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On 8/3/2024 5:51 PM, Richard Damon wrote:Maybe to your mind filled with false facts, but it isn't true.On 8/3/24 6:15 PM, olcott wrote:It is self-evident and you know it. I do have fourOn 8/3/2024 5:07 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>>>
The problem is that every one of those emulation is of a *DIFFERENT* input, so they don't prove anything together except that each one didn't go far enough.
void DDD()
{
HHH(DDD);
return;
}
>
When each HHH correctly emulates 0 to infinity steps of
its corresponding DDD and none of them reach the "return"
halt state of DDD then even the one that emulated infinite
steps of DDD did not emulate enough steps?
>
>
Just says lying YOU.
>
You got any source for that other than yourself?
>
people (two with masters in CS) that attest to that.
*It is as simple as I can possibly make it*
I wonder how you think that you are not swearing yourBecause, I know I speak the truth.
allegiance to that father of lies?
Anyone that truly understands infinite recursion knowsRight, but for every other HHH, which the ones that answer are, it isn't a fact.
that DDD correctly simulated by HHH cannot possibly reach
its own "return" final state.
Surpisingly (to me) Jeff Barnett set the record straightNo, there is one, and only one definition, it is a machine that reaches its final state.
on exactly what halting means.
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