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On 7/17/2024 2:08 AM, Mikko wrote:A logical impossibility does place a limit on computation.On 2024-07-16 14:46:40 +0000, olcott said:If it is a logical impossibility then it places no
On 7/16/2024 2:18 AM, Mikko wrote:Yes, a halting decider is a logical impossibility, as can be and hasOn 2024-07-15 13:32:27 +0000, olcott said:Which is simply a logical impossibility
On 7/15/2024 2:57 AM, Mikko wrote:No, it is proven about the halting problem as that problem is.On 2024-07-14 14:48:05 +0000, olcott said:The uncomputability of halting is only proven when the problem
On 7/14/2024 3:49 AM, Mikko wrote:A lame analogy. A better one is: 2 + 3 = 5 is a proven theorem justOn 2024-07-13 12:18:27 +0000, olcott said:When the source of your disagreement is your own ignorance
then your disagreement has no actual basis.
*You can comprehend this is a truism or fail to*
*comprehend it disagreement is necessarily incorrect*
Any input that must be aborted to prevent the non
termination of HHH necessarily specifies non-halting
behavior or it would never need to be aborted.
Disagreeing with the above is analogous to disagreeing
with arithmetic.
like the uncomputability of halting is.
is framed this way: HHH is required to report on the behavior
of an input that was defined to do exactly the opposite of
whatever DDD reports.
been proven.
actual limit on computation otherwise we would have
"the CAD problem" of the logical impossibility of making
a CAD system that correctly draws a square circle.
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