Belief, awareness, and limited reasoning
Artificial Intelligence
Knowledge and the problem of logical omniscience
Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on Methodologies for intelligent systems
Reasoning about knowledge
Epistemic Logic for AI and Computer Science
Epistemic Logic for AI and Computer Science
On the Complexity of Explicit Modal Logics
Proceedings of the 14th Annual Conference of the EACSL on Computer Science Logic
Proceedings of the 2nd Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge
Journal of Logic, Language and Information
Theoretical Computer Science - Clifford lectures and the mathematical foundations of programming semantics
Making knowledge explicit: how hard it is
Theoretical Computer Science - Clifford lectures and the mathematical foundations of programming semantics
Introducing Justification into Epistemic Logic
Journal of Logic and Computation
Belief, awareness, and limited reasoning: preliminary report
IJCAI'85 Proceedings of the 9th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 1
Logical omniscience via proof complexity
CSL'06 Proceedings of the 20th international conference on Computer Science Logic
Justification logic and history based computation
ICTAC'10 Proceedings of the 7th International colloquium conference on Theoretical aspects of computing
J-Calc: A Typed Lambda Calculus for Intuitionistic Justification Logic
Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science (ENTCS)
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Justification Logic offers a new approach to a theory of knowledge, belief, and evidence, which possesses the potential to have significant impact on applications. The celebrated account of knowledgeas justified true belief, which is attributed to Plato, has long been a focus of epistemic studies (cf. [10,15,18,26,30,32] and many others).