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On 10/19/24 11:20 PM, olcott wrote:That is the problem. Because it is too informally statedOn 10/19/2024 9:27 PM, Richard Damon wrote:Which it isn't, but is a subtle change of the actual question.On 10/19/24 8:13 PM, olcott wrote:>>>
You are directly contradicting the verified fact that DDD
emulated by HHH according to the semantics of the x86 language
cannot possibly reach its own "return" instruction and halt.
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But that isn't what the question being asked
Sure it is. You are just in psychological denial as proven by
the fact that all attempted rebuttals (yours and anyone else's)
to the following words have been baseless.
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Does the input DDD to HHH specify a halting computation?
The actual question (somewhat informally stated, but from the source you like to use) says:
In computability theory, the halting problem is the problem of determining, from a description of an arbitrary computer program and an input, whether the program will finish running, or continue to run forever.
So, DDD is the COMPUTER PROGRAM to be decided on,No not at all. When DDD is directly executed it specifies a
and is converted to a DESCRIPTION of that program to be the input to the decider, and THAT is the input.Then it is the same error as a set defined as a member of itself.
So, the question has ALWAYS been about the behavior of the program (an OBJECTIVE standard, meaning the same to every decider the question is posed to).
Sure and if everyone stuck with the "we have always done it that way(where a halting computation is defined as)Except that isn't the definition of halting, as you have been told many times, but apparently you can't undetstand.
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DDD emulated by HHH according to the semantics of the x86
language reaches its own "return" instruction final state.
Halting is a property of the PROGRAM. It is the property, as described in the question, of will the program reach a final state if it is run, or will it never reach such a final state.Much more generically at the philosophical foundations of logic
DDD emulated by HHH is a standing for that only if HHH never aborts its emulation. But, since your HHH that answer must abort its emulation, your criteria is just a bunch of meaningless gobbledygook.ZFC did the same thing and successfully rejected the false assumption
It seems that a major part of the problem is you CHOSE to be ignorant of the rules of the system, but learned it by what you call "First Principles" (but you don't understand the term) by apparently trying to derive the core principles of the system on your own. This is really a ZERO Principle analysis, and doesn't get you the information you actually need to use.
A "First Principles" approach that you refer to STARTS with an study and understanding of the actual basic principles of the system. That would be things like the basic definitions of things like "Program", "Halting" "Deciding", "Turing Machine", and then from those concepts, sees what can be done, without trying to rely on the ideas that others have used, but see if they went down a wrong track, and the was a different path in the same system.The actual barest essence for formal systems and computations
It seems you never even learned the First Principles of Logic Systems, bcause you don't understand that Formal Systems are built from their definitions, and those definitions can not be changed and let you stay in the same system.The actual First Principles are as I say they are: Finite string
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