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From Knowledge to Conjectures: A Modal Framework for Reasoning about Hypotheses

Fabio Vitali

Abstract

This paper introduces a new family of cognitive modal logics designed to formalize conjectural reasoning: modal systems in which cognitive contexts extend known facts with hypothetical assumptions in order to explore their consequences. Unlike traditional doxastic and epistemic systems, conjectural logics rely on a principle, called Axiom \textbf{C} ($\varphi \rightarrow \Box\varphi$), through which established facts are preserved across conjectural layers. While Axiom \textbf{C} has often been treated with suspicion because of its association with modal collapse, we show that collapse does not arise from \textbf{C} alone, but requires either the presence of Axiom \textbf{T} or a concretely bivalent base logic. Accordingly, we avoid \textbf{T} and adopt a non-bivalent semantic framework, such as supervaluation-style semantics, Weak Kleene logic, or Description Logic, in which undefined propositions may coexist with modal assertions. This prevents modal collapse and preserves a distinction between factual and conjectural statements. Within this framework we define the modal systems $\mathbf{KC}$ and $\mathbf{KDC}$, show that Axiom \textbf{C} directly implies \textbf{4} and \textbf{5}, and prove that these systems are non-trivial, sound, and complete. An inclusion theorem links reality, doxastic states, epistemic states, and conjectural states via set-theoretic inclusion among valuations, providing a unified account of how these layers relate. Finally, we introduce a dynamic operator, $\mathsf{settle}(p)$, which formalizes the transition by which a conjectural extension becomes designated reality, thereby motivating a corresponding Conjectural Dynamic Logic.

From Knowledge to Conjectures: A Modal Framework for Reasoning about Hypotheses

Abstract

This paper introduces a new family of cognitive modal logics designed to formalize conjectural reasoning: modal systems in which cognitive contexts extend known facts with hypothetical assumptions in order to explore their consequences. Unlike traditional doxastic and epistemic systems, conjectural logics rely on a principle, called Axiom \textbf{C} (), through which established facts are preserved across conjectural layers. While Axiom \textbf{C} has often been treated with suspicion because of its association with modal collapse, we show that collapse does not arise from \textbf{C} alone, but requires either the presence of Axiom \textbf{T} or a concretely bivalent base logic. Accordingly, we avoid \textbf{T} and adopt a non-bivalent semantic framework, such as supervaluation-style semantics, Weak Kleene logic, or Description Logic, in which undefined propositions may coexist with modal assertions. This prevents modal collapse and preserves a distinction between factual and conjectural statements. Within this framework we define the modal systems and , show that Axiom \textbf{C} directly implies \textbf{4} and \textbf{5}, and prove that these systems are non-trivial, sound, and complete. An inclusion theorem links reality, doxastic states, epistemic states, and conjectural states via set-theoretic inclusion among valuations, providing a unified account of how these layers relate. Finally, we introduce a dynamic operator, , which formalizes the transition by which a conjectural extension becomes designated reality, thereby motivating a corresponding Conjectural Dynamic Logic.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 37 sections, 17 theorems, 52 equations.

Key Result

Proposition 4.12

Theorems & Definitions (59)

  • Definition 4.1
  • Definition 4.2
  • Definition 4.3
  • Definition 4.4
  • Definition 4.5
  • Definition 4.6
  • Definition 4.7: Defined Formulas
  • Definition 4.8: Definedness-Preserving Extension
  • Definition 4.9: Definedness-Preserving Accessibility
  • Definition 4.10
  • ...and 49 more