetries between the logics of inference and inquiry; where probability describes the degree to which a premise implies an assertion, there exists an analogous quantity that describes the bearing or relevance that a question has on an outstanding issue These have been extended to suggest that the logic of inquiry results in functional relationships analogous to, although more general than, those found in information theory Employing lattice theory, I examine in greater detail the structure of the space of assertions and questions demonstrating that the symmetries between the logical relations in each of the spaces derive directly from the lattice structure Furthermore, I show that while symmetries between the spaces exist, the two lattices are not isomorphic The lattice of assertions is described by a Boolean lattice 2(sup N) whereas the lattice of real questions is shown to be a sublattice of the free distributive lattice FD(N) = 2(sup 2(sup N)) Thus there does not exist a one-to-one mapping of assertions to questions, there is no reflection symmetry between the two spaces, and questions in general do not possess unique complements Last, with these lattice structures in mind, I discuss the relationship between probability, relevance and entropy

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Journal ArticleDOI

Rogues: Two Essays on Reason

James Liner
Journal ArticleDOI

CD4 + T cell help and innate-derived IL-27 induce Blimp-1-dependent IL-10 production by antiviral CTLs

TL;DR: It is reported that CD4+ T cell help in the form of IL-2 is required for IL-10 production by CTLs, but not for the induction of CTL effector cytokines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generating gene knockout rats by homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells

TL;DR: A detailed protocol for generating gene knockout rats by homologous recombination in embryonic stem (ES) cells is described, which allows sophisticated genetic modifications to be performed in the rat, as many laboratories have been doing in the mouse for the past two decades.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond data collection : Objectives and methods of research using VGI and geo-social media for disaster management

TL;DR: This paper investigates research using VGI and geo-social media in the disaster management context and develops a classification schema that captures three levels of main category, focus, and intended use, and analyzes the relationships with the employed data sources and analysis methods.
Posted Content

Lectures on Probability, Entropy, and Statistical Physics

TL;DR: The goal is to develop the main tools for inductive inference--probability and entropy--from a thoroughly Bayesian point of view and to illustrate their use in physics with examples borrowed from the foundations of classical statistical physics.
References
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Book

Introduction to lattices and order

TL;DR: The Stone Representation Theorem for Boolean algebras and its application to lattices in algebra can be found in this article, where the structure of finite distributive lattices and finite Boolean algebraic structures are discussed.
BookDOI

Probability theory : the logic of science

TL;DR: In this article, a survey of elementary applications of probability theory can be found, including the following: 1. Plausible reasoning 2. The quantitative rules 3. Elementary sampling theory 4. Elementary hypothesis testing 5. Queer uses for probability theory 6. Elementary parameter estimation 7. The central, Gaussian or normal distribution 8. Sufficiency, ancillarity, and all that 9. Repetitive experiments, probability and frequency 10. Advanced applications: 11. Discrete prior probabilities, the entropy principle 12. Simple applications of decision theory 15.
Journal Article

The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences.

TL;DR: The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS) as mentioned in this paper is a database of 13,000 number sequences and is freely available on the Web (http://www.att.com/~njas/sequences/) and is widely used.
Book

General Lattice Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define two definitions of Lattices and describe how to describe them, and how to use them to describe lattice geometry, including polynomials, identities, and infinities.