In this section we give the properties of the functions and
, which are central for representing question/answer discourses.
Since the
and
functions are treated in the style of situation
calculus,
we do not need to change our basic theory of context, but
simply give the axioms that formalize the two functions.
Intuitively, the function
will set up a context in which the reply to the
question will be interpreted.
For example, the context resulting in asking some proposition p
will have the property that
in that context
will be interpreted as p.
Thus
only changes the semantic state of the discourse context.
The
function will do a simple update of information:
the formulas true in
the context resulting in replying p in
will be exactly those
formulas which are conditionally true on p in
.
Thus the
function only changes the epistemic state of the discourse
context.
We now make these notions more precise.
The following axioms characterize the functions and
.
We proceed to illustrate the axioms and their use with an example.