Intuitionistic Epistemic Logic
Abstract
We outline an intuitionistic view of knowledge which maintains the original Brou\-wer-Heyting-Kolmogorov semantics for intuitionism and is consistent with the well-known approach that intuitionistic knowledge be regarded as the result of verification. We argue that on this view co-reflection is valid and the factivity of knowledge holds in the form `known propositions cannot be false'. We show that the traditional form of factivity is a distinctly classical principle which, like {\it tertium non datur} , does not hold intuitionistically, but, along with the whole of classical epistemic logic, is intuitionistically valid in its double negation form . Within the intuitionistic epistemic framework the knowability paradox is resolved in a constructive manner. We argue that this paradox is the result of an unwarranted classical reading of constructive principles and as such does not have the consequences for constructive foundations traditionally attributed it.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1406.1582,
title = {Intuitionistic Epistemic Logic},
author = {Sergei Artemov and Tudor Protopopescu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1406.1582},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
40 pages. Pre-print of version to appear in the Review of Symbolic Logic