John L. Pollock
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John L. Pollock (1940–2009) was an American philosopher known for influential work in
epistemology Epistemology (; ), or the theory of knowledge, is the branch of philosophy concerned with knowledge. Epistemology is considered a major subfield of philosophy, along with other major subfields such as ethics, logic, and metaphysics. Epis ...
, philosophical logic, cognitive science, and
artificial intelligence Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence—perceiving, synthesizing, and inferring information—demonstrated by machines, as opposed to intelligence displayed by animals and humans. Example tasks in which this is done include speech r ...
.


Life and career

Born John Leslie Pollock in Atchison, Kansas, on January 28, 1940, Pollock earned a triple-major
physics Physics is the natural science that studies matter, its fundamental constituents, its motion and behavior through space and time, and the related entities of energy and force. "Physical science is that department of knowledge which r ...
, mathematics, and philosophy degree at the
University of Minnesota The University of Minnesota, formally the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, (UMN Twin Cities, the U of M, or Minnesota) is a public land-grant research university in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. ...
in 1961. In 1965, his doctoral dissertation ''Analyticity and Implication'' at the
University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant u ...
was advised by Ernest Adams (making Pollock an intellectual descendant of
Gottfried Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm (von) Leibniz . ( – 14 November 1716) was a German polymath active as a mathematician, philosopher, scientist and diplomat. He is one of the most prominent figures in both the history of philosophy and the history of mathem ...
and
Immanuel Kant Immanuel Kant (, , ; 22 April 1724 – 12 February 1804) was a German philosopher and one of the central Enlightenment thinkers. Born in Königsberg, Kant's comprehensive and systematic works in epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, and ...
, through
Ernest Nagel Ernest Nagel (November 16, 1901 – September 20, 1985) was an American philosopher of science. Suppes, Patrick (1999)Biographical memoir of Ernest Nagel In '' American National Biograph''y (Vol. 16, pp. 216-218). New York: Oxford University Pr ...
and
Patrick Suppes Patrick Colonel Suppes (; March 17, 1922 – November 17, 2014) was an American philosopher who made significant contributions to philosophy of science, the theory of measurement, the foundations of quantum mechanics, decision theory, psychology ...
). This dissertation contained an appendix on
defeasible reasoning In philosophical logic, defeasible reasoning is a kind of reasoning that is rationally compelling, though not deductive reasoning, deductively valid. It usually occurs when a rule is given, but there may be specific exceptions to the rule, or su ...
that would eventually blossom into his main contribution to philosophy. Pollock held faculty positions at SUNY Buffalo,
University of Rochester The University of Rochester (U of R, UR, or U of Rochester) is a private university, private research university in Rochester, New York. The university grants Undergraduate education, undergraduate and graduate degrees, including Doctorate, do ...
,
University of Michigan , mottoeng = "Arts, Knowledge, Truth" , former_names = Catholepistemiad, or University of Michigania (1817–1821) , budget = $10.3 billion (2021) , endowment = $17 billion (2021)As o ...
, and
University of Arizona The University of Arizona (Arizona, U of A, UArizona, or UA) is a public land-grant research university in Tucson, Arizona. Founded in 1885 by the 13th Arizona Territorial Legislature, it was the first university in the Arizona Territory. T ...
, where he spent most of his career. At Arizona, he helped found the Cognitive Science Program. He was an avid mountain biker and founded a riding club in Southern Arizona.


Philosophical work


''Knowledge and Justification''

