Sujet : Re: Who here understands that the last paragraph is Necessarily true? --- Self-Modifying Turing Machine
De : mikko.levanto (at) *nospam* iki.fi (Mikko)
Groupes : comp.theoryDate : 22. Jul 2024, 09:26:52
Autres entêtes
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Message-ID : <v7l54c$indv$1@dont-email.me>
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On 2024-07-21 13:58:56 +0000, olcott said:
On 7/21/2024 4:52 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2024-07-20 13:03:50 +0000, olcott said:
On 7/20/2024 4:01 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2024-07-19 14:18:05 +0000, olcott said:
When a Self-Modifying Turing Machine can change itself to become
any other Turing Machine then it can eliminate the pathological
relationship to its input.
It never was a Turing machine.
A self modifying TM is merely a TM description that is
simulated by a UTM and has access to itself on the UTM
tape.
No, it is not.
I invented it thus that is the specification of my invention.
The term "Turing machine" is already reserved and your "invention"
is not one of the machines that are called "Turing macnines".
Besides, you have not shown the "invention" so there is no
basis to claim that you have invented anything.
A TM description describes a TM that does not change itself.
X is not typically understood to do Y therefore it is
impossible for X to do Y is incorrect reasoning.
That is a different situation. If someting is not understood one can be
wrong about it. But even a very superficial understanding of Turing
machines suffices for determination that a machine that modifis itself
is not a Turing machine.
That you fail to understand that an emulated x86 program can
modify itself to change its own behavior as long as it knows
its own machine address is merely ignorance on your part.
Your false claim about my understanding reveals that you are a liar.
Thank you, but we already knew.
When a simulated Turing Machine Description is provided
access to itself on the UTM tape it can do the same thing.
Rigid minded people incorrectly conflate unconventional
for impossible.
It is not a Turing machine desription if it describes a self-modification.
-- Mikko