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On 5/4/2025 8:13 PM, Ben Bacarisse wrote:False. One value is correct and one is incorrect.Richard Heathfield <rjh@cpax.org.uk> writes:Flibble IS CORRECT when the halting problem is defined
>On 04/05/2025 23:34, Mr Flibble wrote:>The function is neither computable nor incomputable because there is no>
function at all, just a category error.
It's a point of view.
It's a point of view only in the sense that there is no opinion so daft
that it's not someone's point of view. The technical-sounding waffle
about it being a "category error" is simply addressed by asking where
the supposed category error is in other perfectly straightforward
undecidable problems. For example, whether or not a context-free
grammar is ambiguous or not, or the very simple to pose Post
correspondence problem.
>
to be isomorphic (AKA analogous) to the Liar Paradox:
"This sentence is not true".
When the Halting Problem is defined as an input that
does the opposite of whatever its decider reports
then both Boolean return values are incorrect
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