''Knowledge and Justification'' is the book that established Pollock in epistemology. It appeared at a time when American philosophy, and especially American epistemology, was obsessed with the
analysis Analysis ( : analyses) is the process of breaking a complex topic or substance into smaller parts in order to gain a better understanding of it. The technique has been applied in the study of mathematics and logic since before Aristotle (3 ...
of what it means to ''know'' something. For instance, the ''
Gettier problem The Gettier problem, in the field of epistemology, is a landmark philosophical problem concerning the understanding of descriptive knowledge. Attributed to American philosopher Edmund Gettier, Gettier-type counterexamples (called "Gettier-cases") ...
'', one of the most frequently discussed problems of the day, asks why it is that holding a "justified true belief" that x is not equivalent to knowing that x. Pollock's book steps back from trying to identify the "analytic criteria" which might constitute the
necessary and sufficient conditions In logic and mathematics, necessity and sufficiency are terms used to describe a conditional or implicational relationship between two statements. For example, in the conditional statement: "If then ", is necessary for , because the truth of ...
for knowledge. His ''epistemic norms'' are governed by defeasible reasoning; they are '' ceteris paribus'' conditions that can admit exceptions. Several other epistemologists (notably at Brown University, such as
Ernest Sosa Ernest Sosa (born June 17, 1940) is an American philosopher primarily interested in epistemology. Since 2007 he has been Board of Governors Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University, but he spent most of his career at Brown University. Educa ...
, and especially
Roderick Chisholm Roderick Milton Chisholm (; November 27, 1916 – January 19, 1999) was an American philosopher known for his work on epistemology, metaphysics, free will, value theory, and the philosophy of perception. The '' Stanford Encyclopedia of Philoso ...
), as well as his Arizona colleague
Keith Lehrer Keith Lehrer (born January 10, 1936) is Emeritus Regent's Professor of philosophy at the University of Arizona and a research professor of philosophy at the University of Miami, where he spends half of each academic year. Education and career ...
, had written about defeasibility and epistemology. But Pollock's book, which combined a broad scope and a crucial innovation, brought the ideas into the philosophical mainstream.


''Defeasible Reasoning''

Pollock became known as "Mr. Defeasible Reasoning" among philosophers in the two decades before his death. In
artificial intelligence Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence—perceiving, synthesizing, and inferring information—demonstrated by machines, as opposed to intelligence displayed by animals and humans. Example tasks in which this is done include speech r ...
, where
non-monotonic reasoning A non-monotonic logic is a formal logic whose conclusion relation is not monotonic. In other words, non-monotonic logics are devised to capture and represent defeasible inferences (cf. defeasible reasoning), i.e., a kind of inference in which re ...
had caused intellectual upheaval, scholars sympathetic to Pollock's work held him in great esteem for his early commitment and clarity. Pollock's most direct pronouncement is the paper "Defeasible reasoning" in Cognitive Science, 1987, though his non-syntactic ideas were almost fully mature in ''Knowledge and Justification''. Pollock traced the history of his own thinking (e.g., in a footnote in Pollock and Cruz, ''Contemporary Theories of Knowledge,'' 1999, p. 36, note 37, and elsewhere) to his first paper on epistemology, "Criteria and our knowledge of the material world," ''Philosophical Review 76'', 1967. He thought that
Roderick Chisholm Roderick Milton Chisholm (; November 27, 1916 – January 19, 1999) was an American philosopher known for his work on epistemology, metaphysics, free will, value theory, and the philosophy of perception. The '' Stanford Encyclopedia of Philoso ...
had influenced his thinking on the subject, but he also said he was attempting to interpret
Ludwig Wittgenstein Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein ( ; ; 26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951) was an Austrian-British philosopher who worked primarily in logic, the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of language. He is con ...
directly, and sometimes credited Stephen Toulmin on the subject of argument. Although his work had considerable impact in the area of Artificial intelligence and law, Pollock was not himself interested much in
jurisprudence Jurisprudence, or legal theory, is the theoretical study of the propriety of law. Scholars of jurisprudence seek to explain the nature of law in its most general form and they also seek to achieve a deeper understanding of legal reasoning a ...
or theories of legal reasoning, and he never acknowledged the inheritance of defeasible reasoning through H.L.A. Hart. Pollock also held informal logicians and scholars of rhetoric at a distance, though defeasible reasoning has natural affinities in argument. Pollock's "undercutting defeat" and "rebutting defeat" are now fixtures in the defeasible reasoning literature. He later added "self-defeat" and other kinds of defeat mechanisms, but the original distinction remains the most popular. Although aided by a strong tail wind from AI and a few contemporary like minded philosophers (e.g., Donald Nute, Nicholas Asher, Bob Causey), it is certain that defeasible reasoning went from the obscure to the mainstream in philosophy because of John Pollock, in the short time between the publication of ''Knowledge and Justification'' and the second edition of ''Contemporary Theories of Knowledge''.


