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On 5/6/2025 5:52 PM, Richard Damon wrote:No, to be a correct emulator it needs to continue until it reaches the end,On 5/6/25 4:37 PM, olcott wrote:It needs to emulate DD according to the rules ofOn 5/6/2025 3:22 PM, joes wrote:>Am Tue, 06 May 2025 13:05:15 -0500 schrieb olcott:>On 5/6/2025 5:59 AM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 5/5/25 10:18 PM, olcott wrote:On 5/5/2025 8:59 PM, dbush wrote:On 5/5/2025 8:57 PM, olcott wrote:On 5/5/2025 7:49 PM, dbush wrote:What does it violate?The above function VIOLATES COMPUTER SCIENCE. You make no attempt toDO COMPUTE THAT THE INPUT IS NON-HALTING IFF (if and only if) thei.e. it is found to map something other than the above function
mapping FROM INPUTS IS COMPUTED.
which is a contradiction.
show how my claim THAT IT VIOLATES COMPUTER SCIENCE IS INCORRECT you
simply take that same quote from a computer science textbook as the
infallible word-of-God.
>Every function computed by a model of computation must apply a specificNo, YOU don't understand what Computer Science actually is talkingAll you are doing is showing that you don't understand proof byNot at all. The COMPUTER SCIENCE of your requirements IS WRONG!
contradiction,
about.
sequence of steps that are specified by the model to the actual finite
string input.You are very confused. An algorithm or program computes a function.>
>
Nothing computes a function unless it applies a specific
set of rules to its actual input to derive its output.
Anything that ignores its input is not computing a function.
>
Right, so HHH needs to apply the rules that it was designed with.
>
And that means it breaks the criteria that you say it needs to do to get the right answer,
>
And thus it gets the wrong answer.
>
the x86 language. This includes emulating itself
emulating DD until it recognizes that if it kept
doing this that DD would never halt.
<MIT Professor Sipser agreed to ONLY these verbatim words 10/13/2022>Right, that UTM(D) would never halt.
If simulating halt decider H correctly simulates its
input D until H correctly determines that its simulated D
*would never stop running unless aborted* then
*would never stop running unless aborted*Nope, can't change DD, it is your hypothetical HHH, which has become UTM, when given the ORIGINAL DD, which calls the ORIGINAL HHH, as that code was part of the definition of DD.
Is the hypothetical HHH/DD pair where HHH does not abort.
No, you have always been stupidly wrong, because you decided not to learn the meaning of the words you were using.Note, the rules of how to compute say NOTHING about what is the correct answer to the question, the definition of the function to be computed does that, and that clearly says to look at the behavior of the program the input representsThat has always been stupidly wrong.
Look at the behavior that the finite string input specifies.WHich first means your finite string of just the code of DD is incorrect, your finite string must include the code of the HHH that it calls.
Not look at some behavior that cannot possibly be derived by
applying the rules of the x86 language to this finite string input.
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