Score: 0

Comparing Knowledge: An Analysis of the Relative Epistemic Powers of Groups

Published: December 6, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2512.06542v1

By: Baltag Alexandru, Smets Sonja

Potential Business Impact:

Shows how groups know more than individuals.

Business Areas:
Artificial Intelligence Artificial Intelligence, Data and Analytics, Science and Engineering, Software

We use a novel type of epistemic logic, employing comparative knowledge assertions, to analyze the relative epistemic powers of individuals or groups of agents. Such comparative assertions can express that a group has the potential to (collectively) know everything that another group can know. Moreover, we look at comparisons involving various types of knowledge (fully introspective, positively introspective, etc.), satisfying the corresponding modal-epistemic conditions (e.g., $S5$, $S4$, $KT$). For each epistemic attitude, we are particularly interested in what agents or groups can know about their own epistemic position relative to that of others.

Country of Origin
🇳🇱 Netherlands

Page Count
20 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Logic in Computer Science