''OSCAR / How to Build a Person''

Pollock devoted considerable time later in his career to a software project called ''OSCAR'', an artificial intelligence software prototype he called an "artilect". OSCAR was largely an implementation of Pollock's ideas on defeasible reasoning, but it also embodied his less well known and often unpublished ideas about intentions, interests, strategies for problem solving, and other cognitive architectural design. OSCAR was a LISP-based program that had an "interest-based" reasoner. Pollock claimed that the efficiency of his theorem-prover was based on its unwillingness to draw "uninteresting" conclusions. Although OSCAR did not benefit from the contributions of a large number of professional programmers, it must be compared to
CyC Cyc (pronounced ) is a long-term artificial intelligence project that aims to assemble a comprehensive ontology and knowledge base that spans the basic concepts and rules about how the world works. Hoping to capture common sense knowledge, Cyc f ...
,
Soar (cognitive architecture) Soar is a cognitive architecture, originally created by John Laird, Allen Newell, and Paul Rosenbloom at Carnegie Mellon University. (Rosenbloom continued to serve as co-principal investigator after moving to Stanford University, then to the Uni ...
, and Novamente for its inventor's ambition. Pollock described Oscar's main features as the ability to reason defeasibly about perception, change and persistence, causation, probabilities, plan construction and evaluation, and decision. He described the evolution of Oscar in the Fable of Oscar in his book. OSCAR grew out of the Prologemena on ''How to Build a Person'', which colleagues must have assumed was a facetious use of ''
personhood Personhood or personality is the status of being a person. Defining personhood is a controversial topic in philosophy and law and is closely tied with legal and political concepts of citizenship, equality, and liberty. According to law, only a l ...
'' at the time. However, Pollock's own attitude toward OSCAR was more machinating: he looked forward to future cognitive taxonomies that would classify OSCAR generously as a legitimate anthropomorphic form.


''Nomic Probability''

''Nomic Probability and the Foundations of Induction,'' Oxford, 1990 was Pollock's deep investigation of the relationship between defeasible reasoning and the estimation of
probability Probability is the branch of mathematics concerning numerical descriptions of how likely an event is to occur, or how likely it is that a proposition is true. The probability of an event is a number between 0 and 1, where, roughly speakin ...
from frequencies (direct inference of probability). It is a maturation of ideas originally found in a 1983 ''Theory and Decision'' paper. This work must be compared to Henry E. Kyburg's theories of probability, although Pollock believed that he was theorizing about a broader variety of statistical inferences.


Publications


Books

* ''Introduction to Symbolic Logic,'' Holt Rinehart Winston, 1969. * ''Knowledge and Justification,'' Princeton, 1974. * ''Subjunctive Reasoning,'' Springer, 1976. * ''Language and Thought,'' Princeton, 1982. * ''The Foundations of Philosophical Semantics,'' Princeton, 1984. * ''Contemporary Theories of Knowledge,'' first edition, Rowman-Littlefield, 1987. * ''How to Build a Person: A prolegomenon,'' MIT Press, 1989. * ''Technical Methods in Philosophy,'' Westview, 1990. * ''Nomic Probability and The Foundations of Induction,'' Oxford, 1990. * ''Philosophy and AI: Essays at the Interface,'' with R. Cummins, MIT Press, 1995. * ''Cognitive Carpentry: A blueprint for how to build a person,'' MIT Press, 1995. * ''Contemporary Theories of Knowledge,'' with J. Cruz, second edition, Rowman-Littlefield, 1999. * ''Thinking about Acting: Logical Foundations for Rational Decision Making,'' Oxford, 2006.


