Fuzziness and approximate reasoning : epistemics on uncertainty, expectation and risk in rational behavior /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Dompere, K. K.
Imprint:Berlin : Springer, ©2009.
Description:1 online resource (xxiv, 289 pages) : illustrations.
Language:English
Series:Studies in fuzziness and soft computing, 1434-9922 ; v. 237
Studies in fuzziness and soft computing ; v. 237.
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Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11072898
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ISBN:9783540880875
3540880879
9783540880868
3540880860
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary:This monograph is special in its orientation and contribution to current state of our understanding of decision-choice process and knowledge production. Its special orientation is to bring to the scientific community the discussions on the epistemic structure of the relationships among uncertainty, expectations, risk, possibility, probability and how the rules of fuzzy paradigm and the methods of fuzzy rationality bring new and different understanding to the relationships. At the level of theory of knowledge, it presents the structure and epistemic analysis of uncertainty, expectations and risk in decision-choice actions through the characteristics of substitution-transformation and input-output processes in categorial dynamics of actual-potential duality. The interactive effects of rationality and expectation are examined around belief, prospect, time and conditions of belief justification where the relationship between possibility and probability as a sequential link between potential and actual is analyzed to provide some understanding of the role of relative costs and benefits in defining risk in both nature and society. The concepts of possibilistic and probabilistic beliefs are explicated in relation to rationality and the decision-choice process where the analytical relationship between uncertainty and expectation formation is presented leading to the introduction of two types of uncertainty composed of fuzzy uncertainty and stochastic uncertainty.
Other form:Print version: Dompere, K.K. Fuzziness and approximate reasoning. Berlin : Springer, ©2009 9783540880868
Description
Summary:We do not perceive the present as it is and in totality, nor do we infer the future from the present with any high degree of dependability, nor yet do we accurately know the consequences of our own actions. In addition, there is a fourth source of error to be taken into account, for we do not execute actions in the precise form in which they are imaged and willed. Frank H. Knight [R4.34, p. 202] The "degree" of certainty of confidence felt in the conclusion after it is reached cannot be ignored, for it is of the greatest practical signi- cance. The action which follows upon an opinion depends as much upon the amount of confidence in that opinion as it does upon fav- ableness of the opinion itself. The ultimate logic, or psychology, of these deliberations is obscure, a part of the scientifically unfathomable mystery of life and mind. Frank H. Knight [R4.34, p. 226-227] With some inaccuracy, description of uncertain consequences can be classified into two categories, those which use exclusively the language of probability distributions and those which call for some other principle, either to replace or supplement.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xxiv, 289 pages) : illustrations.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9783540880875
3540880879
9783540880868
3540880860
ISSN:1434-9922
;