Satisfying Rationality Postulates of Structured Argumentation Through Deductive Support -- Technical Report
Abstract
ASPIC-style structured argumentation frameworks provide a formal basis for reasoning in artificial intelligence by combining internal argument structure with abstract argumentation semantics. A key challenge in these frameworks is ensuring compliance with five critical rationality postulates: closure, direct consistency, indirect consistency, non-interference, and crash-resistance. Recent approaches, including ASPIC and Deductive ASPIC, have made significant progress but fall short of meeting all postulates simultaneously under a credulous semantics (e.g. preferred) in the presence of undercuts. This paper introduces Deductive ASPIC, a novel framework that integrates gen-rebuttals from ASPIC with the Joint Support Bipolar Argumentation Frameworks (JSBAFs) of Deductive ASPIC, incorporating preferences. We show that Deductive ASPIC satisfies all five rationality postulates under a version of preferred semantics. This work opens new avenues for further research on robust and logically sound structured argumentation systems.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2604.21515,
title = {Satisfying Rationality Postulates of Structured Argumentation Through Deductive Support -- Technical Report},
author = {Marcos Cramer and Tom Friese},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.21515},
year = {2026}
}