Science and Semantics: A Note on Rough Sets and Vagueness
Access Status
Authors
Date
2013Type
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Source Title
ISBN
School
Collection
Abstract
In the chapter we present rough set theory against the background of recent philosophical discussions about vagueness and empirical sciences. Weiner, in her article about this topic, discusses the supervaluationist semantics of vague predicates and its criticism offered by Fodor and Lepore. She argues that neither the former nor latter approach is consistent with the scientific methodology of dealing with vague concepts such as "obese". In actual fact, it is Frege's philosophical approach that concepts must have sharp boundaries, which is the closest to scientific practice. In this context, rough set theory can be viewed as a modified supervaluationist semantics. To be more precise, rough sets provide a modal version of this semantics, where the super-truth is replaced by a local one. However, there are flies in the ointment: firstly, rough set theory is philosophically weaker than supervaluationism (in consequence, more vulnerable to the criticism of Fodor and Lepore); secondly, Weiner's arguments concerning scientific methods apply to rough sets as well. Yet there is also good news: this philosophical weakness stays actually in full accordance with scientific practice. Thus, rough set theory may be seen as a supervaluationism shifted toward the scientific methodology. In the chapter we shall make a further step into this direction and also present how rough set theory would be like when made fully consistent with the scientific approach to vague predicates. In other words, we also offer a Fregean rough set methodology. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Asano-Cavanagh, Yuko; Cavanagh, Rob (2011)This paper was written for a symposium on invariance (The Invariance Condition in Educational Research: Invariance Between Groups, Instruments, Language and Across Time). The philosophical genre of hermeneutical phenomenology ...
-
Asano-Cavanagh, Yuko; Cavanagh, Rob (2011)This paper was written for a symposium on invariance (The Invariance Condition in Educational Research: Invariance Between Groups, Instruments, Language and Across Time). The philosophical genre of hermeneutical phenomenology ...
-
Zhang, Grace (1998)In this paper, I attempt to distinguish four linguistic concepts: fuzziness, vagueness, generality and ambiguity. The distinction between the four concepts is a significant matter, both theoretically and practically. ...