
Intellectics and Computational Logic
Papers in Honor of Wolfgang Bibel
herausgegeben von Steffen Hölldobler`Intellectics' seeks to understand the functions, structure and  operation of the human intellect and to test artificial systems to see  the extent to which they can substitute or complement such functions.  The word itself was introduced in the early 1980s by Wolfgang Bibel to  describe the united fields of artificial intelligence and cognitive  science. 
  The book collects papers by distinguished researchers, colleagues and  former students of Bibel's, all of whom have worked together with him,  and who present their work to him here to mark his 60th birthday. The  papers discuss significant issues in intellectics and computational  logic, ranging across automated deduction, logic programming, the  logic-based approach to intellectics, cognitive robotics, knowledge  representation and reasoning. Each paper contains new, previously  unpublished, reviewed results. The collection is a state of the art  account of the current capabilities and limitations of a  computational-logic-based approach to intellectics. 
  Readership: Researchers who are convinced that the intelligent  behaviour of machines should be based on a rigid formal treatment of  knowledge representation and reasoning.