Selected papers

* "Criteria and our knowledge of the material world," ''The Philosophical Review'', 1967. * "Basic modal logic," ''Journal of Symbolic Logic'', 1967. * "What Is an Epistemological Problem? ''American Philosophical Quarterly'', 1968. * "The structure of epistemic justification," ''American Philosophical Quarterly'', 1970. * "Perceptual knowledge," ''The Philosophical Review'', 1971. * "The logic of projectibility," ''Philosophy of Science'', 1972. * "Subjunctive generalizations," ''Synthese'', 1974. * "Four Kinds of Conditionals," ''American Philosophical Quarterly'', 1975. * "The 'possible worlds' analysis of counterfactuals," ''Philosophical Studies'', 1976. * "Thinking about an Object," ''Midwest Studies in Philosophy'', 1980. * "A refined theory of counterfactuals," ''Journal of Philosophical Logic'', 1981. * "Epistemology and probability," ''Synthese'', 1983. * "How Do You Maximize Expectation Value?" ''Nous'', 1983. * "A theory of direct inference," ''Theory and Decision'', 1983. * "A solution to the problem of induction," ''Nous'', 1984. * "Reliability and justified belief," ''Canadian Journal of Philosophy'', 1984. * "A theory of moral reasoning," ''Ethics'', 1986. * "The Paradox of the Preface," ''Philosophy of Science'', 1986. * "Epistemic norms," ''Synthese'', 1987. * "Defeasible reasoning," ''Cognitive Science'', 1987. * "How To Build a Person: The Physical Basis for Mentality," ''Philosophical Perspectives'', 1987. * "My brother, the machine," ''Nous'', 1988. * "OSCAR: A general theory of rationality," ''
Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence The ''Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence'' is a quarterly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Taylor and Francis. It covers all aspects of artificial intelligence and was established in 1989. The editor-in-chi ...
'', 1989. * "Interest driven suppositional reasoning," ''Journal of Automated Reasoning'', 1990. * "Self-defeating arguments," ''Minds and Machines'', 1991. * "A theory of defeasible reasoning," ''International Journal of Intelligent Systems'', 1991. * "New foundations for practical reasoning," ''Minds and Machines'', 1992. * "How to reason defeasibly," ''Artificial Intelligence'', 1992. * "The theory of nomic probability," ''Synthese'', 1992. * "The phylogeny of rationality," ''Cognitive Science'', 1993. * "Foundations for direct inference," ''Theory and Decision'', 1994. * "Justification and defeat," ''Artificial Intelligence'', 1994. * "The projectibility constraint," in ''Grue! The New Riddle of Induction'', ed. Douglas Stalker, Open Court, 1994. * "Implementing defeasible reasoning," ''Workshop on Computational Dialectics - FAPR'', 1996. * "Oscar - A general-purpose defeasible reasoner," ''Journal of Applied Nonclassical Logics'', 1996. * "Proving the non-existence of God," ''Inquiry : An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy'', 1996. * "Taking perception seriously," ''Proceedings of the first international conference on Autonomous Agents'', 1997. * "Reasoning about change and persistence: A solution to the frame problem," ''Nous'', 1997. * "The logical foundations of goal-regression planning in autonomous agents," ''Artificial Intelligence'', 1998. * "Perceiving and reasoning about a changing world," ''Computational Intelligence'', 1998. * "Procedural Epistemology," in ''The Digital Phoenix: How Computers are Changing Philosophy,'' Bynum and Moor, eds., Wiley, 1998. * "Planning Agents," in ''Foundations of Rational Agency'', ed. Rao and Wooldridge, Kluwer, 1999. * "Belief revision and epistemology," with AS Gillies, ''Synthese'', 2000. * "Rational cognition in OSCAR," ''Lecture Notes in Computer Science'', 2000. * "Defeasible reasoning with variable degrees of justification," ''Artificial Intelligence'', 2001. * "Causal probability," ''Synthese'', 2002. * "The logical foundations of means-end reasoning," ''Common Sense, Reasoning, & Rationality'', 2002. * "Rational choice and action omnipotence," ''The Philosophical Review'', 2002. * "Plans and decisions," ''Theory and Decision'', 2004. * "What Am I? Virtual machines and the mind/body problem," ''Philosophy and Phenomenological Research'', 2008.


References


External links


A site containing John Pollock's works.




*
Philosophy department memorial notice
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pollock, John L. 1940 births 2009 deaths 20th-century American essayists 20th-century American male writers 20th-century American philosophers 21st-century American essayists 21st-century American male writers 21st-century American philosophers Action theorists American logicians American male essayists American male non-fiction writers American philosophy academics American science writers American social commentators American social sciences writers Analytic philosophers American cognitive neuroscientists American consciousness researchers and theorists Epistemologists Existential risk from artificial general intelligence People from Atchison, Kansas Philosophers from Kansas Philosophers from Michigan Philosophers from Minnesota Philosophers of language Philosophers of logic Philosophers of mathematics Philosophers of mind Philosophers of psychology Philosophers of science Philosophers of social science Philosophers of technology Philosophy writers Probability theorists Rationalists Rhetoric theorists Social philosophers Theorists on Western civilization Trope theorists University of Arizona faculty University of Michigan faculty University of Minnesota alumni Writers about activism and social change Writers about religion and science