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On 3/24/2025 3:00 AM, Mikko wrote:Ia that your "point"? At least that was not what you were talking aboutOn 2025-03-23 20:08:25 +0000, olcott said:No Turing Machine computation can report on the behavior
On 3/23/2025 4:49 AM, Mikko wrote:Maybe, if you have a point. But it does not prove your false claim above.On 2025-03-22 15:47:03 +0000, olcott said:I forgot that the notion of computable function already proves my point
On 3/22/2025 9:57 AM, Mikko wrote:No, it has not. "Halting decider" can be defined without mentioningOn 2025-03-21 15:25:09 +0000, olcott said:It has always been stipulated that a [halt decider] is a type
On 3/21/2025 10:00 AM, olcott wrote:No, there is nothing incorrect there. It simply means a halpt deciderOn 3/21/2025 9:44 AM, dbush wrote:On 3/17/2025 11:29 PM, olcott wrote:When the definition of a [HALT decider] contradicts the definition of a [decider] in the same field of inquiry at least one of them is incorrect.On 3/17/2025 8:25 PM, dbush wrote:Category error. Requirements can't be false. They can however be impossible to satisfy.On 3/17/2025 9:18 PM, olcott wrote:It looks like you simply don't understand that aOn 3/17/2025 7:48 PM, dbush wrote:False. The input finite string is REQUIRED to be a perfect proxy for direct execution, as per the requirements:On 3/17/2025 8:44 PM, olcott wrote:It has always been incorrectly assumed that the inputOn 3/17/2025 7:22 PM, dbush wrote:Halting behavior when executed directly, which is what is to be reported on as per the requirements:On 3/17/2025 8:18 PM, olcott wrote:It does do that and this behavior does specifyOn 3/17/2025 7:00 PM, dbush wrote:The input is required to be a complete description of the program that can be used to determine its full behavior. In the case of DD, that description is the code of the function DD, the code of the function HHH, and everything that HHH calls down to the OS level.On 3/17/2025 7:51 PM, olcott wrote:A termination analyzer has no access to that.On 3/17/2025 5:15 PM, dbush wrote:i.e. the semantics of the x86 language when those actual instructions are actually executed on an actual x86 processor.On 3/17/2025 6:10 PM, olcott wrote:It can only do that when it assumes that the behaviorThe halt decider does not and cannot possiblyNo one claimed it should. What it must do is determine what would happen in the hypothetical case that a direct execution is done.
compute the mapping from the actual behavior
of an executing process.
specified by the semantics of its input machine language
exactly matches this behavior. Its only basis is this
input finite string.
finite string is a perfect proxy for the behavior
of the direct execution.
counter-factual requirement is necessarily incorrect.
is not a decider,
of [decider]. This means that every halt decider only has the
behavior that its finite string input specifies as its only basis.
"decider" and some authors do so.
of any directly executing Turing Machine because no directly
executing Turing machine is a finite string input.
given an input of the function domain it
can return the corresponding output.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computable_function
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